Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4713169 Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research 2009 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

Basaltic magmatism associated with the Yellowstone hotspot has been widely attributed to upwelling of a mantle plume, yet the temporal and spatial distribution of these magmas and their compositional characteristics are distinctive from oceanic hotspot magmatism. Fundamental questions concern the influence of continental cratonic lithosphere in producing the differences, and the extent to which upper plate processes contribute to magma production. To better understand scenarios of melt generation, P–T conditions are estimated for segregation of primitive Snake River Plain (SRP) basalts from the mantle. Combined with analysis of trace element and seismic constraints, we conclude from this that (1) melt production was concentrated at depths between roughly 70–100 km, (2) mantle temperature was only slightly higher than ambient conditions with a maximum potential temperature of 1450 °C, and (3) the mantle source was relatively fertile (Mg# < 90). These results suggest that the seismically imaged plume below Yellowstone is significantly cooler than upwellings beneath Hawaii, Iceland and many other oceanic “hotspots”. Our findings, in combination with other geochemical and geodynamic considerations, are permissive of magma generation within the ancient lithospheric mantle keel associated with the Wyoming craton. Plume contributions, while not excluded, involve physical and geochemical implications that suggest they are subordinate.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geochemistry and Petrology
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