11:00 AM - 11:15 AM
[SCG46-02] Subducting slab-derived fluid preserved in exhumed mantle wedge serpentinite: Example from the Kamabuseyama serpentinite body, Kanto Mountains, Japan.

Keywords:Noble gas, Halogen, Sanbagawa metamorphic belt, Metasomatism
We focused on the Kamabuseyama serpentinite body in the Kanto Mountains, which is considered to be one of the shallowest wedge mantle among the ultramafic rocks of the Sanbagawa metamorphic belt, which preserves the rocks of the plate boundary, and performed noble gas and halogen analyses on rocks in the metasomatic reaction zone (pelitic schist, talc/actinolite, and serpentinite) where fluids are thought to have passed through. The 3He/4He results indicate that the fluids in the pelitic schist have a mixed composition of oceanic sediments and altered oceanic crust, and the fluid in the talc/actinolite rock and serpentinite have a mixed composition of fluids from oceanic sediment, altered oceanic crust and the upper mantle. Non-radiogenic noble gas element ratios (130Xe/36Ar, 84Kr/36Ar) and 40Ar/36Ar are explained by a mixing of the mean composition of the altered oceanic crust, ocenic sediments, and seawater. Halogen element ratios (I/Cl, Br/Cl) have values that are explained by the composition of oceanic pore fluid for the pelitic schist and talc/actinolite rock, and by the mixing of altered oceanic crust and oceanic pore fluids for the serpentinite. These results suggest that the Kamabuseyama serpentinite body is a serpentinite formed by the infiltration of the fluid generated from dehydration of altered oceanic crust and compression of oceanic sediment. These results indicate that altered oceanic crust may have started dehydrating at the subduction plate boundary that formed the Sambagawa Belt 20-30 km below the surface.