Isotopic Constraints on Earth System Processes. Группа авторов

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Название Isotopic Constraints on Earth System Processes
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northern Costa Rica and the sedimentary sequence has been well‐documented by the Deep Sea Drilling Program (DSDP); see Patino et al. (2000). The lower section of the sedimentary sequence consists of middle‐lower Miocene chalky carbonate ooze and manganiferous chalk and chert that are on average ~50 wt. % CaO (von Huene et al., 1982).

      Subducted carbonate sediments along the Central American trough have compositions (Ba/Laavg = 244, Sr/Nbavg = 3418, 87Sr/86Sravg = 0.7086) that can produce a distinct signature in the arc basalts (Patino et al., 2000; Sadofsky et al., 2008). The calcium isotopic composition of this sediment has not been measured, but modern carbonate ooze (DSDP 590B) has a δ44Ca = –0.36 ± 0.15‰ (2σ) (Fantle & DePaolo, 2005), similar to the modern riverine inputs to the oceans (DePaolo, 2004); see Fig. 3.3. The calcium isotope homogeneity among the studied arc magmas is particularly notable when one considers the fact that they exhibit a large range in their sediment contribution signatures. They exhibit compositions that range from non‐existent levels typical of MORB up to those near BSE in these sediment signatures (e.g., Ba/La varies from ~4 to 117, Fig. 3.2; Sr/Nb varies from 16–328; and 87Sr/86Sr varies from 0.7029–0.7041, Fig. 3.4) compared to the more limited range recorded by the Hawaiian tholeiites (Sr/Nb = 25–55, 87Sr/86Sr = 0.7035–0.7042), considered by Huang et al. (2011) to reflect ancient carbonate recycling. These observations imply that some traditional geochemical signatures for carbonate sediment subduction in arc magmas are at odds with their calcium isotopic signatures.

      Second, it is possible that the flux of subducted sediment to the arc, and in particular marine carbonate, is overestimated. Despite the large volumes (100s m thick) of carbonate inferred from the DSDP drill cores from the subducting sediment sequence along the volcanic front, it is unknown how much sediment‐derived calcium is hybridized within the source reservoir(s) of the arc magmas. On average CaO is 4–5× more enriched in the carbonate sediment than the arc magmas. MORB‐like magmas have CaO contents that are the same or slightly higher than comparable primitive arc basalts (Patino et al. 1997; Presnall & Hoover, 1987). So, unlike Pb, Sr, and Nd that are found in relatively low abundances in the mantle, and therefore must come from a subducted component, perhaps sediments, to explain the elevated abundances in the arc basalts, all of the CaO needed in the arc basalts can be potentially provided by the mantle. For the most part these trace elements also behave incompatibly and will preferentially contribute, along with H2O and other fluid mobile LILE, to the arc flux. In contrast, calcium acts compatibly. Therefore, any process that creates new Ca‐bearing phases, such as the “reaction pyroxenite” described by Straub et al. (2008; 2011), would effectively trap sediment‐derived Ca. As this material sinks into the mantle, this may help explain why some or most subducted carbonate calcium is added to long, deep mantle convection cycles contributing to the formation of ocean island basalts as suggested by Huang et al. (2011) (and possibly the carbonatites discussed in the following section), rather than the arc.

      Third, the calcium isotope signatures may reflect a scenario in which the light calcium isotopic signatures of the subducted sediment are diluted by mixture with relatively heavy calcium reservoir(s), i.e., seawater and/or crustal rocks with BSE calcium isotopic compositions. Clear evidence of sediment subduction in the Central American arc is complicated by the fact that the radiogenic isotope compositions of the subducted sediments are relatively unradiogenic for marine sediments (cf. Feigenson et al., 2004). The exception may be Guatemalan lava AT‐50, but notably its Nd‐Sr isotopes could also reflect addition of crust and not necessarily subducted sediment (Fig. 3.4). Some of the trace element variability used as evidence for subducted sediment (Ba/Th) could also be explained by the mobilization of Ba over Th in fluids derived from subducted altered oceanic crust (Fig. 3.4) as seen in oceanic island arc basalts (Hawkesworth et al., 1997; Turner et al., 1996). Moreover, calcium mobilized in fluids extracted via deserpentinization reactions, as subducted rocks rise in temperature and pressure, might buffer the light carbonate signatures. It has been reported that subducted fluids could evolve isotopically during transport and fluid‐rock interaction, becoming enriched in heavy isotopes as they rise through the slab into the subvolcanic arc (John et al., 2012). It follows that mixing with isotopically heavy altered oceanic crust could offset the effects of the calcium from carbonate sediment, which is isotopically light, and produce BSE calcium isotope compositions for the arc lavas.

      3.4.4. Mantle Source(s) of Calcium in Carbonatite Magmas

      The similar δ44Ca of the studied Oldoinyo Lengai carbonatite lavas and terrestrial basalts (i.e., BSE composition) suggests a mantle source for their calcium. This interpretation is consistent with the general consensus that carbonatites originate from low‐degrees of partial melting of the mantle (see Bell & Tiltonm, 2002; Walter et al., 2008). It is also consistent with studies that conclude carbonatite volcanoes extrude primordial volatiles (CO2, He, N2, and Ar) that are indistinguishable from those emitted along mid‐ocean ridges despite the fact that Oldoinyo Lengai carbonatites occur in a setting far removed from oceanic spreading centers (Fisher et al., 2009). It is possible that Oldoinyo Lengai lavas, which are natrocarbonatite, are not representative of more Ca‐rich carbonatite magmas. Extruded carbonatites, being composed largely of soluble carbonates, are easily weathered and therefore unlikely to be preserved in the geological record. The question of why this volcano extrudes lavas that are chemically different to older carbonatite centers, and whether ancient carbonatites were all originally natrocarbonatites and subsequently altered to calciocarbonatites, remains unanswered (Dawson et al., 1987; Zaitsev & Keller, 2006).

      3.4.5. Origin of the Light Calcium Isotope Composition of Laacher See and other Intrusive Carbonatites

      The distinctly light calcium isotope signature (δ44Ca = –0.39 ± 0.14‰ [2σ]) of the intrusive Laacher See carbonatite is the sole outlier in this study, and is distinct from what is found in most igneous samples (see compilations in Antonelli & Simon, 2020; Schiller et al., 2016). It is possible that the mass‐dependent calcium isotopic deficit seen in Laacher See carbonatite is an artifact produced by relatively large (~4 epsilon‐unit) radiogenic 40Ca effects, as can be seen in Precambrian samples (e.g., Antonelli et al., 2019c; Mills et al., 2018; Simon et al., 2009). This is unlikely given the fact that the carbonatite clast studied was cogenetic with its ~12.9 ka phonolite host, which exhibits negligible evidence for assimilation, and contained zircons that range from 32.6 ± 4.1 ka to near‐eruption in age (Schmitt et al., 2010).

      The calcium isotope composition of the Laacher See carbonatite could originate from recycling of isotopically light marine carbonate as suggested recently for other carbonatites (Amsellem et al., 2020). This would involve carbonate subduction through a long deep convection cycle, which is required given the fact that the East Eifel Volcanic Field is in Central Europe, far from a modern subduction