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Published November 1, 2013 | Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

The hydrogen isotopic composition and water content of southern Pacific MORB: A reassessment of the D/H ratio of the depleted mantle reservoir

Abstract

In this paper, we re-investigate the isotopic composition of hydrogen in MORB and the possible effects of contamination on δD and water content. A suite of 40 N-MORB from the Pacific–Antarctic ridge, far from any hotspot, was analyzed for chlorine content by electron microprobe and for water content and δD with silica tubes. Cl concentrations (from 29 to 2400 ppm) indicate widespread contamination, more intense with faster spreading rates, while water contents (from 840 to 7800 ppm) are mainly controlled by igneous processes. δD values range from −76 to −48‰−48‰, with an average value of −61‰−61‰. The lack of correlation between Cl content and either H_2O/Ce or δD indicate that contamination has a negligible effect on δD for our samples, which is therefore characteristic of the mantle below the Pacific–Antarctic ridge. We suggest that the 20‰ lower δD value reported for the North Pacific and North Atlantic is highly unlikely from geodynamical arguments. We propose that the convecting mantle is characterized by a δD of −60±5‰−60±5‰, as supported by the most recent data from North Atlantic N-MORB.

Additional Information

© 2013 Elsevier B.V. Received 26 February 2013; Received in revised form 4 August 2013; Accepted 19 August 2013; Available online 25 September 2013. Editor: B. Marty. The LSCE provided the water standards used for this study. We wish to thank Michel Fialin for his assistance in performing the chlorine content measurements, Manuel Moreira for access to the PACANTARCTIC 2 samples, Cédric Hamelin for early access to geochemical data on those samples and Jean-Jacques Bourrand for the construction and maintenance of the vacuum lines used in this study. We thank Alberto Saal and Phil Ihinger for their detailed and constructive reviews that helped improving our manuscript. We acknowledge support from the CNRS via its SEDIT research program. This is IPGP contribution number 3433.

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