Selective enrichment or depletion in either Zr and Hf (HFSE4+) or Nb and Ta (HFSE5+) is a feature commonly observed in many mantle-derived melts and amphiboles occurring as either disseminated minerals in mantle xenoliths and peridotite massifs or in vein assemblages cutting these rocks. The fractionation of Nb from Zr seen in natural mantle amphiboles suggests that their incorporation is governed by different crystal-chemical mechanisms. An extensive set of new partitioning experiments between pargasite/kaersutite and melt under upper-mantle conditions shows that HFSE incorporation and fractionation depends on amphibole major-element composition and the presence or absence of dehydrogenation. Multiple regression analysis shows that Amph/LDNb/Zr is strongly dependent on the mg# of the amphibole due to a combination of amphibole- and melt structure effects, so that the following generalisations apply: i) high-mg# amphiboles crystallised from unmodified mantle melts more easily incorporate Zr relative to Nb leading to an increase of the Nb/Zr ratio in the residual melt; ii) low-mg# amphiboles, such as those found in veins cutting peridotites, may strongly deplete the residual melt in Nb and cause very low Nb/Zr in residual melts. Implications and applications to mantle environments are discussed.

Fractionation of Nb and Ta from Zr and Hf at mantle depths: the role of titanian pargasite and kaersutite

TIEPOLO M;OBERTI R;ZANETTI A
2001

Abstract

Selective enrichment or depletion in either Zr and Hf (HFSE4+) or Nb and Ta (HFSE5+) is a feature commonly observed in many mantle-derived melts and amphiboles occurring as either disseminated minerals in mantle xenoliths and peridotite massifs or in vein assemblages cutting these rocks. The fractionation of Nb from Zr seen in natural mantle amphiboles suggests that their incorporation is governed by different crystal-chemical mechanisms. An extensive set of new partitioning experiments between pargasite/kaersutite and melt under upper-mantle conditions shows that HFSE incorporation and fractionation depends on amphibole major-element composition and the presence or absence of dehydrogenation. Multiple regression analysis shows that Amph/LDNb/Zr is strongly dependent on the mg# of the amphibole due to a combination of amphibole- and melt structure effects, so that the following generalisations apply: i) high-mg# amphiboles crystallised from unmodified mantle melts more easily incorporate Zr relative to Nb leading to an increase of the Nb/Zr ratio in the residual melt; ii) low-mg# amphiboles, such as those found in veins cutting peridotites, may strongly deplete the residual melt in Nb and cause very low Nb/Zr in residual melts. Implications and applications to mantle environments are discussed.
2001
Istituto di Geoscienze e Georisorse - IGG - Sede Pisa
Inglese
42
221
232
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Pargasite
Kaersutite
HFSE fractionation
Mantle processes
Melt migration
Zr(Hf) and Nb(Ta) are generally considered incompatible elements with similar geochemical behaviour. However, in many natural situations a decoupling between these elements is observed. In this work for the first time on the basis of new set of experimentally determined amphibole/liquid partition coefficients the different behaviour of elements has been demonstrated and in particular the capability of amphibole in fractionating Nb(Ta) from Zr(Hf) has been shown. The results of this work, well accepted by this high rate journal, have a large importance in the modelling of mantle processes and melt migration in the upper mantle.
6
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Tiepolo, M; Bottazzi, P; Foley, Sf; Oberti, R; Vannucci, R; Zanetti, A
01 Contributo su Rivista::01.01 Articolo in rivista
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/24377
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