JpGU-AGU Joint Meeting 2017

講演情報

[EE]Eveningポスター発表

セッション記号 S (固体地球科学) » S-GC 固体地球化学

[S-GC52] [EE] Volatile cycles in the Earth - from Surface to Deep Interior

2017年5月22日(月) 17:15 〜 18:30 ポスター会場 (国際展示場 7ホール)

[SGC52-P02] Volatile element transport within a closed system constrained by halogens and noble gases in mantle wedge peridotites

小林 真大1、*角野 浩史2長尾 敬介3石丸 聡子4荒井 章司5芳川 雅子6川本 竜彦6熊谷 仁孝6小林 哲夫7Burgess Ray8Ballentine Chris9 (1.東京大学大学院理学系研究科地殻化学実験施設、2.東京大学大学院総合文化研究科広域科学専攻相関基礎科学系、3.韓国極地研究所、4.熊本大学大学院自然科学研究科理学専攻地球環境科学講座、5.金沢大学理工学域自然システム学系、6.京都大学大学院理学研究科附属地球熱学研究施設、7.鹿児島大学大学院理工学研究科地球環境科学専攻、8.マンチェスター大学地球環境学教室、9.オックスフォード大学地球科学科)

キーワード:halogen, noble gas, mantle, subduction, slab fluids

Halogen and noble gas systematics are powerful tracers of volatile recycling in subduction zones. The presence of noble gases and halogens with seawater and sedimentary pore-fluid signatures in exhumed mantle wedge peridotites and eclogites from the Sanbagawa-metamorphic belt, southwest Japan [1,2], and in seafloor and forearc serpentinites [3] along with seawater-like heavy noble gases (Ar, Kr, and Xe) in the convecting mantle [4] strongly suggest the subduction of sedimentary-pore-fluid-like noble gases and halogens.

In order to determine how volatiles are carried into the mantle wedge and how the subducted fluids modify halogen and noble gas compositions in the mantle, we analyzed halogen and noble gas compositions of mantle peridotites containing H2O-rich fluid inclusions collected at volcanic fronts from two contrasting subduction zones (the Avacha volcano of Kamchatka arc and the Pinatubo volcano of Luzon arcs) and orogenic peridotites from a peridotite massif (the Horoman massif, Hokkaido, Japan) which represents an exhumed portion of the mantle wedge [5].

The halogen and noble gas signatures in the H2O-rich fluids are similar to those of marine sedimentary pore fluids and forearc and seafloor serpentinites. This suggests that marine pore fluids in deep-sea sediments are carried by serpentine and supplied to the mantle wedge, preserving their original halogen and noble gas compositions.

On the other hand, the measured Cl/H2O and 36Ar/H2O in the peridotites are higher than those in sedimentary pore fluids and serpentine in oceanic plates. The halogen/noble gas/H2O systematics are interpreted within a model where water is incorporated into serpentine in a closed system formed along fracture zones developed at the outer rise, where oceanic plates bend prior to entering subduction zones, preserving Cl/H2O and 36Ar/H2O values of sedimentary pore fluids. Dehydration–hydration process within the oceanic lithospheric mantle maintains the closed system until the final stage of serpentine dehydration. The sedimentary pore fluid-like halogen and noble gas signatures in fluids released at the final stage of serpentine dehydration are preserved due to highly channelized flow, whereas the original Cl/H2O and 36Ar/H2O ratios are fractionated by the higher incompatibility of halogens and noble gases in hydrous minerals. The fluids are supplied to the mantle wedge beneath volcanic fronts and trapped as fluid inclusions in mantle wedge peridotites.

Some studies have argued that the sources of trace elements and water are decoupled in subduction zone magmas and that the major source of water is serpentine. Halogen and noble gas signatures found in the peridotites investigated here reveal that serpentine supplies a significant amount of water to the mantle wedge beneath volcanic fronts, and that this water is not strongly decoupled from these two groups of elements. The seawater-like noble gases in the convecting mantle [4] can be also explained by deeper subduction and/or involvement of the noble gas signatures observed in this study, to the convecting mantle.

[1] Sumino et al. EPSL 2010. [2] Sumino et al. Mineral. Mag. 2011. [3] Kendrick et al. Nature Geosci. 2011. [4] Holland & Ballentine Nature 2006. [5] Kobayashi et al. EPSL 2017.