Abstract

The dichotomy between partial melting and metasomatism is a paradigm of mantle geochemistry since the pioneering work of Frey and Prinz (1978) on the occurrence of LREE-enriched harzburgites. However, the thermo-chemical implications of such two-stage scenarios are often poorly considered, and the latter fail to explain why trace-element enrichment and major-element depletion are often proportional. We here re-envisage the petrogenesis of the famous San Carlos peridotites based on new petrographic observations and detailed modal, major- and trace-element compositions. The lherzolites (and pyroxenites) are characterized by homogeneously fertile mineral chemistry and LREE-depleted patterns consistent with low degrees of partial melting of the lherzolitic protolith. Bulk compositions and mineral zoning suggest that opx-rich pyroxenites formed by pressure-solution creep during melt-present deformation, locally accompanied by magmatic segregations of cpx. The harzburgites are characterized by stronger mineral zoning with low-Mg# and Na-, Al- and Cr-rich cpx rims, and can be discriminated in a low-Jd and high-Jd cpx groups. The high-Jd group is interpreted as the result of local elemental redistribution in the presence of a low-degree hydrous melt, in good agreement with their wide range of LREE enrichment. In contrast, the MREE-to-HREE fractionation and increasing Cr# in spinel of the low-Jd group indicate that they experienced higher degrees of melting. Open-system melting simulations of trace-element fractionation during hydrous flux melting suggests that the high-Jd harzburgites are the result of low fluid influx producing poorly extracted melt, while higher influx led to higher melting degrees and efficient melt extraction in the low-Jd harzburgites; the lherzolites mostly remained below or near solidus during that process. The lithological and chemical heterogeneity of San Carlos mantle is thus compatible with a single-stage evolution, which is also supported by the striking consistency between Fe-Mg exchange and REE thermometric estimates (1057 and 1074 °C on average, respectively), indicating that harzburgites and lherzolites probably followed a similar P-T path and relatively little sub-solidus re-equilibration. These interpretations suggest that the development of melt extraction pathways promoted by reactive channeling instability is able to produce complex lithological heterogeneities during hydrous flux melting. This process provides a self-consistent explanation for the systematic enrichment of harzburgites observed in many mantle terranes and xenoliths worldwide. We argue that San Carlos is one of such examples where a ca 1.5-Ga continental lithosphere experienced localized flux melting and deformation during the tectonic reactivation of a Proterozoic subduction zone, providing new constraints on the mantle sources of volcanic activity in the Jemez Lineament.

Highlights

  • The paradoxical association of light rare earth element (LREE)-depleted fertile lherzolites and LREE-enriched harzburgites has long been controversial in mantle petrology

  • Based on new detailed observations and major- and trace-element compositions, we argue that (1) the lithological and chemical diversity of San Carlos harzburgites, lherzolites and pyroxenites can be mostly explained by a single-stage flux melting episode, owing to the inherent spatial variability of this complex process; and that (2) the paradoxical occurrence of LREE-depleted fertile lherzolites and LREE-enriched harzburgites may often reflect the development of melt extraction pathways controlled by pre-existing heterogeneities and the presence of volatiles

  • Cpx have LREE-depleted patterns (Fig. 8a) with (La/Sm)N = 0.27–0.41 positively correlated to the Yb concentration and are homogeneous at sample and mineral scale. These patterns contrast with the wide range of MREE-toHREE slopes [(Gd/Yb)N = 0.5–2.9] and LREE enrichment observed in harzburgites where (La/Sm)N = 1.1–1.6 is roughly negatively correlated to the Yb concentration

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Summary

Introduction

The paradoxical association of light rare earth element (LREE)-depleted fertile lherzolites and LREE-enriched harzburgites has long been controversial in mantle petrology. In the absence of petrographic evidence for modal metasomatism, partial melting or breakdown reactions, fluidinduced metasomatism must be limited to a narrow range of P-T conditions below the wet peridotite solidus and above the stability field of hydrous/volatile-bearing phases (phlogopite, mica, amphibole, etc.) These considerations reflect the limitations of a reasoning based on discrete magmatic processes and the dichotomy between magmatism and metasomatism (see Kiseeva et al, 2017) and an ongoing paradigm change. Based on new detailed observations and major- and trace-element compositions, we argue that (1) the lithological and chemical diversity of San Carlos harzburgites, lherzolites and pyroxenites can be mostly explained by a single-stage flux melting episode, owing to the inherent spatial variability of this complex process; and that (2) the paradoxical occurrence of LREE-depleted fertile lherzolites and LREE-enriched harzburgites may often reflect the development of melt extraction pathways controlled by pre-existing heterogeneities and the presence of volatiles

Geology and petrography of San Carlos xenoliths
Modal compositions and mineral chemistry
Trace-element compositions
Lherzolite fertility and the origin of pyroxenites
Incipient flux melting and melt extraction in harzburgites
Systematic enrichment of mantle harzburgites: single vs multi-stage scenarios
Findings
Reactivation of ancient lithosphere and the sources of the Jemez Lineament
Conclusions
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