Variations of Li and Mg isotope ratios in bulk chondrites and mantle xenoliths
Variations of Li and Mg isotope ratios in bulk chondrites and mantle xenoliths
Date
2011-06-21
Authors
Pogge von Strandmann, Philip A. E.
Elliott, Tim
Marschall, Horst R.
Coath, Chris
Lai, Yi-Jen
Jeffcoate, Alistair B.
Ionov, Dmitri A.
Elliott, Tim
Marschall, Horst R.
Coath, Chris
Lai, Yi-Jen
Jeffcoate, Alistair B.
Ionov, Dmitri A.
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Abstract
We present whole rock Li and Mg isotope analyses of 33 ultramafic xenoliths from
the terrestrial mantle, which we compare with analyses of 30 (mostly chondritic)
meteorites. The accuracy of our new Mg isotope ratio measurement protocol is
substantiated by a combination of standard addition experiments, the absence of mass
independent effects in terrestrial samples and our obtaining identical values for rock
standards using 2 different separation chemistries and 3 different mass-spectrometric
introduction systems. Carbonaceous, ordinary and enstatite chondrites have
irresolvable mean stable Mg isotopic compositions (δ25Mg = -0.14 ± 0.06; δ26Mg = -
0.27 ± 0.12‰, 2sd), but our enstatite chondrite samples have lighter δ7Li (by up to
~3‰) than our mean carbonaceous and ordinary chondrites (3.0 ± 1.5‰, 2sd),
possibly as a result of spallation in the early solar system. Measurements of
equilibrated, fertile peridotites give mean values of δ7Li = 3.5 ± 0.5‰, δ25Mg = -0.10
± 0.03‰ and δ26Mg = -0.21 ± 0.07‰. We believe these values provide a useful
estimate of the primitive mantle and they are within error of our average of bulk
carbonaceous and ordinary chondrites. A fuller range of fresh, terrestrial, ultramafic
samples, covering a variety of geological histories, show a broad positive correlation
between bulk δ7Li and δ26Mg, which vary from -3.7 to +14.5‰, and -0.36 to +0.06‰,
respectively. Values of δ7Li and δ26Mg lower than our estimate of primitive mantle
are strongly linked to kinetic isotope fractionation, occurring during transport of the
mantle xenoliths. We suggest Mg and Li diffusion into the xenoliths is coupled to H loss from nominally anhydrous minerals following degassing. Diffusion models
suggest that the co-variation of Mg and Li isotopes requires comparable diffusivities
of Li and Mg in olivine. The isotopically lightest samples require ~5-10 years of
diffusive ingress, which we interpret as a time since volatile loss in the host magma.
Xenoliths erupted in pyroclastic flows appear to have retained their mantle isotope
ratios, likely as a result of little prior degassing in these explosive events. High δ7Li,
coupled with high [Li], in rapidly cooled arc peridotites may indicate that these
samples represent fragments of mantle wedge that has been metasomatised by heavy,
slab-derived fluids. If such material is typically stirred back into the convecting
mantle, it may account for the heavy δ7Li seen in some oceanic basalts.
Description
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2011. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier B.V. for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 75 (2011): 5247-5268, doi:10.1016/j.gca.2011.06.026.