Abstract

Serpentinites play a pivotal role in carrying fluids and different elements into the Earth’s mantle. However, their role in exchanging silica (Si) between the marine environment and the mantle remains a matter of investigation. The Wadi Igla serpentinite (southern Eastern Desert of Egypt) formed at the expense of abyssal harzburgite by ∼15–22 % melting. It contains abundant Cr-spinel with sub-microscopic serpentine and chlorite-rich pores providing a base to explore Si cycling during serpentinization-carbonatization processes. The low-grade metamorphism of the harzburgite protolith started on the ocean floor, forming lizardite and chlorite (250–300 °C). Increasing the temperature (400–450 °C) caused the formation of brucite and antigorite. With the subduction in the fore-arc and the interaction with subducting sediments-related CO2-rich fluid, the Wadi Igla serpentinite underwent metasomatism, producing chlorite (300 °C), antigorite, tremolite, dolomite, and ferritchromite rims around Cr-spinel (Type 1), with brucite loss. In the upper greenschist-lower amphibolite facies (ca. 500 °C), CO2-rich hydrothermal fluids (with XCO2 of ∼0.55) penetrated a large volume of the protolith leading to full serpentinization together with abundant magnesite replacement. The resultant silica-rich fluids percolated in the Type 1 Cr-spinel from the outward to cores through microfractures and pores, producing Type 2 and Type 3 Cr-spinel with serpentine ± chlorite along cleavages, diminished Al-cores and growing outer ferritchromite zone and/or Cr-magnetite to magnetite zones. The suprachondritic NbN/LaN (up to 39.35) and NbN/BaN (up to 13.37) of whole rock implies for HFSEs metasomatism by subduction sediments input components, while slight enrichment in LREEs (LaN/YbN = 2.5–3) and FMEs (Li, Pb, Sr, and Ba) may have resulted from serpentinization-related hydrothermal alteration. The Wadi Igla serpentinite indicates silica cycled in a closed system, suggesting that the altered Neoproterozoic oceanic lithosphere may not have shared their main components with the surrounding environment whether to the ocean floor or the subduction zone.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call