Abstract

Long-lived radiogenic isotopes of abyssal peridotites, residues of MORB extraction, show that the asthenosphere is intrinsically heterogeneous, which is inherited from ancient melting events and crustal recycling during Earth's history. Yet, Mid Ocean Ridge Basalts (MORB) have a rather uniform average composition, suggesting that the variability of their mantle source is concealed during their ascent. Here we document that mantle heterogeneity is exceptionally well preserved in high permeability mantle conduits from the Lanzo South mantle massif, Western Italian Alps. Nd-Hf-Os isotopes of decametre-scale replacive bodies provide evidence for the existence of two generations of mantle channels. The first generation consists of dunites concordant to the main foliation of host peridotites. The replacive dunites include clinopyroxene with MORB-like incompatible element signature and initial (160 Ma) ƐNd and ƐHf ranging from +4 to +7 and from +10 to +15, respectively. The second generation, made up of pyroxene-poor harzburgites discordant to the main foliation, is geochemically depleted in incompatible elements and its clinopyroxene displays highly radiogenic Hf isotopes (initial ƐHf up to +202). The mantle channel heterogeneity is confirmed by ReOs isotopes and platinum-groups elements. The MORB-type dunites have high Pt, Pd and, locally, Re, and have 187Os/188Os ratios similar to the host peridotite (0.122–0.128). On the other hand, the depleted bodies have lower Pt, Pd and Re, and 187Os/188Os ratios ranging from those of host peridotites (0.124) to highly unradiogenic values (0.118) in the most refractory sample. The preserved heterogeneity in trace elements, PGE, and Nd-Hf-Os isotopes highlights infiltration of melts from a highly heterogeneous mantle, still partially preserved within these mantle bodies. If applied to present-day Mid Ocean Ridges, our model indicates that the isotopic variability of melts migrating through replacive mantle conduits is by far larger than magmas erupted on the seafloor, which implies that diverse mantle components are mainly delivered and homogenised above the crust-mantle boundary.

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