Journal article icon

Journal article

Evidence for melting mud in Earth's mantle from extreme oxygen isotope signatures in zircon

Abstract:
The role of sediment melting in Earth's mantle remains controversial, as direct observation of melt generation in the mantle is not possible. Geochemical fingerprints provide indirect evidence for subduction-delivery of sediment to the mantle, however sediment abundance in mantle-derived melt is generally low (0-2%), and difficult to detect. Here we provide evidence for bulk melting of subducted sediment in the mantle through isotopic analysis of granite sampled from an exhumed mantle section. Peraluminous granite dikes that intrude peridotite in the Oman-United Arab Emirates ophiolite have U-Pb ages of 99.8±3.3 Ma that predate obduction at ca. 85 to 90 Ma. The dikes have unusually high oxygen isotope (δ18O) values for whole rock (14-23‰) and quartz (20-22‰), and yield the highest δ18O zircon values known (14-28‰; values relative to Vienna standard mean ocean water). The extremely high oxygen isotope ratios uniquely identify the melt source as high δ18O marine sediment (pelitic and/or siliciceous mud), as no other source could produce granite with such anomalously high δ18O. Formation of high δ18O sediment-derived (S-type) granite within peridotite requires delivery of sediment to the mantle by subduction, where it melted and intruded the overlying mantle wedge. The granite suite described here contains the most evolved oxygen isotope ratios reported for igneous rocks, yet intruded mantle peridotite below the Mohorovičić seismic discontinuity, the most primitive oxygen isotope reservoir in the silicate Earth. Identifying the presence and quantifying the extent of sediment melting within the mantle has important implications for understanding subduction recycling of crust and mantle heterogeneity over time.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

Actions


Access Document


Files:
Publisher copy:
10.1130/G39402.1

Authors



Publisher:
Geological Society of America
Journal:
Geology More from this journal
Volume:
45
Issue:
11
Pages:
975-978
Publication date:
2017-10-02
Acceptance date:
2017-07-21
DOI:
EISSN:
1943-2682
ISSN:
0091-7613


Pubs id:
pubs:709066
UUID:
uuid:489225e5-bc52-4e1d-9e9a-bd832140cd36
Local pid:
pubs:709066
Source identifiers:
709066
Deposit date:
2017-07-24

Terms of use



Views and Downloads






If you are the owner of this record, you can report an update to it here: Report update to this record

TO TOP