9:45 AM - 10:05 AM
[BCG06-04] Geochemical stratigraphy of oceanic lithosphere reconstructed by spinel/garnet peridotite xenoliths from petit-spots in the northwestern Pacific
★Invited Papers
Keywords:Petit-spot, Mantle, Lithosphere-Asthenosphere boundary, Depleted MORB mantle, Off Tohoku
25 peridotite xenoliths were collected from petit-spot Sites A and B in the northwestern Pacific using deep-submergence vehicle Shinkai 6500 during three expeditions of YK05-06, YK20-14S and YK21-07S. The samples show variation in terms of the presence of spinel and garnet with melt depletion from harzburgite to lherzolite. The peridotite xenoliths are small in size ranging from 1 to 3 cm in diameter, except for a garnet lherzolite with 15 cm-long diameter. Some of the peridotites include fine-grained mineral aggregates, which are broken-down products after pyrope-rich garnets considering their average chemical compositions. The garnet lherzolites and spinel lherzolites are fertile, whereas spinel harzburgites are depleted in melt components. We applied a mantle melting model using rare-earth elements (REE) in clinopyroxenes of the spinel harzburgites and spinel lherzolites. The results indicate that a few percent of fractional melting in the garnet-stable region is required before conventional fractional melting in the spinel-stable region. One spinel lherzolite is exceptionally fertile in equilibrium with a source reservoir of MORB (i.e., DMM).
Abyssal peridotites recovered from the mid-ocean ridges are known to undergo melting from the garnet-stable region to the spinel-stable region. Thus, depleted spinel harzburgite layer is expected to be perched atop fertile spinel/garnet lherzolite layers in hypothetical melting column in the mid-ocean ridge. The peridotite xenoliths from the petit-spots substantiate this melting column, and corroborate the presence of DMM beneath the depleted harzburgite layer in the mid-ocean ridge. We will present pressure–temperature estimates on the peridotite xenoliths and quantitatively reconstruct the geochemical stratigraphy of the oceanic lithosphere.