Loading…
Osmium isotope variations accompanying the eruption of a single lava flow field in the Columbia River Flood Basalt Province
Geochemical interpretations of continental flood basalts usually assume that individual lava flows represent compositionally homogenous and rapidly erupted products of large well-mixed magma reservoirs. However, inflated pāhoehoe lavas may develop over considerable periods of time and preserve chemi...
Saved in:
Published in: | Earth and planetary science letters 2013-04, Vol.368, p.183-194 |
---|---|
Main Authors: | , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
Summary: | Geochemical interpretations of continental flood basalts usually assume that individual lava flows represent compositionally homogenous and rapidly erupted products of large well-mixed magma reservoirs. However, inflated pāhoehoe lavas may develop over considerable periods of time and preserve chemical variations that can be temporally linked through flow formation to eruption sequence thus providing an understanding of magma evolution over the timescale of a single eruption. This study presents comprehensive major, trace element and Re–Os isotope data for a single eruption that formed the 2660km3 Sand Hollow flow field in the Columbia River Basalt Province, USA. Major and trace element variations accompanying flow emplacement (e.g. MgO 3.09–4.55wt%, Ni 17.5–25.6ppm) are consistent with fractional crystallisation, but other petrogenetic processes or variable sources cannot be distinguished. However, there is a systematic shift in the initial 187Os/188Os isotope composition of the magma (age corrected to 15.27Ma), from 0.174 (lava core) to 1.444 (lava crust) within a single 35m thick sheet lobe. Lava crust values are more radiogenic than any known mantle source, consistent with previous data indicating that neither an enriched reservoir nor the sub-continental lithospheric mantle are likely to have sourced these basalts. Rather, these data indicate that lavas emplaced during the earliest stages of eruption have higher degrees of crustal contamination. These results highlight the limitations of applying chemostratigraphic correlation across continental flood basalt provinces, the use of single data points to define melt sources and magmatic processes, and the dangers of using conventional isochron techniques in such basalt sequences for absolute chronology.
► Isotopic variations from the source occur in an individual flood basalt eruption. ► Initial Os ratios range from 1.444 to 0.174 within a single 35m thick sheet lobe. ► Greatest extent of crustal contamination is in the earliest erupted lavas. ► Lavas emplaced earlier in the Sand Hollow eruption may have been richer in volatiles. |
---|---|
ISSN: | 0012-821X 1385-013X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.epsl.2013.02.003 |