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Evidence from Sardinian basalt geochemistry for recycling of plume heads into the Earth's mantle
by
Blichert-Toft, J.
, Télouk, P.
, Macera, P.
, Gasperini, D.
, Bosch, D.
, Albarède, F.
, Del Moro, A.
in
Basalt
/ Chemistry
/ Crystalline rocks
/ Earth
/ Earth mantle
/ Earth Sciences
/ Earth, ocean, space
/ Exact sciences and technology
/ Geochemistry
/ Geology
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Igneous and metamorphic rocks petrology, volcanic processes, magmas
/ Isotope geochemistry
/ Isotope geochemistry. Geochronology
/ letter
/ Marine
/ multidisciplinary
/ Ocean floor
/ Oceanic crust
/ Oceans
/ Pleistocene
/ Plumes
/ Science
/ Sciences of the Universe
2000
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Evidence from Sardinian basalt geochemistry for recycling of plume heads into the Earth's mantle
by
Blichert-Toft, J.
, Télouk, P.
, Macera, P.
, Gasperini, D.
, Bosch, D.
, Albarède, F.
, Del Moro, A.
in
Basalt
/ Chemistry
/ Crystalline rocks
/ Earth
/ Earth mantle
/ Earth Sciences
/ Earth, ocean, space
/ Exact sciences and technology
/ Geochemistry
/ Geology
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Igneous and metamorphic rocks petrology, volcanic processes, magmas
/ Isotope geochemistry
/ Isotope geochemistry. Geochronology
/ letter
/ Marine
/ multidisciplinary
/ Ocean floor
/ Oceanic crust
/ Oceans
/ Pleistocene
/ Plumes
/ Science
/ Sciences of the Universe
2000
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Evidence from Sardinian basalt geochemistry for recycling of plume heads into the Earth's mantle
by
Blichert-Toft, J.
, Télouk, P.
, Macera, P.
, Gasperini, D.
, Bosch, D.
, Albarède, F.
, Del Moro, A.
in
Basalt
/ Chemistry
/ Crystalline rocks
/ Earth
/ Earth mantle
/ Earth Sciences
/ Earth, ocean, space
/ Exact sciences and technology
/ Geochemistry
/ Geology
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Igneous and metamorphic rocks petrology, volcanic processes, magmas
/ Isotope geochemistry
/ Isotope geochemistry. Geochronology
/ letter
/ Marine
/ multidisciplinary
/ Ocean floor
/ Oceanic crust
/ Oceans
/ Pleistocene
/ Plumes
/ Science
/ Sciences of the Universe
2000
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Evidence from Sardinian basalt geochemistry for recycling of plume heads into the Earth's mantle
Journal Article
Evidence from Sardinian basalt geochemistry for recycling of plume heads into the Earth's mantle
2000
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Overview
Up to 10 per cent of the ocean floor consists of plateaux
1
—regions of unusually thick oceanic crust thought to be formed by the heads of mantle plumes. Given the ubiquitous presence of recycled oceanic crust in the mantle source of hotspot basalts, it follows that plateau material should also be an important mantle constituent. Here we show that the geochemistry of the Pleistocene basalts from Logudoro, Sardinia, is compatible with the remelting of ancient ocean plateau material that has been recycled into the mantle. The Sr, Nd and Hf isotope compositions of these basalts do not show the signature of pelagic sediments. The basalts’ low CaO/Al
2
O
3
and Ce/Pb ratios, their unradiogenic
206
Pb and
208
Pb, and their Sr, Ba, Eu and Pb excesses indicate that their mantle source contains ancient gabbros formed initially by plagioclase accumulation, typical of plateau material. Also, the high Th/U ratios of the mantle source resemble those of plume magmas. Geochemically, the Logudoro basalts resemble those from Pitcairn Island, which contain the controversial EM-1 component that has been interpreted as arising from a mantle source sprinkled with remains of pelagic sediments
2
,
3
. We argue, instead, that the EM-1 source from these two localities is essentially free of sedimentary material, the geochemical characteristics of these lavas being better explained by the presence of recycled oceanic plateaux. The storage of plume heads in the deep mantle through time offers a convenient explanation for the persistence of chemical and mineralogical layering in the mantle.
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK,Nature Publishing,Nature Publishing Group
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