Constant average olivine Mg# in cratonic mantle reflects Archaean mantle melting to the exhaustion of orthopyroxene

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3621 Mantle Processes (1038), 3630 Experimental Mineralogy And Petrology, 3640 Igneous Petrology, 3672 Planetary Mineralogy And Petrology (5410)

Scientific paper

Shallow (garnet-free) cratonic mantle, occurring as xenoliths in kimberlites and alkaline basaltic lavas, has high Mg# (100x Mg/(Mg+Fe)>92) and is poor in Al and Ca compared to off-cratonic mantle. Many xenoliths show rhenium-depletion age of > 3 Ga, and are thus representative of depleted mantle peridotite that form an integral part of the stable nuclei of Archaean (2.5-3.8 Ga) cratons. Accordingly, the depleted composition of the xenolith suites is linked to Archaean melt extraction events. We have compiled data for many suites of shallow cratonic mantle xenoliths worldwide, including samples from cratons of Kaapvaal, Tanzania, Siberia, Slave, North China and Greenland, and encompassing both the classic orthopyroxene-rich peridotites of Kaapvaal and orthopyroxene-poor peridotites from Greenland. The suites show a remarkably small range in average olivine Mg# of 92.8 +/- 0.2. Via comparison with data for experimental melting of mantle peridotite compositions, we explain consistent olivine Mg# in the shallow cratonic mantle as the result of mantle melting and melt extraction to the point of orthopyroxene exhaustion, leaving a nearly monomineralic olivine, or dunitic, residue. Experimental data for peridotite melting at pressures less than 4 GPa and data on natural rocks suggest that mantle olivine has a Mg# of about 92.8 at the point of orthopyroxene exhaustion. If the melt extraction was efficient, no further melting could take place without a considerable temperature increase or melt/fluid flux through the dunite residue at high temperatures. While the high Mg#, dunite-dominated xenolith suites from e.g. Greenland represent simple residues from mantle melting, the orthopyroxene-rich xenolith suites with identical Mg# as known from e. g. Kaapvaal must reflect some additional processes. We envisage their derivation from dunite protoliths via subsequent melt/rock reaction with silica-rich melts or, in some cases, possibly as residues at higher average melting pressures.

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