کد مقاله کد نشریه سال انتشار مقاله انگلیسی نسخه تمام متن
4700852 1637747 2007 27 صفحه PDF دانلود رایگان
عنوان انگلیسی مقاله ISI
The application of olivine geothermometry to infer crystallization temperatures of parental liquids: Implications for the temperature of MORB magmas
موضوعات مرتبط
مهندسی و علوم پایه علوم زمین و سیارات ژئوشیمی و پترولوژی
پیش نمایش صفحه اول مقاله
The application of olivine geothermometry to infer crystallization temperatures of parental liquids: Implications for the temperature of MORB magmas
چکیده انگلیسی

We have performed a detailed evaluation of three olivine geothermometers for anhydrous systems representing three different approaches to modelling olivine-melt equilibrium. The Ford et al. [Ford, C. E., Russell, D. G., Craven, J.A., Fisk, M. R., 1983. Olivine-liquid equilibria: Temperature, pressure and composition dependence of the crystal/liquid cation partition coefficients for Mg, Fe2+, Ca and Mn. J. Petrol., 24, 256–265.] geothermometer describes olivine liquidus temperature as a function of melt composition and pressure, and the composition of the liquidus olivine as a function of melt composition, pressure and temperature. The Herzberg and O'Hara [Herzberg, C., O'Hara, M.J., 2002. Plume-associated ultramafic magmas of Phanerozoic Age. Journal of Petrology, 43, 1857–1883.] geothermometer describes olivine liquidus temperature similarly to Ford et al. [Ford, C. E., Russell, D. G., Craven, J.A., Fisk, M. R., 1983. Olivine-liquid equilibria: Temperature, pressure and composition dependence of the crystal/liquid cation partition coefficients for Mg, Fe2+, Ca and Mn. J. Petrol., 24, 256–265.], and olivine composition as function of melt composition only. The Putirka [Putirka, K.D., 2005. Mantle potential temperatures at Hawaii, Iceland, and the mid-ocean ridge system, as inferred from olivine phenocrysts: evidence for thermally driven mantle plumes, Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst., 6, Q05L08, doi:10.1029/2005GC000915.] geothermometer describes both olivine liquidus temperature and composition as function of melt composition only. A comparison of these three geothermometers with experimental data at 0.1 MPa and 1.5 GPa reveals that the Ford et al. [Ford, C. E., Russell, D. G., Craven, J.A., Fisk, M. R., 1983. Olivine-liquid equilibria: Temperature, pressure and composition dependence of the crystal/liquid cation partition coefficients for Mg, Fe2+, Ca and Mn. J. Petrol., 24, 256–265.] geothermometer is the most successful in reproducing experimental temperatures and olivine-melt KD's. We therefore recommend that the Ford et al. [Ford, C. E., Russell, D. G., Craven, J.A., Fisk, M. R., 1983. Olivine-liquid equilibria: Temperature, pressure and composition dependence of the crystal/liquid cation partition coefficients for Mg, Fe2+, Ca and Mn. J. Petrol., 24, 256–265.] olivine geothermometer be used in parental liquid calculations that involve the incremental addition of olivine to obtain equilibrium with a target olivine phenocryst composition at low pressure. The thermometer of Putirka [Putirka, K.D., 2005. Mantle potential temperatures at Hawaii, Iceland, and the mid-ocean ridge system, as inferred from olivine phenocrysts: evidence for thermally driven mantle plumes, Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst., 6, Q05L08, doi:10.1029/2005GC000915.] was found to systematically calculate anomalously high temperatures for high MgO experimental compositions at both 0.1 MPa and 1.5 GPa. The application of the Ford et al. [Ford, C. E., Russell, D. G., Craven, J.A., Fisk, M. R., 1983. Olivine-liquid equilibria: Temperature, pressure and composition dependence of the crystal/liquid cation partition coefficients for Mg, Fe2+, Ca and Mn. J. Petrol., 24, 256–265.] geothermometer to calculate the temperatures of crystallization for parental MORB liquids in mid-crustal magma chambers reveals that there is an ∼ 115 °C temperature range. The hottest MORB parental liquids have crystallisation temperatures of ∼ 1345 °C (MgO contents ∼ 16 wt.%) for a mid-crustal pressure of 0.2 Gpa.

ناشر
Database: Elsevier - ScienceDirect (ساینس دایرکت)
Journal: Chemical Geology - Volume 241, Issues 3–4, 15 July 2007, Pages 207–233
نویسندگان
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