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Sublithospheric diamonds extend Paleoproterozoic record of cold deep subduction into the lower mantle

•Superdeep DO-27 diamonds include a complete predicted lower mantle mineralogy.•Diamond formation occurred during metasomatism of subducted slab harzburgite.•We determined two new superdeep diamond formation ages, at 1679 ± 13 and 998 ± 18 Ma.•These ages constrain onset of cold deep subduction into...

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Published in:Earth and planetary science letters 2024-05, Vol.634, p.118675, Article 118675
Main Authors: Zhang, Qiwei, Timmerman, Suzette, Stachel, Thomas, Chinn, Ingrid, Stern, Richard A., Davies, Joshua, Nestola, Fabrizio, Luth, Robert, Pearson, D. Graham
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container_title Earth and planetary science letters
container_volume 634
creator Zhang, Qiwei
Timmerman, Suzette
Stachel, Thomas
Chinn, Ingrid
Stern, Richard A.
Davies, Joshua
Nestola, Fabrizio
Luth, Robert
Pearson, D. Graham
description •Superdeep DO-27 diamonds include a complete predicted lower mantle mineralogy.•Diamond formation occurred during metasomatism of subducted slab harzburgite.•We determined two new superdeep diamond formation ages, at 1679 ± 13 and 998 ± 18 Ma.•These ages constrain onset of cold deep subduction into the lower mantle to ≥∼1.7 Ga. Cold deep subduction – a hallmark of modern-style plate tectonics – is the dominant mechanism for recycling crustal materials into Earth's deep mantle, potentially changing its composition, heat budget and dynamics. The onset of cold deep subduction remains contentious and is largely constrained by crustal rocks, despite subduction being driven by mantle processes. Here we use the chemical and chronological information from sublithospheric mantle-derived minerals entrapped in diamonds from the DO-27 kimberlite, Slave Craton, Canada, to better constrain the timing and products of cold deep subduction reaching Earth's lower mantle. DO-27 sublithospheric diamonds preserve a complete lower mantle mineral assemblage: Ca-silicates (retrogressed CaSi-perovskite) ± enstatite (retrogressed bridgmanite) ± ferropericlase. The high Mg#s (molar Mg/(Mg+Fe)) of retrogressed bridgmanite (median Mg#=95) and ferropericlase (median Mg#=86) implicate a harzburgitic host rock for the diamonds. This strongly melt-depleted signature contrasts with the high abundance of Ca-silicate inclusions, some of which are variably enriched in incompatible elements and have enriched Sr-Nd-Pb isotopic signatures that collectively indicate the host rock was metasomatized by carbonatitic melts released from a relatively cold subducting slab in the lower mantle. The U-Pb systematics of the Ca-silicates define two ages of diamond crystallisation: 998 ± 18 Ma and 1679 ± 13 Ma. This is the first direct evidence of cold deep subduction in Earth's lower mantle at ∼1.7 Ga (Paleoproterozoic), in agreement with the oldest crustal low-temperature, high-pressure eclogites and is much earlier than previous Neoproterozoic estimates.
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Here we use the chemical and chronological information from sublithospheric mantle-derived minerals entrapped in diamonds from the DO-27 kimberlite, Slave Craton, Canada, to better constrain the timing and products of cold deep subduction reaching Earth's lower mantle. DO-27 sublithospheric diamonds preserve a complete lower mantle mineral assemblage: Ca-silicates (retrogressed CaSi-perovskite) ± enstatite (retrogressed bridgmanite) ± ferropericlase. The high Mg#s (molar Mg/(Mg+Fe)) of retrogressed bridgmanite (median Mg#=95) and ferropericlase (median Mg#=86) implicate a harzburgitic host rock for the diamonds. This strongly melt-depleted signature contrasts with the high abundance of Ca-silicate inclusions, some of which are variably enriched in incompatible elements and have enriched Sr-Nd-Pb isotopic signatures that collectively indicate the host rock was metasomatized by carbonatitic melts released from a relatively cold subducting slab in the lower mantle. The U-Pb systematics of the Ca-silicates define two ages of diamond crystallisation: 998 ± 18 Ma and 1679 ± 13 Ma. 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The U-Pb systematics of the Ca-silicates define two ages of diamond crystallisation: 998 ± 18 Ma and 1679 ± 13 Ma. 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ispartof Earth and planetary science letters, 2024-05, Vol.634, p.118675, Article 118675
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subjects Carbonatitic metasomatism
DO-27 kimberlite
Lower mantle
Onset of cold deep subduction
Slave Craton
Superdeep diamonds
title Sublithospheric diamonds extend Paleoproterozoic record of cold deep subduction into the lower mantle
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