Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5784048 Lithos 2017 53 Pages PDF
Abstract
Several generations of amphibole are recognized in accord with this multi-stage evolution. Texturally unequilibrated amphibole occurring within the peridotite matrix and in melt pockets attest to continued hydration and refertilization of the lithospheric mantle subsequent to Oligocene flood basalt magmatism, during which an earlier-emplaced inventory of amphibole was likely largely consumed. However, a single harzburgite contains amphibole with the highest Mg# and lowest TiO2 content, which is interpreted as sampling a volumetrically subordinate mantle region beneath the Ethiopian plateau that was not tapped during flood basalt magmatism. Strikingly, both trace-element enriched and depleted lherzolites have high clinopyroxene and orthopyroxene and low olivine contents (median 15, 24 and 56 vol.%), combined with primitive olivine Mg# (median 89.5), indicating the presence of refertilized mantle beneath Gundeweyn. Despite its fertility and FeO-rich character (hence high inferred density), and impingement by the Afar plume, the CLM beneath the Ethiopian plateau, though apparently thinned through thermochemical erosion, has so far resisted whole-sale delamination or dripping. This is tentatively ascribed to insufficient stress and density contrasts at the periphery of the Afar plume, which reached its greatest thermochemical buoyancy in the Afar region, northeast of Gundeweyn.
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Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geochemistry and Petrology
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