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Dehydration melting of nominally anhydrous mantle: The primacy of partitioning
The onset of dehydration melting of nominally anhydrous peridotite can be calculated by combination of appropriate mineral/melt partition coefficients for H 2O, D H min / liq , and a parameterization of the influence of the H 2O content of melt on the solidus of peridotite. Thermodynamic models pred...
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Published in: | Physics of the earth and planetary interiors 2009-09, Vol.176 (1), p.54-68 |
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Main Authors: | , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | The onset of dehydration melting of nominally anhydrous peridotite can be calculated by combination of appropriate mineral/melt partition coefficients for H
2O,
D
H
min
/
liq
, and a parameterization of the influence of the H
2O content of melt on the solidus of peridotite. Thermodynamic models predict that olivine/melt partitioning,
D
H
ol
/
liq
, should increase with pressure, and though direct experimental determinations of
D
H
ol
/
liq
from 0.5 to 3
GPa do not show the predicted pressure dependence, storage capacity experiments suggest increases in
D
H
ol
/
liq
at pressures above 8
GPa and particularly at 12–14
GPa, near the base of the upper mantle. Calculations using experimental values of
D
H
min
/
liq
and ignoring the likely effect of pressure on
D
H
ol
/
liq
indicate that
D
H
perid
/
liq
increases from 0.006 at 1
GPa up to 0.009 at the onset of garnet stability at 2.8
GPa and then diminishes with further increases in pressure owing to decreasing pyroxene mode and decreasing Al in pyroxene. Because these calculations ignore the likely pressure effect on
D
H
ol
/
liq
, they represent minima. Incipient partial melts of mantle with 100
ppm H
2O have 1–2
wt.% H
2O from 1 to 5
GPa, and this modest H
2O concentration limits the stability of hydrous partial melts to temperatures approaching the dry solidus. The influence of H
2O on the melting behavior of peridotite can be quantified using a simple cryoscopic approach benchmarked against experiments on hydrous peridotite. Along a mantle adiabat with a potential temperature of 1323
°C, calculations indicate that dehydration partial melting of peridotite with 100
ppm H
2O begins at 80
km, or about 15
km deeper than would be the case for truly dry peridotite. However, decreases in
D
H
perid
/
liq
related to the onset of the stability of garnet mean that mantle modestly enriched in H
2O will begin melting significantly deeper, i.e., at 104
km for 200
ppm H
2O. In the low velocity zone (LVZ) beneath mature (50
Ma) oceanic lithosphere, incipient partial melting at 110
km requires 300
ppm H
2O and generation of small finite (≥0.1%) melt fractions across the entire LVZ from 90 to 200
km requires 600
ppm H
2O. The minimum concentration, 300
ppm H
2O, is 2–3 times that of typical convecting oceanic (MORB-source) mantle, so it is not likely that pervasive hydrous partial melting is responsible for the seismic properties of the LVZ. Extrapolation of low pressure partition coefficients to the base of the upper mantle |
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ISSN: | 0031-9201 1872-7395 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.pepi.2009.04.001 |