Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5785510 | Journal of African Earth Sciences | 2017 | 40 Pages |
Abstract
Whole rock chemistry of DivriÄi wehrlites resembles serpentinized peridotites in Himalayas. They have high MgO (average 31.27Â wt%) and low Al2O3 (average 0.56Â wt%) concentrations and Mg/Si and Al/Si ratios imply that peridotites formed in a supra-subduction zone environment. The U-shaped REE patterns of serpentinized wehrlites are formed by partial melting, coupled with interaction between peridotite and hydrous melts in the mantle wedge. The spinels collected from serpentinized wehrlites show compositions ranging from chromite in the core to ferritchromite and Cr-magnetite at the rims and have high Cr2O3 (46.5-56.2Â wt%) and very low TiO2 contents (<0.3Â wt%). Cr# values (0.71-0.84) of studied spinels are consistent with those of selected spinels from Anatolian peridotites but their Mg# values (0.26-0.46) are significantly lower. Cr# values of DivriÄi spinels correspond to SSZ peridotites and indicate high-degree partial melting (>%35). Parental melt compositions computed (8.69-11.71Â wt% for Al2O3 and 0.1 to 0.37Â wt% for TiO2) from chromite-melt equilibrium conditions yield a boninitic affinity. Our data suggest that spinels from serpentinized wehrlites in the DivriÄi area are similar to peridotite xenoliths from the Kamchatka arc and West Bismarck.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geology
Authors
Taner Ãnlü, Sinan Akıska, Ece Varol, Ceyda Ãztürk, Halim Mutlu,