Abstract

Here, we report that the Finero phlogopite peridotite massif, southern Italy, a sliver of the former subcontinental lithospheric mantle (SCLM), experienced two stages of fluid/melt percolation, which had different origins and scales in the mantle wedge based on noble gas analysis and the deformation structure. In the field investigation, we found a mylonite zone several tens of meters wide in the massif, inferred to have been caused by deformation in the mantle. Systematic differences in noble gas compositions between samples from inside and outside the mylonite zone reflect two stages of fluid/melt infiltration. In the first event, the fluid/melt with a noble gas mixture of seawater, radiogenic, and mantle components penetrated the Finero SCLM. It likely occurred simultaneously with the famous metasomatism that crystallized phlogopite and amphibole throughout the massif. This first event produced a 4He/40Ar ratio much higher than those of the convecting mantle and crustal components, probably during metasomatism by hydrous melt derived from the slab in the mantle wedge. The second event was probably synchronous with the development of mylonitization and locally supplied seawater-rich components. The 40Ar/36Ar ratios tend to be atmospheric as mylonitization progresses. Our results provide two insights: (i) the first demonstration of the formation of extremely high He/Ar ratios during mantle metasomatism of natural samples and (ii) differences in the deformation structure affecting the noble gas composition and distribution in the SCLM. Regarding (i), the elemental fractionation can be attributed to two factors: one is the difference in the solubility between noble gas elements in particular minerals in the slab, and the other is the difference in the diffusion coefficients of He and Ar. Our results imply that the recycling of volatiles within subduction zones is significantly influenced by the thermal structures of slabs. This is because these thermal structures control the stability of hydrous minerals on the slabs, temperature conditions, and potentially the efficiency of diffusion in mantle wedges.

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