Abstract

AbstractOcean-island basalts (OIBs) are considered to be messengers from the deep mantle, yet the filtering effect of the plumbing systems that bring OIB melts to the surface remains poorly assessed. We investigated volcanic products from El Hierro island (Canary Islands) from textural and chemical perspectives. The majority of geochemical data cluster at relatively fractionated basaltic compositions of 5 wt% MgO. Compositions ≥10 wt% MgO are porphyritic whole rocks that accumulate mafic minerals. Near-primary melts do not erupt. Instead, we show that carrier melts (crystal-free whole rocks, glasses, and melt inclusions) are consistently buffered to low-MgO compositions during passage through the plumbing system. We tested our model of melt fractionation and crystal accumulation on a global compilation of OIBs. Similar to El Hierro, the majority of data cluster at evolved compositions of 5 wt% MgO (alkaline) to 7 wt% MgO (tholeiitic). Modeling the fractionation of OIB parental melts, we show that with 50% crystallization, OIB melts reach 5 wt% MgO with reduced density, increased volatile content, and overall low viscosity, becoming positively buoyant relative to wall rocks and highly eruptible when reaching volatile saturation at depths around the crust-mantle boundary. Under these conditions, 5 wt% MgO OIB “sweet spot” melts are propelled to the surface and erupt carrying an assortment of recycled crystals. This mechanism is consistent with the petrography and chemistry of erupted products and suggests OIB volcanoes are dominated by low-MgO basaltic melts.

Highlights

  • Volcanoes are surface expressions of complex pathways of magma transport and storage

  • Compared to crystal records (Ganne et al, 2018), less attention has been placed on the filtering effect of the plumbing system on erupted melts (Hartley and Maclennan, 2018)

  • El Hierro offers a complex ocean-island basalts (OIBs) plumbing system (Klügel et al, 2015) and outstanding exposures of feeder dikes and associated lava flows that illustrate the effect of crystal accumulation on bulk-rock compositions (Fig. 1)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Volcanoes are surface expressions of complex pathways of magma transport and storage. Compared to crystal records (Ganne et al, 2018), less attention has been placed on the filtering effect of the plumbing system on erupted melts (Hartley and Maclennan, 2018). This is relevant for ocean-island basalts (OIBs), with chemistries long recognized to reflect melt generation in the garnet stability field at great mantle depths (Budahn and Schmidt, 1985; O’Neill, 2016). El Hierro offers a complex OIB plumbing system (Klügel et al, 2015) and outstanding exposures of feeder dikes and associated lava flows that illustrate the effect of crystal accumulation on bulk-rock compositions (Fig. 1). We explored the petrographic controls on the interpretation of OIB chemistries and their implications for the composition and architecture of the oceanic crust in OIB settings

MELT FRACTIONATION AND CRYSTAL ACCUMULATION
Findings
GLOBAL OIBS AS NONPRIMITIVE LIQUIDS
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