Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8910482 | Chemical Geology | 2018 | 39 Pages |
Abstract
This study presents an analytical protocol for stable W isotope measurements including the calibration of a 180W-183W double-spike as well as W isotope and W concentration data of several geological reference materials (BHVO-2, AGV-2, SDC-1, W-2a, ScO-2, NOD-A-1, NOD-P-1). The reproducibility of stable W isotope measurements (± 0.018â° in δ186/184W; 2 s.d.) is significantly improved compared to previous studies, which allows resolving between the stable W isotope compositions of various rock reservoirs on Earth. Relative to the NIST SRM 3163 standard, the highest δ186/184W value was observed for the Pacific Mn crust NOD-P-1 (+ 0.154 ± 0.013â°; 2 s.d.; n = 6), which is significantly different from the δ186/184W value of the Atlantic Mn crust NOD-A-1 (+ 0.029 ± 0.014â°; 2 s.d.; n = 6). Considering equilibrium fractionation between seawater WO42 â and slowly growing Mn oxides, this indicates an isotopically heterogeneous distribution of W in the modern oceans. Igneous rocks also show a resolvable range in δ186/184W values. Magmatic reference materials range in δ186/184W between + 0.016 ± 0.032â° (andesite AGV-2; 2 s.d.; n = 5) and + 0.082 ± 0.010â° (basalt BHVO-2; 2 s.d.; n = 5) showing relative enrichment of light isotopes in more evolved magmatic rocks. These isotopic differences might result from isotope fractionation during magmatic differentiation. Alternatively, the mobilization of W by hydrothermal and/or magmatic fluids might be accompanied by isotope fractionation.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geochemistry and Petrology
Authors
Florian Kurzweil, Carsten Münker, Jonas Tusch, Ronny Schoenberg,