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Hadean silicate differentiation preserved by anomalous 142Nd/144Nd ratios in the RĂ©union hotspot source.

Authors :
Peters, Bradley J.
Carlson, Richard W.
Day, James M. D.
Horan, Mary F.
Source :
Nature; 3/1/2018, Vol. 555 Issue 7694, p89-93, 5p, 14 Graphs
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Active volcanic hotspots can tap into domains in Earth's deep interior that were formed more than two billion years ago. High-precision data on variability in tungsten isotopes have shown that some of these domains resulted from differentiation events that occurred within the first fifty million years of Earth history. However, it has not proved easy to resolve analogous variability in neodymium isotope compositions that would track regions of Earth's interior whose composition was established by events occurring within roughly the first five hundred million years of Earth history. Here we report <superscript>142</superscript>Nd/<superscript>144</superscript>Nd ratios for Réunion Island igneous rocks, some of which are resolvably either higher or lower than the ratios in modern upper-mantle domains. We also find that Réunion <superscript>142</superscript>Nd/<superscript>144</superscript>Nd ratios correlate with helium-isotope ratios (<superscript>3</superscript>He/<superscript>4</superscript>He), suggesting parallel behaviour of these isotopic systems during very early silicate differentiation, perhaps as early as 4.39 billion years ago. The range of <superscript>142</superscript>Nd/<superscript>144</superscript>Nd ratios in Réunion basalts is inconsistent with a single-stage differentiation process, and instead requires mixing of a conjugate melt and residue formed in at least one melting event during the Hadean eon, 4.56 billion to 4 billion years ago. Efficient post-Hadean mixing nearly erased the ancient, anomalous <superscript>142</superscript>Nd/<superscript>144</superscript>Nd signatures, and produced the relatively homogeneous <superscript>143</superscript>Nd/<superscript>144</superscript>Nd composition that is characteristic of Réunion basalts. Our results show that Réunion magmas tap into a particularly ancient, primitive source compared with other volcanic hotspots, offering insight into the formation and preservation of ancient heterogeneities in Earth's interior. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Volume :
555
Issue :
7694
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
128240381
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature25754