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Journal ArticleDOI

Compositional variation in normal MORB from 22°–25°N: Mid‐Atlantic Ridge and Kane Fracture Zone

TLDR
Basalts collected by dredging between 23°N and 25°N include samples from the active spreading ridges, median valley walls, and older walls of the Kane Fracture Zone transform fault at about 24°N as discussed by the authors.
Abstract
Basalts collected by dredging between 23°N and 25°N include samples from the active spreading ridges, median valley walls, and older walls of the Kane Fracture Zone transform fault at about 24°N. Chemical analyses of over 100 basalts and basalt glasses show the depletion in large ion lithophile elements characteristic of ‘normal’ ocean ridge basalts. Basalt suites recovered from the median valley north and south of the fracture zone are almost identical geochemically. There is no evidence of present or past volcanic activity within the transform zone. Petrogenesis of the basalts, as deduced from both petrographic and geochemical evidence, indicates that simple low-pressure equilibrium crystallization during ascent in shallow vents or flow in seafloor lava tubes can account for a large part of the major element and trace element variation within discrete data subsets. However, more complex models are required to explain relations between samples showing large differences in large ion lithophile element enrichments. A subset of samples of intermediate composition can be explained by simple mixing of highly fractionated basalt with mafic parental basalt. A number of basalts enriched in Al2O3 may reflect accumulation and partial resorption of plagioclase. By comparison to existing phase equilibria experiments, it is shown that a basalt-type common to the area is a logical choice as a mantle-derived primary magma; it is close to the composition of average normal MORB with wt % TiO2 ≅ 1.50, Mg# ≅ 66, and normative olivine 10–15 wt %. This composition is inferred to have separated from the mantle at a pressure of about 8–9 kbar. Rare examples of more mafic ‘primary’ basalt are present and are inferred to represent melts which escaped from the mantle at higher pressures. We outline a comprehensive hypothesis for melting, fractionation, and mixing which we believe may be adequate to explain compositional variation in these and other suites of ‘normal MORB.’ An important consequence of this model is that MORB presently at a given position on a low-pressure, multiply saturated cotectic may have reached that point by a variety of paths; some may be nearly direct mantle derivatives, while others may have experienced a complex history of polybaric and low-pressure fractionation and/or mixing.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Chemical differentiation of the Earth: the relationship between mantle, continental crust, and oceanic crust

TL;DR: In this paper, the average chemical compositions of the continental crust and the oceanic crust (represented by MORB), normalized to primitive mantle values and plotted as functions of the apparent bulk partition coefficient of each element, form surprisingly simple, complementary concentration patterns.
Journal ArticleDOI

Global correlations of ocean ridge basalt chemistry with axial depth and crustal thickness

TL;DR: In this paper, the global major element variations can be explained by ∼8-20% melting of the mantle at associated mean pressures of 5-16 kbar, and the lowest extents of melting occur at shallowest depths in the mantle and are associated with the deepest ocean ridges.
Journal ArticleDOI

Oceanic crustal thickness from seismic measurements and rare earth element inversions

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that the igneous section of oceanic crust averages 7.1±0.8 km from anomalous regions such as fracture zones and hot spots, with extremal bounds of 5.0-8.5 km.
Journal ArticleDOI

High pressure experimental calibration of the olivine-orthopyroxene-spinel oxygen geobarometer: implications for the oxidation state of the upper mantle

TL;DR: In this article, synthetic spinel harzburgite and lherzolite assemblages were equilibrated between 1040 and 1300°C and 0.3 to 2.7 GPa, under controlled oxygen fugacity (fO2).
Journal ArticleDOI

Mid-ocean ridge magma chambers

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that the composition of the melt lens is mainly moderately fractionated ferrobasalt, which is consistent with a model that effectively separates the processes of magma mixing and fractionation into different parts of a composite magma chamber.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Iceland Mantle Plume: Geochemical Study of Reykjanes Ridge

TL;DR: In this article, rare earth and minor element concentration variations in basalt recently erupted along the postglacial Reykjanes Ridge Axis and its northward extension over Iceland reflect the existence, spatial influence, and primordial nature of the Iceland hot mantle plume.
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Chemical Characteristics of Oceanic Basalts and the Upper Mantle

TL;DR: 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.
Journal ArticleDOI

Geochemical characteristics of mid-ocean ridge basalts

TL;DR: In this article, a strong correlation exists between percent TiO 2 (proportional to amount of melting) and Al 2 O 3 /TiO 2, CaO/TiO2 ratios of these close to primary MORB, indicating a progressive release of Al and Ca from the mantle source.
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