Abstract

AbstractWe analyzed a set of mantle xenoliths from the Fernando de Noronha archipelago to constrain the roles of deformation, cooling, annealing, and melt percolation in the evolution of the mantle lithosphere of the equatorial Atlantic. The peridotites are dominantly lherzolites with coarse granular or porphyroclastic microstructures. Equilibrium temperatures range between 850 and 1,000 °C. Olivine crystal preferred orientations (CPO) have mainly orthorhombic patterns characterized by clear [100] and [010] point maxima or a fiber‐[100] tendency; these patterns imply deformation by dislocation creep with dominant activation of the [100](010) slip system. Olivine fiber‐[010] patterns are less common; they probably result from recrystallization or melt‐rock interaction. Annealing after deformation partially recovered the microstructures and reduced the olivine CPO strength. Pyroxene CPOs often have weak consistency with olivine CPO, implying post‐deformation refertilization. Chemical compositions are systematically more fertile than those from abyssal peridotites from the Mid‐Atlantic Ridge. These compositions together with the microstructures suggest two stages of melt‐rock interaction. An early refertilization of the base of the lithosphere due to continuous percolation of small melt fractions and later, more important, but local chemical changes (both refertilization and dunitization) as well as recrystallization due to reactive melt percolation likely associated with the Cenozoic volcanism. By comparing the calculated seismic properties with existing seismological data we argue that the moderate seismic anisotropy displayed by the Fernando de Noronha mantle xenoliths likely records past horizontal asthenospheric flow parallel to the spreading direction frozen in the lithospheric mantle as the plate cooled.

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