Li, B and Be contents of harzburgites from the dramala complex (Pindos Ophiolite, Greece): Evidence for a MOR-type mantle in a supra-subduction zone environment

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Abstract

The Pindos ophiolite represents oceanic lithosphere obducted during the Jurassic. The Dramala mantle section mainly consists of highly depleted spinel harzburgite and minor plagioclase-bearing harzburgite. Textural observations and major element compositions of minerals indicate that the harzburgites experienced impregnation by a mafic, depleted melt and subsequent high-temperature (high-T) hydration and cooling (>750°C) forming pargasite and edenitic hornblende. During further cooling (from ≥ 350-400°C to >100°C), talc + tremolite + serpentine + olivine, serpentine + magnetite, and finally plagioclase alteration phases formed. To test the hypothesis of a supra-subduction zone origin for the Dramala mantle, we measured Li, B and Be contents of minerals by secondary ion mass spectrometry. Whole-rock contents were measured using inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry and prompt gamma neutron activation analysis. We observe low Li and B contents of primary minerals (olivine, orthopyroxene, clinopyroxene) consistent with values for unmetasomatized mantle minerals; only Li contents of clinopyroxene (up to 3·7 μg/g) are slightly elevated. The bulk Li contents (0·5-1·1 μg/ g) are in the upper range of values for unmetasomatized mantle, whereas B contents (<0·04-1·1 μg/g) are variable and slightly elevated compared with the unmetasomatized mantle as a result of serpentinization. Beryllium abundances in all minerals are very low (<0·005 μg/g), except for pargasite, where a maximum Be content of 0·012 μg/g was measured. The selective addition of Li to clinopyroxene can be related to the interaction with a depleted melt, and/or to partitioning of Li into clinopyroxene upon cooling. During high-T hydration and cooling, the fluid calculated to be in equilibrium with the pargasite or edenitic hornblende (based on Li, Be and B) could have been reaction-modified seawater. Low-T hydration may have led to a very minor increase in bulk B content of most samples and to the formation of serpentine with highly variable B contents (0·1-28 μg/g). Low-T hydration decreased the Li content of orthopyroxene, and Li was probably leached from some samples. The lack of correlation between degree of serpentinization and bulk B contents as well as the presence of high- and low-B serpentine can be explained by low fluid-rock ratios, decreasing T during serpentinization and lack of equilibrium as a result of fast obduction-exhumation. The low light-element contents of primary minerals and whole-rock samples clearly argue against a supra-subduction zone (SSZ) origin of the Dramala mantle section, and against the previous hypothesis of hydrous melting of the Pindos mantle above a subduction zone. We therefore conclude that the Dramala harzburgites represent a mid-ocean ridge (MOR)-type mantle, and not an SSZ-type mantle, juxtaposed with MOR-type and SSZ-type oceanic crust, either in a back-arc or in an intra-oceanic subduction zone setting. © The Author 2008. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.

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Pelletier, L., Vils, F., Kalt, A., & Gméling, K. (2008). Li, B and Be contents of harzburgites from the dramala complex (Pindos Ophiolite, Greece): Evidence for a MOR-type mantle in a supra-subduction zone environment. Journal of Petrology, 49(11), 2043–2080. https://doi.org/10.1093/petrology/egn057

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