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Article Dans Une Revue Nature Geoscience Année : 2012

Recent contribution of sediments and fluids to the mantle's volatile budget

Résumé

Subduction modifies the cycling of Earth's volatile elements. Fluid-rich sediments and hydrated oceanic lithosphere enter the convecting mantle at subduction zones. Some of the sediments and volatile components are released from the subducting slab, promote mantle melting and are returned to the surface by volcanism. The remainder continue into the deeper mantle. Quantification of the fate of these volatiles requires an understanding of both the nature and timing of fluid release and mantle melting1. Here we analyse the trace element and isotopic geochemistry of fragments of upper mantle rocks that were transported to the surface by volcanic eruptions above the Batan Island subduction zone, Philippines. We find that the mantle fragments exhibit extreme disequilibrium between their U-Th-Ra isotopic ratios, which we interpret to result from the interaction of wet sediment melts and slab-derived fluids with rocks in the overlying mantle wedge. We infer that wet sediments were delivered from the slab to the mantle wedge between 8,000 and 10,000 years ago, whereas aqueous fluids were delivered separately much later. We estimate that about 625 ppm of water is retained in the wedge. A significant volume of water could therefore be delivered to the mantle transition zone at the base of the upper mantle, or even to the deeper mantle.
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Dates et versions

insu-00664507 , version 1 (30-01-2012)

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Simon Turner, John Caulfield, Michael Turner, Peter van Keken, René Maury, et al.. Recent contribution of sediments and fluids to the mantle's volatile budget. Nature Geoscience, 2012, 5, pp.50-54. ⟨10.1038/ngeo1325⟩. ⟨insu-00664507⟩
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