Allan, James F. et al. (1999): Determination of primitive melt composition in the North Atlantic seaward-dipping reflector sequences from Cr-rich spinel compositions

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 104
ODP 152
ODP 163
DSDP 38
DSDP 81
DSDP 38 338
ODP 152 917
Identifier:
2000-063790
georefid

10.2973/odp.proc.sr.163.121.1999
doi

Creator:
Allan, James F.
Texas A&M University, Department of Geology and Geophysics, College Station, TX, United States
author

Forsythe, Lance
Oregon State University, United States
author

Natland, James H.
Ocean Drilling Program, United States
author

Identification:
Determination of primitive melt composition in the North Atlantic seaward-dipping reflector sequences from Cr-rich spinel compositions
1999
In: Larsen, Hans-Christian, Duncan, Robert A., Allan, James F., Aita, Yoshiaki, Arndt, Nicholas T., Buecker, Christian J., Cambray, Herve, Cashman, Katharine V., Cerney, Brian P., Clift, Peter D., Fitton, J. Godfrey, Le Gall, Bernard, Hooper, Peter R., Hurst, Stephen D., Krissek, Lawrence A., Kudless, Kristen E., Larsen, Lotte Melchior, Lesher, Charles E., Nakasa, Yukari, Niu, Yaoling, Philipp, Harald, Planke, Sverre, Rehacek, Jakub, Saunders, Andrew D., Teagle, Damon A. H., Tegner, Christian, Scroggs, John (editor), Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program; scientific results, Southeast Greenland margin; covering Leg 163 of the cruises of the drilling vessel JOIDES Resolution, Reykjavik, Iceland, to Halifax, Nova Scotia, sites 988-990, 3 September-7 October 1995
Texas A & M University, Ocean Drilling Program, College Station, TX, United States
163
119-134
Coring during Ocean Drilling Program and Deep Sea Drilling Project Legs 163, 152, 104, 81, and 38 recovered sequences of altered basalt from North Atlantic seaward-dipping reflector sequences (SDRS) erupted during the initial rifting of Greenland from northern Europe and likely associated with excessive mantle temperatures caused by an impacting mantle plume head. Cr-rich spinel is found abundantly as inclusions and groundmass crystals within the olivine-rich lavas of Hole 917A (Leg 152) cored into the Southeast Greenland SDRS, but only rarely as inclusions within plagioclase in the lavas of the Voring Plateau SDRS, and it is absent from other cored SDRS lavas from the Rockall Plateau and Southeast Greenland. Eruptive melt compositions determined from inferred, thermodynamically-defined, spinel-melt exchange equilibria indicate that the most primitive melts represented by Hole 917A basalts have Mg/(Mg+Fe (super 2+) ) at least as high as 0.70 and approach near-primary mantle melt compositions. In contrast, Cr-rich spinels from Hole 338 (Leg 38) lavas on the Voring Plateau SDRS give evidence for melt with Mg/(Mg+Fe (super 2+) ) only as high as 0.64. This study underlines that primitive melts similar to those from Hole 917A comprise only a small fraction of the eruptive North Atlantic SDRS melts, and that most SDRS basalts were, in fact, too evolved to have precipitated Cr-rich spinel, with true melt Mg/(Mg+Fe (super 2+) ) likely below 0.60. The evolved nature of the SDRS basalts implies large amounts of fractionation at the base of the crust or deep within it, consistent with seismic results that indicate an abnormally thick Layer 3 underlying the SDRS.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:84.0000
West:-80.0000East: 20.0000
South:0.0000

Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments; Igneous and metamorphic petrology; alkaline earth metals; Arctic region; Atlantic Ocean; basalts; chemical composition; chrome spinel; chromium; concentration; continental margin; cores; Deep Sea Drilling Project; DSDP Site 338; East Greenland; genesis; Greenland; igneous rocks; IPOD; Leg 104; Leg 152; Leg 163; Leg 38; Leg 81; magnesium; melts; metals; North Atlantic; Ocean Drilling Program; ocean floors; ODP Site 917; oxides; South Greenland; spinel; volcanic rocks;

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