[1] Recent diving with the JAMSTEC Shinkai 6500 manned submersible in the Mariana fore arc southeast of Guam has discovered that MORB-like tholeiitic basalts crop out over large areas. These "fore-arc basalts" (FAB) underlie boninites and overlie diabasic and gabbroic rocks. Potential origins include eruption at a spreading center before subduction began or eruption during near-trench spreading after subduction began. FAB trace element patterns are similar to those of MORB and most Izu-Bonin-Mariana (IBM) back-arc lavas. However, Ti/V and Yb/V ratios are lower in FAB reflecting a stronger prior depletion of their mantle source compared to the source of basalts from mid-ocean ridges and back-arc basins. Some FAB also have higher concentrations of fluid-soluble elements than do spreading center lavas. Thus, the most likely origin of FAB is that they were the first lavas to erupt when the Pacific Plate began sinking beneath the Philippine Plate at about 51 Ma. The magmas were generated by mantle decompression during near-trench spreading with little or no mass transfer from the subducting plate. Boninites were generated later when the residual, highly depleted mantle melted at shallow levels after fluxing by a water-rich fluid derived from the sinking Pacific Plate. This magmatic stratigraphy of FAB overlain by transitional lavas and boninites is similar to that found in many ophiolites, suggesting that ophiolitic assemblages might commonly originate from near-trench volcanism caused by subduction initiation. Indeed, the widely dispersed Jurassic and Cretaceous Tethyan ophiolites could represent two such significant subduction initiation events.
We present major, trace element, and Pb‐Sr‐Nd‐Hf isotope data for Quaternary basalt and basaltic andesite lavas from cross‐chain volcanoes in the northern Izu (N‐Izu) arc. Lavas from Izu‐Oshima, Toshima, Udonejima, and Niijima islands show consistent chemical changes with depth to the Wadati‐Benioff zone, from 120 km beneath Izu‐Oshima to 180 km beneath Niijima. Lavas from Izu‐Oshima at the volcanic front (VF) have elevated concentrations of large ion lithophile elements (LILEs), whereas rear‐arc (RA) lavas are rich in light rare earth elements (LREEs) and high field strength elements (HFSEs). VF lavas also have more radiogenic Pb, Nd, Sr, and Hf isotopic compositions. We have used the Arc Basalt Simulator version 3 (ABS3) to examine the mass balance of slab dehydration and melting and slab fluid/melt‐fluxed mantle melting and to quantitatively evaluate magma genesis beneath N‐Izu. The results suggest that the slab‐derived fluids/melts are derived from ∼20% sediment and ∼80% altered oceanic crust, the slab fluid is generated by slab dehydration for the VF magmas at 3.3–3.5 GPa/660°C–700°C, and slab melt for RA magmas is supplied at 3.4–4.4 GPa/830°C–890°C. The degree of fluxed melting of the mantle wedge varies between 17% and 28% (VF) and 6% and 22% (RA), with a slab flux fraction of 2%–4.5% (VF fluid) to 1%–1.5% (RA melt), and at melting depths 1–2.5 GPa (VF) and 2.4–2.8 GPa (RA). These conditions are consistent with a model whereby shallow, relatively low temperature slab fluids contribute to VF basalt genesis, whereas deeper and hotter slab melts control formation of RA basalts. The low‐temperature slab dehydration is the cause of elevated Ba/Th in VF basalt due mainly to breakdown of lawsonite, whereas deeper breakdown of phengite by slab melting is the cause of elevated K and Rb in RA basalts. Melting in the garnet stability field, and at lower degrees of partial melting, is required for the elevated LILEs, LREEs, and HFSEs observed in the RA basalts. Less radiogenic Sr, Nd, Hf, and Pb in RA basalts are all attributable to lesser slab flux additions. The low H2O predicted for RA basalt magmas (<1.5 wt %) relative to that in VF basalt magmas (5–8 wt %) is also due to melt addition rather than fluid. All these conclusions are broadly consistent with existing models; however, in this study they are quantitatively confirmed by the geochemical mass balance deduced from petrological ABS3 model. Overall, the P‐T‐X(H2O) structure of the slab and the mantle wedge exert the primary controls on arc basalt genesis.
Understanding the origins of the mantle melts that drive voluminous silicic volcanism is challenging because primitive magmas are generally trapped at depth. The central Taupō Volcanic Zone (TVZ; New Zealand) hosts an extraordinarily productive region of rhyolitic caldera volcanism. Accompanying and interspersed with the rhyolitic products, there are traces of basalt to andesite preserved as enclaves or pyroclasts in caldera eruption products and occurring as small monogenetic eruptive centers between calderas. These mafic materials contain MgO-rich olivines (Fo79–86) that host melt inclusions capturing the most primitive basaltic melts fueling the central TVZ. Olivine-hosted melt inclusion compositions associated with the caldera volcanoes (intracaldera samples) contrast with those from the nearby, mafic intercaldera monogenetic centers. Intracaldera melt inclusions from the modern caldera volcanoes of Taupō and Okataina have lower abundances of incompatible elements, reflecting distinct mantle melts. There is a direct link showing that caldera-related silicic volcanism is fueled by basaltic magmas that have resulted from higher degrees of partial melting of a more depleted mantle source, along with distinct subduction signatures. The locations and vigor of Taupō and Okataina are fundamentally related to the degree of melting and flux of basalt from the mantle, and intercaldera mafic eruptive products are thus not representative of the feeder magmas for the caldera volcanoes. Inherited olivines and their melt inclusions provide a unique “window” into the mantle dynamics that drive the active TVZ silicic magmatic systems and may present a useful approach at other volcanoes that show evidence for mafic recharge.
One of the leading hydrothermal alteration processes in volcanic environments is when rock‐forming minerals with high concentrations of iron, magnesium, and calcium react with CO2 and water to form carbonate minerals. This is used to the advantage of geologic sequestration of anthropogenic CO2. Here we experimentally investigate how mineral carbonation processes alter the rock microstructure due to CO2‐water‐rock interactions. In order to characterize these changes, CO2‐water‐rock alteration in Auckland Volcanic Field young basalts (less than 0.3 Ma) is studied before and after a 140 day reaction period. We investigate how whole core basalts with similar geochemistry but different porosity, permeability, pore geometry, and volcanic glass content alter due to CO2‐water‐rock reactions. Ankerite and aluminosilicate minerals precipitate as secondary phases in the pore space. However, rock dissolution mechanisms are found to dominate this secondary mineral precipitation resulting in an increase in porosity and decrease in rigidity of all samples. The basalt with the highest initial porosity and volcanic glass volume shows the most secondary mineral precipitation. At the same time, this sample exhibits the greatest increase in porosity and permeability, and a decrease in rock rigidity post reaction. For the measured samples, we observe a correlation between volcanic glass volume and rock porosity increase due to rock‐fluid reactions. We believe this study can help understand the dynamic rock‐fluid interactions when monitoring field scale CO2 sequestration projects in basalts.
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