Abstract

Platinum-group elements (PGEs) are one of the key tracers to reveal early differentiation processes of the Earth due to their preferential distribution into the metallic core. Meanwhile, informative evidence for early differentiation has been greatly disturbed through metasomatic PGE disturbance, which has been demonstrated through a number of PGE data for natural mantle peridotites as well as base-metal sulfide and platinum group mineral grains therein. The mechanism and process of metasomatic PGE mobilization should be investigated in detail for an appropriate estimation of PGE abundance in the primitive upper mantle. However, this has not yet been achieved, because sub-micrometer-scale (i.e. scale of less than a micrometer) descriptions for metasomatic effects imprinted in the mantle peridotites have not been sufficiently recorded.Here, we report a sub-micrometer-sized sulfide–glass inclusion array in a Tahitian harzburgite xenolith. The textural and chemical characteristics were disclosed with employing synchrotron X-ray and transmission electron microscope analyses. The results demonstrate that the sulfide and glass contain appreciable amounts of PGE (9.7 at.% Ir, 4.3 at.% Rh and 5.8 at.% Pt) and carbon (21.2 at.% C), respectively. The sulfide–glass inclusion array is hosted in sodium-enriched clinopyroxene (up to 1.8wt% Na2O) that shows vein-like distribution and partly replaces orthopyroxene. Primitive mantle-normalized trace-element patterns of the clinopyroxene show a general increase from heavy rare-earth elements (REEs) to light REEs with negative anomalies in Pb and high-field-strength elements such as Zr, Hf and Ti, which indicate equilibration with Mg-rich carbonatitic melt. These results suggest that Na-bearing Mg-rich carbonatitic melts were involved in the harzburgite formation and that Ir, Rh and Pt were mobilized through carbonatitic metasomatism and eventually distributed in the sulfides.

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