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Published September 2015 | public
Journal Article

Temporal evolution of mantle wedge oxygen fugacity during subduction initiation

Abstract

Arc basalts have a higher proportion of Fe in an oxidized state (Fe^(3+)) relative to Fe^(2+) compared to mid-oceanic ridge basalts (MORBs), likely because slab-derived fluids oxidize the mantle wedge where subduction zone magmas originate. Yet, the time scales over which oxygen fugacity of the mantle wedge changes during subduction initiation and margin evolution are unknown. Fe speciation ratios show that magmas produced during the early stages of subduction in the Mariana arc record oxygen fugacities ∼2× more oxidized than MORB. Mantle wedge oxygen fugacity rises by ∼1.3 orders of magnitude as slab fluids become more involved in melt generation processes, reaching conditions essentially equivalent to the modern arc in just 2–4 m.y. These results constrain existing models for the geochemical evolution of the mantle wedge and suggest that oxidation commences upon subduction initiation and matures rapidly in the portions of the mantle wedge that produce melts. This further implies that sulfide or other reduced phases are not present in the mantle wedge in high enough abundance to prevent oxidation of the magmas that form upon subduction initiation. The arc mantle source is oxidized for the majority of a subduction zone's lifetime, influencing the mobility of multivalent elements during recycling, the degassing of oxidized volcanic volatiles, and the mechanisms for generating continental crust from the immediate onset of subduction.

Additional Information

© 2015 Geological Society of America. Manuscript received 21 February 2015; Revised manuscript received 14 June 2015; Manuscript accepted 15 June 2015. We thank C.T.A. Lee, F. Gaillard, and one anonymous reviewer for their constructive reviews of this manuscript. We are grateful for guidance from R. Lange during wet chemical procedures. We thank A. Lanzirotti, S. Wirick, and W. Rao for assistance in beamline operations at the National Synchrotron Light Source (NSLS, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, New York, USA). M. Lytle, S. Grocke, F. Davis, T. Rose, and T. Gooding provided valuable assistance and expertise. Access to NSLS was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy under contract DE-AC02-98CH10886. We acknowledge support from the Smithsonian Institution's Scholarly Studies Program (Cottrell), National Science Foundation (NSF) grant MARGINS-EAR-0841108 (Kelley), NSF grant MARGINS-EAR-0841006 (Cottrell), and grant NSF MARGINS-EAR-0840862 (Reagan). NSF grant OCE-0644625 provides curatorial support for marine geological samples at the University of Rhode Island, USA.

Additional details

Created:
August 20, 2023
Modified:
October 24, 2023