Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2019

A nephelinitic component with unusual δ56Fe in Cenozoic basalts from eastern China and its implications for deep oxygen cycle

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Abstract Cycling of elements with multiple valences (e.g., Fe, C, and S) through subduction and magmatism may dictate the redox evolution of the deep mantle and atmosphere. To investigate the potential of Fe isotopes as a tracer of such cycles, here we report Fe isotopic compositions of thirty-seven Cenozoic basalts from eastern China. A nephelinitic melt component with δ 56 Fe up to 0.29 has been identified, which cannot be explained by weathering, alteration, magma differentiation, or chemical diffusion. Its low Fe/Mn ∼58, relatively low TiO2 and high Na2O + K2O argue against a significant contribution of pyroxenite melting. Instead, the heavy Fe component requires enhanced isotope fractionation during partial melting of a peridotitic source with Fe3+/ΣFe ≥ 0.15. Low Ba/Th ∼ 50 and depleted 87Sr/86Sr(i) and eNd(t) suggest that the source was insignificantly affected by hydrous fluids and recycled terrigenous sediments. The heavy Fe component is known to be unique in its low δ 26 Mg and high δ 66 Zn and indicates hybridization by recycled carbonates. The source Fe3+/ΣFe was most likely enhanced at cost of reduction of recycled carbonates to diamonds in a mantle depth ≥300 km. The origin of the heavy Fe component illustrates a pathway with net transportation of oxidizer back to Earth s surface: CO2 (in carbonates) → C (as diamond frozen in the deep mantle) + O2 (ferric Fe being scavenged by melt extraction). Secular cooling of global subduction zones may have stepwisely increased the efficiency of this carbon driven deep oxygen cycle in the past, providing an alternative explanation for the rise of atmospheric O2.

Volume 512
Pages 175-183
DOI 10.1016/J.EPSL.2019.02.009
Language English
Journal Earth and Planetary Science Letters

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