Highly Refractory Peridotites on Macquarie Island and the Case for Anciently Depleted Domains in the Earth's Mantle

Arjan H. Dijkstra, Dmitry S. Sergeev, Carl Spandler, Thomas Pettke, Thomas Meisel, Peter Anthony Cawood

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Macquarie Island (Southern Ocean) is a fragment of Miocene ocean crust and upper mantle formed at a slow-spreading ridge system, uplifted and currently exposed above sea-level. The crustal rocks on the island have unusually enriched compositions and the strong signature of an enriched source requires low overall degrees of melt depletion in the underlying mantle. Peridotites on the island, however, are highly refractory harzburgites that can be modeled as residues of > 20-25% of near-fractional melting from which all the free clinopyroxene was melted out. The peridotites have some of the highest spinel Cr-numbers (0 center dot 40-0 center dot 49) and lowest orthopyroxene-core Al2O3 concentrations (2 center dot 7-3 center dot 0 wt %) reported so far for oceanic peridotites. The peridotites were subsequently modified by melt-rock reactions underneath the Miocene ridge system. The refractory character of the peridotites is inconsistent with the slow-spreading ridge setting as well as with the enriched character of the overlying crust, and must indicate a previous depletion event; the peridotites are not the source residue of the overlying ocean crust on Macquarie Island. Osmium isotopic compositions of peridotite samples are very unradiogenic (Os-187/Os-188 = 0 center dot 1194-0 center dot 1229) compared with normal abyssal peridotites and indicate a long-lived rhenium depletion. Proterozoic rhenium-depletion ages indicate that these rocks have preserved a memory of an old mantle melting event. We argue that the Macquarie Island harzburgites are samples from an anciently depleted refractory mantle reservoir that may be globally important, but that is generally overlooked because of its sterility; that is, its inability to produce basalts. This reservoir may preserve key information about the history of the Earth's mantle as a whole.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)469-493
Number of pages25
JournalJournal of Petrology
Volume51
Issue number1-2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2010

Keywords

  • abyssal peridotite
  • ophiolite
  • petrology
  • Re-Os isotopes
  • trace elements
  • geochemistry
  • MID-ATLANTIC RIDGE
  • EPISODIC CONTINENTAL GROWTH
  • OSMIUM ISOTOPIC COMPOSITION
  • PRIMITIVE UPPER-MANTLE
  • OCEANIC UPPER-MANTLE
  • ABYSSAL PERIDOTITES
  • TRACE-ELEMENTS
  • MELT PERCOLATION
  • OPHIOLITE COMPLEX
  • NORTH-ATLANTIC

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