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Experimental Melting of Carbonated Peridotite at 6-10 GPa

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TLDR
Partial melting of magnesite-bearing peridotites was studied at 6-10 GPa and 1300-1700°C in a multianvil apparatus using natural mineral mixes as starting material placed into olivine containers and sealed in Pt capsules as discussed by the authors.
Abstract
Partial melting of magnesite-bearing peridotites was studied at 6-10 GPa and 1300-1700°C. Experiments were performed in a multianvil apparatus using natural mineral mixes as starting material placed into olivine containers and sealed in Pt capsules. Partial melts originated within the peridotite layer, migrated outside the olivine container and formed pools of quenched melts along the wall of the Pt capsule. This allowed the analysis of even small melt fractions. Iron loss was not a problem, because the platinum near the olivine container became saturated in Fe as a result of the reaction Fe 2 SiO 4 Ol = Fe Fe-Pt alloy + FeSiO 3 Opx + O 2 . This reaction led to a gradual increase in oxygen fugacity within the capsules as expressed, for example, in high Fe 3+ in garnet. Carbonatitic to kimberlite-like melts were obtained that coexist with olivine + orthopyroxene + garnet ± clinopyroxene ± magnesite depending on P-T conditions. Kinetic experiments and a comparison of the chemistry of phases occasionally grown within the melt pools with those in the residual peridotite allowed us to conclude that the melts had approached equilibrium with peridotite. Melts in equilibrium with a magnesite-bearing garnet lherzolite are rich in CaO (20-25 wt %) at all pressures and show rather low MgO and SiO 2 contents (20 and 10 wt %, respectively). Melts in equilibrium with a magnesite-bearing garnet harzburgite are richer in SiO 2 and MgO. The contents of these oxides increase with temperature, whereas the CaO content becomes lower. Melts from magnesite-free experiments are richer in SiO 2 , but remain silicocarbonatitic. Partitioning of trace elements between melt and garnet was studied in several experiments at 6 and 10 GPa. The melts are very rich in incompatible elements, including large ion lithophile elements (LILE), Nb, Ta and light rare earth elements. Relative to the residual peridotite, the melts show no significant depletion in high field strength elements over LILE. We conclude from the major and trace element characteristics of our experimental melts that primitive kimberlites cannot be a direct product of single-stage melting of an asthenospheric mantle. They rather must be derived from a previously depleted and re-enriched mantle peridotite.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The deep carbon cycle and melting in Earth's interior

TL;DR: Carbon geochemistry of mantle-derived samples suggests that the fluxes and reservoir sizes associated with deep cycle are in the order of 1012−13−g−C/yr and 1022−23−g C, respectively.
Journal ArticleDOI

Redox freezing and melting in the Earth/'s deep mantle resulting from carbon-iron redox coupling

Arno Rohrbach, +1 more
- 14 Apr 2011 - 
TL;DR: This work demonstrates that carbonate-induced melting may occur in deeply subducted lithosphere at near-adiabatic temperatures in the Earth’s transition zone and lower mantle and shows experimentally that these carbonatite melts are unstable when infiltrating ambient mantle and are reduced to immobile diamond when recycled at depths greater than ∼250 kilometres.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rejuvenation and erosion of the cratonic lithosphere

TL;DR: In this paper, the lower part of the lithosphere is first weakened and altered by impregnation of magma at a few locations, which produces local density anomalies that have a destabilizing effect.
Journal ArticleDOI

The composition of near-solidus melts of peridotite in the presence of CO2 and H2O between 40 and 60 kbar

TL;DR: Partial melting experiments at 40, 50 and 60 kbar pressure on three peridotite compositions with 0.5, 0.63 and 0.2% CO2 added indicate melting temperatures only marginally above continental geotherms as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Reappraisal of Redox Melting in the Earth’s Mantle as a Function of Tectonic Setting and Time

TL;DR: This mechanism was originally applied to melting owing to the oxidation of reduced CH4 and H2-bearing fluids in contact with more oxidized blocks in the mantle, particularly recycled crustal blocks.
References
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Book

Treatise on geochemistry

TL;DR: This extensively updated new edition of the widely acclaimed Treatise on Geochemistry has increased its coverage beyond the wide range of geochemical subject areas in the first edition, with five new volumes which include: the history of the atmosphere, geochemistry of mineral deposits, archaeology and anthropology, organic geochemistry and analytical geochemistry as discussed by the authors.
Book ChapterDOI

Cosmochemical Estimates of Mantle Composition

TL;DR: The composition of the primitive mantle derived by as mentioned in this paper shows that Earth was assembled from material that shows many of the same chemical fractionation processes as chondritic meteorites. But the stable isotope record excludes chondrite meteorites as the ‘building blocks’ of Earth.
Journal ArticleDOI

Partial melting of dry peridotites at high pressures: Determination of compositions of melts segregated from peridotite using aggregates of diamond

TL;DR: In this article, the compositions of melts formed by partial melting of two relatively fertile spinel lherzolites were determined at pressures between 10 and 30 kbar under dry conditions using a layer of diamond aggregates sandwiched between peridotite layers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Carbonatite metasomatism in the northern Tanzanian mantle: petrographic and geochemical characteristics

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used trace element signatures of carbonatite melts responsible for modal metasomatism of peridotite xenoliths from the Olmani cinder cone, northern Tanzania.
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