TY - JOUR
T1 - A 400 Ma-long Nd-Hf isotopic evolution of melt-modified garnet-pyroxenites in an ancient subcontinental lithosphere (Lanzo North ophiolite, Western Alps)
AU - Sanfilippo, Alessio
AU - Borghini, Giulio
AU - Guarnieri, Luisa
AU - Nakamura, Eizo
AU - Piccardo, Giovanni B.
AU - Vannucci, Riccardo
AU - Zanetti, Alberto
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was improved by constructive reviews from E. Rampone and R. Tilhac. N. Rizzo and A. Mosconi are acknowledged for preliminary work on the chemical data. A. Risplendente is thanked for assistance with the WDS data. Analyses carried out at the Pheasant Memorial Laboratory were supported by PML members, especially Chie Sakaguchi at Misasa. This study is partly supported by the Italian Programma di Rilevante Interesse Nazionale to A. Sanfilippo (PRIN_2017KY5ZX8). This project was partially supported by 21 COE Program of MEXT Japan represented by EN.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2022/1/20
Y1 - 2022/1/20
N2 - Pyroxenite veining is widely preserved in peridotite massifs, and used to derive information on the origin and evolution of upper mantle domains. These lithospheric mantle sections can be isolated from the convecting mantle for >1 Ga or more, suffering a long history of melting and/or melt-rock reaction processes, which modify their original chemical and isotopic compositions. Here, we show the effect of ancient process of melt-rock reaction in the chemistry of garnet pyroxenites from Lanzo North Massif, an iconic lithospheric mantle section exhumed during the opening of the Jurassic Alpine Tethys. Selected pyroxenites are more than 10 cm thick, and embedded within peridotites that have textures and chemical compositions indicative of a complex history of interaction with migrating melts. Whole rock and clinopyroxene Nd-Hf isotopes of the pyroxenites consistently indicate that the first melt-rock reaction event occurred at ~400 Ma, likely in combination with exhumation from the garnet to the spinel-facies mantle conditions. Two samples still retain textural relicts and chemical evidence of precursor garnet and have high εNd (~12) for comparatively low εHf (~10), when recalculated at 400 Ma, which suggest that they were less affected by this ancient percolation process. The chemical evidence of such a long history of melt-rock reactions was preserved from 400 Ma until present. Finally, two pyroxenites located within plagioclase peridotites show evidence for an event of re-equilibration at plagioclase-facies conditions, likely triggered by infiltration of melt in the host rock. These samples reveal the coexistence of two internal Sm-Nd isochrones at 152 ± 30 Ma and 149 ± 13 Ma, thereby providing temporal constraints to the event of melt impregnation of the host peridotites as consequence of the opening of the Ligurian Tethys ocean.
AB - Pyroxenite veining is widely preserved in peridotite massifs, and used to derive information on the origin and evolution of upper mantle domains. These lithospheric mantle sections can be isolated from the convecting mantle for >1 Ga or more, suffering a long history of melting and/or melt-rock reaction processes, which modify their original chemical and isotopic compositions. Here, we show the effect of ancient process of melt-rock reaction in the chemistry of garnet pyroxenites from Lanzo North Massif, an iconic lithospheric mantle section exhumed during the opening of the Jurassic Alpine Tethys. Selected pyroxenites are more than 10 cm thick, and embedded within peridotites that have textures and chemical compositions indicative of a complex history of interaction with migrating melts. Whole rock and clinopyroxene Nd-Hf isotopes of the pyroxenites consistently indicate that the first melt-rock reaction event occurred at ~400 Ma, likely in combination with exhumation from the garnet to the spinel-facies mantle conditions. Two samples still retain textural relicts and chemical evidence of precursor garnet and have high εNd (~12) for comparatively low εHf (~10), when recalculated at 400 Ma, which suggest that they were less affected by this ancient percolation process. The chemical evidence of such a long history of melt-rock reactions was preserved from 400 Ma until present. Finally, two pyroxenites located within plagioclase peridotites show evidence for an event of re-equilibration at plagioclase-facies conditions, likely triggered by infiltration of melt in the host rock. These samples reveal the coexistence of two internal Sm-Nd isochrones at 152 ± 30 Ma and 149 ± 13 Ma, thereby providing temporal constraints to the event of melt impregnation of the host peridotites as consequence of the opening of the Ligurian Tethys ocean.
KW - Lanzo ophiolite
KW - Melt-rock reaction
KW - Nd-Hf isotopes
KW - Pyroxenite
KW - Subcontinental lithospheric mantle
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U2 - 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2021.120643
DO - 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2021.120643
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85119895753
SN - 0009-2541
VL - 588
JO - Chemical Geology
JF - Chemical Geology
M1 - 120643
ER -