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Research ArticleArticles

Volatile-bearing partial melts beneath oceans and continents–Where, how much, and of what compositions?

Rajdeep Dasgupta
American Journal of Science January 2018, 318 (1) 141-165; DOI: https://doi.org/10.2475/01.2018.06
Rajdeep Dasgupta
Department of Earth, Environmental and Planetary Sciences, Rice University, 6100 Main Street, MS 126, Houston, Texas 77005
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  • For correspondence: Rajdeep.Dasgupta@rice.edu
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Abstract

Besides depth and temperature, CO2 and H2O, are the two most important variables in stabilizing partial melts in the Earth's mantle. However, despite decades of experimental studies on the roles of these two volatile species in affecting mantle melting, ambiguity remains in terms of the stability, composition, and proportion of volatile-bearing partial melts at depths. Furthermore, the difference in the influence of H2O versus CO2 in production of mantle melts is often inadequately discussed. Here I first discuss how as a function of depth and concentration of volatiles, the peridotite + H2O versus peridotite + CO2 near-solidus melting conditions differ - discussing specifically the concepts of saturation of volatile-bearing phases and how the mode of storage of ‘water’ and carbon affects the near solidus melting relations. This analysis shows that for the Earth's mantle beneath oceans and continents, deep, volatile-induced melting is influenced mostly by carbon, with water-bearing carbonated silicate melt being the key agent. A quantitative framework that uses the existing experimental data, allows calculation of the loci, extent of melting, and major element compositions of volatile-bearing partial melts beneath oceans and continents. How the domains of volatile-bearing melt stability are affected when possible oxygen fugacity variation at depths in the mantle is taken into account is also discussed. I show that trace amount hydrous carbonated silicate melt is likely stabilized at two or more distinct depths in the continental lithospheric mantle, at depths ranges similar to where mid-lithospheric discontinuity (MLD) and lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary (LAB) have been estimated from seismology. Whereas beneath oceans, hydrous carbonated silicate melt likely remain continuously stable from the base of the thermal boundary layer to at least 200 km or deeper depending on the prevailing oxygen fugacity at depths. Hotter mantles, such as those beneath oceans, prevent sampling strongly silica-undersaturated, carbonated melts such as kimberlites as shallower basaltic melt generation dominates. Thick thermal boundary layers, such as those in cratonic regions, on the other hand allow production of kimberlitic to carbonatitic melt only. Therefore, the increasing frequency of occurrence of kimberlites starting at the Proterozoic may be causally linked to cooling and growth of sub-continental mantles through time.

  • volatile-induced mantle melting
  • hydrous melting
  • carbonated silicate melting
  • carbonatite
  • kimberlite
  • fluid-present melting
  • fluid-absent melting
  • continental lithospheric mantle
  • lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary (LAB)
  • mid-lithospheric discontinuity (MLD)
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American Journal of Science: 318 (1)
American Journal of Science
Vol. 318, Issue 1
1 Jan 2018
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Volatile-bearing partial melts beneath oceans and continents–Where, how much, and of what compositions?
Rajdeep Dasgupta
American Journal of Science Jan 2018, 318 (1) 141-165; DOI: 10.2475/01.2018.06

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Volatile-bearing partial melts beneath oceans and continents–Where, how much, and of what compositions?
Rajdeep Dasgupta
American Journal of Science Jan 2018, 318 (1) 141-165; DOI: 10.2475/01.2018.06
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  • Article
    • Abstract
    • INTRODUCTION
    • H2O -BEARING VERSUS CO2 BEARING SOLIDUS OF PERIDOTITE −CONCEPTS OF SATURATION VERSUS UNDERSATURATION, FLUID-PRESENT VERSUS FLUID-ABSENT MELTING
    • THE COMBINED ROLE OF CO2 AND H2O IN STABILIZING MANTLE PARTIAL MELTS-OXIDIZING CONDITIONS
    • COMPOSITIONS AND FRACTION OF VOLATILE-BEARING PARTIAL MELTS IN THE MANTLE BENEATH CONTINENTS AND OCEANS
    • THE EFFECTS OF CHANGE IN CARBON SPECIATION ON THE LOCI OF MELT PRODUCTION
    • CONSTRAINTS ON POTENTIAL PRESENCE OF PARTIAL MELTS IN THE MANTLE FROM GEOPHYSICS VERSUS CONSTRAINTS FROM PETROLOGY
    • CONCLUSIONS
    • ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
    • REFERENCES
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Keywords

  • volatile-induced mantle melting
  • hydrous melting
  • carbonated silicate melting
  • Carbonatite
  • kimberlite
  • fluid-present melting
  • fluid-absent melting
  • continental lithospheric mantle
  • lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary (LAB)
  • mid-lithospheric discontinuity (MLD)

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