Abstract

The Mascarene Islands in the western Indian Ocean, encompassing La Réunion, Mauritius, and Rodrigues, are the recent (<10 Ma) surface expressions of the Réunion hotspot. Ocean island basalts (OIB) from these islands exhibit a remarkably homogeneous long-lived radiogenic isotopic composition, coinciding with the convergence field of many global OIB trends in the mantle array. Réunion plume-related OIB therefore provide one of Earth’s most pristine representations of this “focal zone” component, which may have a primordial heritage. Besides this signature, Mascarene lavas have been suggested to retain contributions from sources with distinct compositions, including: (1) Archaean-aged zircons assimilated from continental crust within the oceanic lithosphere by trachytic magmas from Mauritius; (2) more deeply recycled continental crust components preserved by elevated 87Sr/86Sr and 208Pb/206Pb in lavas from the Piton des Neiges volcano of Réunion; and (3) an isotopically depleted mantle component resulting from interaction with Central Indian Ridge material.In this study we use Sr-Nd-Pb isotope systematics, along with major and trace element compositions of basaltic lavas from all three Mascarene Islands to investigate the relationship of their sources to well-characterized mantle endmembers. Among the Mascarene Islands, Rodrigues lavas are the most enriched in highly incompatible elements, likely reflecting shallower and lower degrees of partial melting than Réunion or Mauritius. Combined Sr-Nd-Pb isotope compositions indicate that lavas from the Older Series of Mauritius resemble those from Réunion, whereas lavas from the Younger and Intermediate Series, together with Rodrigues, are consistent with contributions from an isotopically depleted component. In addition, the Pb isotopic compositions of Rodrigues samples require an additional contribution from a component with a long-term enrichment in its Th/U ratio. Based on isotope mixing models, direct assimilation of continental crust embedded within the oceanic lithosphere is unlikely to account for the Pb isotopic variation of Rodrigues. A metasomatized mantle component, previously envisaged as a “fossil” Réunion plume near the Central Indian Ridge, is partially able to reproduce the trace element signature, but not the observed Sr-Nd-Pb isotopic compositions of Rodrigues. Instead, small proportions (<5%) of an EM1-like component provide a preferred endmember. The composition and origin of this component, which is exclusively reflected within Rodrigues lavas, may constitute a new geochemical feature of the Mascarene Islands and is consistent with geodynamical predictions that small-scale enriched mantle domains may be widespread in the source regions of hotspot volcanoes.

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