Mafic slab melt contributions to Proterozoic massif-type anorthosites

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Date
2024-08-14
Authors
Keller, Duncan S.
Lee, Cin-Ty A.
Peck, William H.
Monteleone, Brian D.
Martin, Celine
Vervoort, Jeffrey D.
Bolge, Louise
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10.1126/sciadv.adn3976
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Abstract
Massif-type anorthosites, enormous and enigmatic plagioclase-rich cumulate intrusions emplaced into Earth’s crust, formed in large numbers only between 1 and 2 billion years ago. Conflicting hypotheses for massif-type anorthosite formation, including melting of upwelling mantle, lower crustal melting, and arc magmatism above subduction zones, have stymied consensus on what parental magmas crystallized the anorthosites and why the rocks are temporally restricted. Using B, O, Nd, and Sr isotope analyses, bulk chemistry, and petrogenetic modeling, we demonstrate that the magmas parental to the Marcy and Morin anorthosites, classic examples from North America’s Grenville orogen, require large input from mafic melts derived from slab-top altered oceanic crust. The anorthosites also record B isotopic signatures corresponding to other slab lithologies such as subducted abyssal serpentinite. We propose that anorthosite massifs formed underneath convergent continental margins wherein a subducted or subducting slab melted extensively and link massif-type anorthosite formation to Earth’s thermal and tectonic evolution.
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© The Author(s), 2024. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Keller, D. S., Lee, C.-T. A., Peck, W. H., Monteleone, B. D., Martin, C., Vervoort, J. D., & Bolge, L. (2024). Mafic slab melt contributions to Proterozoic massif-type anorthosites. Science Advances, 10(33), eadn3976, https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.adn3976.
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Keller, D. S., Lee, C.-T. A., Peck, W. H., Monteleone, B. D., Martin, C., Vervoort, J. D., & Bolge, L. (2024). Mafic slab melt contributions to Proterozoic massif-type anorthosites. Science Advances, 10(33), eadn3976.
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