Short-term metasomatic control of Nb/Th ratios in the mantle sources of intraplate basalts

  1. S. Pilet1,
  2. J. Hernandez1,
  3. F. Bussy1 and
  4. P.J. Sylvester2
  1. 1 Institute of Mineralogy and Geochemistry, University of Lausanne, 1015 Lausanne, Switzerland
  2. 2Department of Earth Sciences, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's, Newfoundland A1B 3X5, Canada

    Abstract

    Variations in the niobium/thorium ratio in basaltic rocks are thought to be related to the long-term extraction of continental crust from the mantle and the extent of sediment recycling and mixing in the mantle. However, basalts erupted between 13 and 3 Ma from a single volcanic center in the Cantal alkali massif (France) have Nb/Th of 10.5–18.7, a range encompassing nearly the entire basalt record. Cantal basalts are isotopically homogeneous, ruling out variable sediment contamination of their mantle sources. Instead, the new data indicate a mineralogical control on Nb/Th in a veined mantle source. We postulate that the large Nb/Th variations are the result of a metasomatic process, called percolative fractional crystallization, that produced veins containing pyroxene and Nb-rich oxide within the upper mantle. Short-term metasomatic-induced variations in mantle Nb/Th may have occurred throughout the geologic record, and provide an alternative explanation to sediment recycling for Nb/Th heterogeneity in the upper mantle.

    Footnotes

      • Accepted October 3, 2003.
      • Received June 20, 2003.
      • Revision received October 2, 2003.
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