The New Caledonia ophiolite hosts one of the rare examples of crust-mantle sections formed in a nascent arc setting, thus providing the unique opportunity to improve our understanding of the formation of lower arc roots. This sequence includes ultra-depleted harzburgites that suffered very high melting degrees (􀀀 20-25%), overlain by mafic-ultramafic lithologies. The ultramafic rocks (mainly dunites and wehrlites) resulted from melt-peridotite reactions involving primitive arc tholeiites and boninitic melts. The mafic rocks are olivine gabbronorites occurring in the upper part of the sequence as metre-sized sills. In this study a comprehensive geochemical and isotopic (Sr, Nd, Pb) characterization of the New Caledonia olivine gabbronorites has been carried out. The gabbronorites are mainly formed (􀀀 50-80 vol%) by subhedral Ca-rich plagioclase (An up to 96 mol%). Mg-rich olivine (5-15 vol%, Fo = 87-89 mol%) occurs as irregularly shaped, resorbed crystals. Clinopyroxene (15-20 vol%) is generally rimmed by interstitial to poikilitic orthopyroxene (5-15 vol%). Fe-Ti oxides and hydrous phases are absent. Clinopyroxene shows high Mg# (88-92), low Al2O3 (1.5-2.4 wt%) and negligible TiO2 and Na2O contents. Whole rock compositions display high Mg# (86-92) and concentrations of incompatible trace elements lower than arc rocks worldwide. REE patterns show LREE depletion, nearly flat HREE segments (0.82 ≤ DyN/YbN ≤ 1.00), low HREE (YbN = 0.2-0.9) and positive Eu anomalies. Cpx trace element chemistry mirrors the extreme depletion shown by the whole rock. In contrast with this depleted nature, positive spikes for the most incompatible, fluid mobile elements (FME), i.e., Pb and Sr, can be observed both for whole rock and Cpx. The calculated compositions of the putative melts in equilibrium with the gabbroic rocks are consistent with melting of a refractory mantle source in the spinel stability field. The inferred melts have high Mg# of 75-76. Trace element contents indicate derivation from ultra-depleted liquids, sharing some affinities with the most primitive boninites of the Bonin Islands, but with lower contents of LREE and other highly incompatible trace elements (Ba, Pb, Sr, Zr, Hf). FME enrichments, together with high Pb/Ce, Sr/Nd and Ba/Th ratios, shed light on the involvement of a subduction-related fluid in the magma genesis of these rocks. Nd isotopic data (+8.2 ≤ εNdi ≤+9.2) coupled with Pb isotopic values trending from DM to Pacific sediments compositions, also support an origin from a homogenous DM reservoir variably reenriched by slab-derived fluids. We interpret the contrasting geochemical signature of the New Caledonia gabbronorites as reflecting a derivation from a refractory mantle source, which experienced contamination processes by fluids, some of which are related to slab dehydration during the onset of the Eocene subduction.

The contrasting geochemical message from the New Caledonia gabbronorites: insights on depletion and contamination processes of the sub-arc mantle in a nascent arc setting / A. Secchiari, A. Montanini, D. Bosch, P. Macera, D. Cluzel. ((Intervento presentato al convegno Congresso congiunto SIMP-SOGEI-AIV tenutosi a Pisa nel 2017.

The contrasting geochemical message from the New Caledonia gabbronorites: insights on depletion and contamination processes of the sub-arc mantle in a nascent arc setting

A. Secchiari
Primo
;
2017

Abstract

The New Caledonia ophiolite hosts one of the rare examples of crust-mantle sections formed in a nascent arc setting, thus providing the unique opportunity to improve our understanding of the formation of lower arc roots. This sequence includes ultra-depleted harzburgites that suffered very high melting degrees (􀀀 20-25%), overlain by mafic-ultramafic lithologies. The ultramafic rocks (mainly dunites and wehrlites) resulted from melt-peridotite reactions involving primitive arc tholeiites and boninitic melts. The mafic rocks are olivine gabbronorites occurring in the upper part of the sequence as metre-sized sills. In this study a comprehensive geochemical and isotopic (Sr, Nd, Pb) characterization of the New Caledonia olivine gabbronorites has been carried out. The gabbronorites are mainly formed (􀀀 50-80 vol%) by subhedral Ca-rich plagioclase (An up to 96 mol%). Mg-rich olivine (5-15 vol%, Fo = 87-89 mol%) occurs as irregularly shaped, resorbed crystals. Clinopyroxene (15-20 vol%) is generally rimmed by interstitial to poikilitic orthopyroxene (5-15 vol%). Fe-Ti oxides and hydrous phases are absent. Clinopyroxene shows high Mg# (88-92), low Al2O3 (1.5-2.4 wt%) and negligible TiO2 and Na2O contents. Whole rock compositions display high Mg# (86-92) and concentrations of incompatible trace elements lower than arc rocks worldwide. REE patterns show LREE depletion, nearly flat HREE segments (0.82 ≤ DyN/YbN ≤ 1.00), low HREE (YbN = 0.2-0.9) and positive Eu anomalies. Cpx trace element chemistry mirrors the extreme depletion shown by the whole rock. In contrast with this depleted nature, positive spikes for the most incompatible, fluid mobile elements (FME), i.e., Pb and Sr, can be observed both for whole rock and Cpx. The calculated compositions of the putative melts in equilibrium with the gabbroic rocks are consistent with melting of a refractory mantle source in the spinel stability field. The inferred melts have high Mg# of 75-76. Trace element contents indicate derivation from ultra-depleted liquids, sharing some affinities with the most primitive boninites of the Bonin Islands, but with lower contents of LREE and other highly incompatible trace elements (Ba, Pb, Sr, Zr, Hf). FME enrichments, together with high Pb/Ce, Sr/Nd and Ba/Th ratios, shed light on the involvement of a subduction-related fluid in the magma genesis of these rocks. Nd isotopic data (+8.2 ≤ εNdi ≤+9.2) coupled with Pb isotopic values trending from DM to Pacific sediments compositions, also support an origin from a homogenous DM reservoir variably reenriched by slab-derived fluids. We interpret the contrasting geochemical signature of the New Caledonia gabbronorites as reflecting a derivation from a refractory mantle source, which experienced contamination processes by fluids, some of which are related to slab dehydration during the onset of the Eocene subduction.
2017
New Caledonia ophiolite; Sr Nd Pb isotopes; intra-oceanic arcs;
Settore GEO/07 - Petrologia e Petrografia
Società Geologica Italiana
The contrasting geochemical message from the New Caledonia gabbronorites: insights on depletion and contamination processes of the sub-arc mantle in a nascent arc setting / A. Secchiari, A. Montanini, D. Bosch, P. Macera, D. Cluzel. ((Intervento presentato al convegno Congresso congiunto SIMP-SOGEI-AIV tenutosi a Pisa nel 2017.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/946442
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