Tracking continental-scale modification of the Earth's mantle using zircon megacrysts

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Abstract

Metasomatism, the chemical alteration of rocks by a variety of melts and fluids, has formed a key concept in studies of the Earth's mantle for decades. Metasomatic effects are often inferred to be far-reaching and yet the evidence for their occurrence is usually based upon individual hand specimens or suites of rocks that display considerable heterogeneity. In rare cases, however, we are offered insights into larger-scale chemical modifications that occur in the mantle. Here we utilise the Lu-Hf systematics of zircon megacrysts erupted in kimberlite magmas to discern two temporally and compositionally discrete metasomatic events in the mantle beneath southern Africa, each having an influence extending over an area exceeding one million km2. These data provide unambiguous evidence for metasomatic processes operating at continental scales and seemingly unperturbed by the age and composition of the local lithospheric mantle. The most recent of these events may be associated with the major Jurassic-Karoo magmatism in southern Africa.

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Woodhead, J., Hergt, J., Giuliani, A., Phillips, D., & Maas, R. (2017). Tracking continental-scale modification of the Earth’s mantle using zircon megacrysts. Geochemical Perspectives Letters, 4, 1–6. https://doi.org/10.7185/geochemlet.1727

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