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Journal ArticleDOI

Chemical Characteristics of Oceanic Basalts and the Upper Mantle

TLDR
In this article, it was shown that oceanic tholeiites are either complete melts of the upper mantle or are generated from a mix of this tholeite and a magnesium-rich peridotite or dunite in proportions up to perhaps 1:4.
Abstract
Tholeiitic basalts (oceanic tholeiites) that form most of the deeply submerged volcanic features in the oceans are characterized by extremely low amounts of Ba, K, P, Pb, Sr, Th, U, and Zr as well as Fe 2 O 3 /FeO 10 in unaltered samples. Oceanic tholeiites also have rare earth abundance-distribution patterns and ratios of K/Rb (1300) and Sr 87 /Sr 86 (0.702) similar to or overlapping those of calcium-rich (basaltic) achondritic meteorites. The close compositional similarities between the oceanic tholeiites and calcium-rich achondrites indicates the relatively primitive nature of the oceanic tholeiites. In contrast, the alkali-rich basalts that cap submarine and island volcanoes are relatively enriched in Ba, K, La, Nb, P, Pb, Pb 206 , Rb, Fe 2 O 3 , Sr, Sr 87 , Ti, Th, U, and Zr; i.e . in the same elements and isotopes that are concentrated in the sialic continental crusts by factors of 5 to 1000 more than the amounts readily inferred in the upper mantle. These analytical data coupled with the field relationships indicate that the alkali-rich basalts are derivative rocks, fractionated from the oceanic tholeiites by processes of magmatic differentiation, and that the oceanic tholeiites are the principal or only primary magma generated in the upper mantle under the oceans. Studies of the abundances and compositions of continental basalts show that essentially identical tholeiitic lavas, contaminated with Si, K, and the chemically coherent trace elements and radiogenic isotopes from the sial, also have been the predominant or only magma generated in the mantle under the continents. The chemical properties of oceanic tholeiites suggest that the upper mantle probably contains less than (in parts per million): Ba, 10; K, 1000; Pb, 0.4; Rb, 10; Th, 0.2; and U, 0.1. The Sr 87 /Sr 86 must be less than 0.7015; Th/U about 2; K/Rb about 1500–2000; and Fe 2 O 3 /FeO less than 0.1. The integration of field and petrochemical data with seismic, density, and shock-wave studies suggests that the oceanic tholeiites are either complete melts of the upper mantle or are generated from a mix of this tholeiite and a magnesium-rich peridotite or dunite in proportions up to perhaps 1:4. The Mohorovicic discontinuity under the oceans appears to mark the transition downward from a largely tholeiitic oceanic crust to either tholeiite reconstituted to blueschist or greenschist or to the ultramafic residue left after expulsion of oceanic tholeiite.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Guide to the Chemical Classification of the Common Volcanic Rocks

TL;DR: In this paper, a system was presented whereby volcanic rocks may be classified chemically as follows: Subalkaline Rocks:A.B. Tholeiitic basalt series:Tholeitic picrite-basalt; tholeiite, tholeitic andesite; dacite; rhyolite.
Journal ArticleDOI

Geochemical discrimination of different magma series and their differentiation products using immobile elements

TL;DR: In this article, the abundance and distribution of selected minor and trace elements (Ti, Zr, Y, Nb, Ce, Ga and Sc) in fresh volcanic rocks can be used to classify the differentiation products of subalkaline and alkaline magma series in a similar manner to methods using normative or major-element indices.
Journal ArticleDOI

Convection Plumes in the Lower Mantle

TL;DR: The concept of crustal plate motion over mantle hotspots has been advanced to explain the origin of the Hawaiian and other island chains and the origin the Walvis, Iceland-Farroe and other aseismic ridges as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ti-V plots and the petrogenesis of modern and ophiolitic lavas

TL;DR: In this article, the authors applied the Ti/V plot to published data on ophiolites from a variety of postulated settings and in general supported the conclusions of previous investigators.
Journal ArticleDOI

A method of discriminating between different types of mid-ocean ridge basalts and continental tholeiites with the Nb1bZr1bY diagram

TL;DR: In this paper, the immobile trace elements Nb, Zr and Y were used to distinguish between different types of mid-ocean ridge basalts (MORB) including N-type MORB, from normal midocean ridges and P-type, from plume-influenced regions).
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Density and composition of mantle and core

TL;DR: In this paper, the Adams-Williamson method was used to estimate the density of the lower and upper layers of the Earth's mantle and the inner core. But the upper and lower layers were assumed to have close-packed oxides, silica transforming to stishovite.
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The Petrology of Thingmuli, a Tertiary Volcano in Eastern Iceland

TL;DR: The Tertiary flood-basalt sequence of eastern Iceland is intermittently disturbed by central volcanic activity with the voluminous eruption of acid magma as mentioned in this paper, which produces a swarm of acid and basic dykes and extensive superimposed hydrothermal alteration.
Journal ArticleDOI

The composition of the stone meteorites and the origin of the meteorites

TL;DR: In this article, a study has been made of some 350 chemical analyses of stone meteorites available in the literature, and criteria have been applied in an attempt to select those which are more reliable.
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The geochemistry of some igneous rock series

TL;DR: In this paper, the distribution of some of the commoner trace elements with respect to the major elements in various igneous rock series is discussed. But the present communication deals with certain calc-alkali igneous rocks series, namely, the rocks of the Southern California batholith, the lavas of Lassen Peak, Crater Lake, the Lesser Antilles, the Medicine Lake Highlands and the East Central Sierra Nevada.
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