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Mantle redox in Cordilleran ophiolites as a record of oxygen fugacity during partial melting and the lifetime of mantle lithosphere
We examine controls on mantle oxygen fugacity ( fO 2) during the partial melting process that forms mantle lithosphere at spreading centers. We compare the paleo fO 2 at the time of melting inferred by V/Sc systematics of ophiolite peridotites, with the thermobarometric fO 2 recorded by olivine–orth...
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Published in: | Earth and planetary science letters 2006-08, Vol.248 (1), p.106-117 |
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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: | We examine controls on mantle oxygen fugacity (
fO
2) during the partial melting process that forms mantle lithosphere at spreading centers. We compare the paleo
fO
2 at the time of melting inferred by V/Sc systematics of ophiolite peridotites, with the thermobarometric
fO
2 recorded by olivine–orthopyroxene–spinel assemblages during simple cooling in relatively young oceanic lithosphere. Modelling of the V/Sc in the ophiolite peridotites from Alaska, Yukon and British Columbia is permissive of only a narrow range in log
fO
2 during melting between NNO and NNO
−
1 (where NNO is the nickel–nickel oxide buffer), depending on the choice of partition coefficients for Sc. This result is within uncertainty of the thermobarometric
fO
2 recorded by most samples (within 1 log unit of NNO
−
1). The same cannot be said for more complex peridotite residues from continental mantle, where V/Sc systematics show a narrow paleo
fO
2 during formation but wide range of thermobarometric
fO
2 after equilibration in the lithosphere. In continental mantle with a complex history, thermobarometric
fO
2 is an ambiguous measure of that attendant during partial melting. Graphite-saturated melting in a system closed to oxygen controls melt Fe
3+/Fe
2+and CO
2 content, and creates a shift in
fO
2 of about 2 log units
[1] in a peridotite residue. In contrast, for the ophiolite mantle samples in this study, both paleo- and thermobarometric
fO
2 are near values predicted by carbon–fluid equilibria, yet show no relationship with depletion, suggesting the melt-residue system in the mantle may be open to oxygen during the partial melting process. |
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ISSN: | 0012-821X 1385-013X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.epsl.2006.04.038 |