Title: Melt inclusions in basaltic and associated volcanic rocks
1Melt inclusions in basaltic and associated
volcanic rocks
Adam Kent, Oregon State University
2Melt inclusions An introduction
Parcels of melt trapped in igneous crystals ?
Fluid inclusions
Occur in basaltic and related rocks wherever they
are found Arcs, OIB, CFB, MORB, LMI,
ETs Silicic and Plutonic Rocks Xenoliths
3Saal et al. 1998
4Scope Basaltic and related volcanic rocks
5Scope Basaltic and related volcanic rocks
Nanos gigantum humeris insidentes Bernard of
Charles, 1159
6Why study melt inclusions?
Melt inclusions preserve compositions that are
different from those of erupted lavas/tephra
79N Mid Atlantic Ridge
Ultra-depleted
Sobolev and Shimizu, 1993
8Why study melt inclusions?
Melt inclusions preserve compositions that are
different from those of erupted lavas/tephra
- More variable than host and associated lavas
- Bulk rock, Matrix glass ? Averages
- Provide larger data sets per rock
- Preserve low volume or low survivability melts
- Primitive Melts
- Trap volatile elements
- Compare volatile and non volatile behaviour
- Provide melt samples in altered rocks
9But theres a catch
Melt inclusions are NOT a universal panacea!
- Specific samples phyric rapidly cooled
- More work/time/money per sample
- Mineral separation, mounting and polishing
- Specialized analysis techniques
- Melt inclusions are small!
- Typically (trace element and isotope) analyses
are less precise - Isotopic data are limited
- Require significant additional interpretation
10Melt Inclusion Variations
- Magmatic
- Crystallization
- Assimilation
- Magma mixing
- Source heterogeneity
- Degassing
- Inclusion-specific
- Boundary layers
- Post-entrapment crystallization
- Re-equilibration with host or external melt
- Non representative trapping
i.e. things that drive changes in magma
compositions
i.e. things that are unique to inclusions
11Inclusion-Specific Processes
- Re-equilibration between inclusion and host
- Portnyagin et al. 2007, Spandler et al. 2007,
Cottrell et al. 2002, Danyushevsky et al. 2000
Gaetani and Watson, 2000, 2002 - Preferential trapping of unusual,
non-representative compositions - Michael et al. 2002, Danyushevsky et al. 2004,
Yaxley et al. 2005 - Trapping boundary layers
- Kohut and Nielsen, 2004 Faure and Schiano, 2005,
Baker et al. 2008. Goldstein and Luth, 2007 - Alteration of inclusions
- Nielsen et al. 1998
12Analysis
plus speciation
13How do melt inclusions form?
The widespread occurrence of melt inclusions in
basaltic rocks shows that their formation is a
normal part of the process of crystallization in
igneous rocks
Melt inclusions form in regions of relatively
slow crystal growth
14How do melt inclusions form?
Modified from V.S. Sobolev and Kostyuk 1975
Roedder, 1979, 1984
15Do melt inclusion formation processes fractionate
trapped compositions?
Faure and Schiano 2005
16Baker et al. 2008
17Not all experimental studies show boundary layer
effects
18- Most natural suites do not show clear indications
of boundary layer effects - Perhaps we sample larger inclusions (only
significant at lt 30 µm) - Longer isothermal times in natural samples
- Are boundary layers static?
- Kinetic experiments
19Evolution of melt inclusions after trapping
Important impact on physical appearance and
chemical compositions
25 µm
25 µm
20Evolution of melt inclusions after trapping
Wallace, 2005
- Venting/breaching/alteration
- Post-entrapment crystallization
- Diffusive exchange
21Correction for postentrapment crystallization
- Experimental
- Reheat to (estimated) trapping temperature
- Numerical
- Based on chemical equilibrium
- Olivine KDFeO/MgO 0.33 0.03
Loihi Seamount (Kent et al., 1999)
22Compatible elements are the least robust after
correction for post-entrapment crystallization
23Equilibration between Host and Inclusion
- Equilibration more rapid at
- Higher Diffusivity
- Higher Temperatures
- More compatible
- Larger inclusion
- Smaller host
Qin et al. (1992)
24Fe Loss
Danyushevsky et al. 2000
Yaxley et al. 2005
- Negative correlation between measured FeO and
Fohost - Anomalously low FeO wrt liquid line of descent
25Trace element re-equilibration
- The most robust data sources in melt inclusions
are slow diffusing and incompatible elements - Altered only by dilution/concentration
- Ratios unchanged
Are incompatible trace elements affected by
diffusional re-equilibration?
26Cottrell et al. 2002
REE equilibration with host after 2500 years
27Cottrell et al 2002
28(No Transcript)
29Slater et al., 2001
30(No Transcript)
31Trace element re-equilibration
Spandler et al. 2007
32(No Transcript)
33Baffin Island olivine-hosted n 103
34Preserve inter-crystal variations
35Driving Force?
36The message from melt inclusions Variability
- In many basaltic systems it is clear that the
primary control on melt inclusion compositions is
the variability of melts present within the
system - These are sampled by erupted lavas as well, but
are homogenized - Implies large scale mixing of smaller melt
batches is extremely widespread - Melt inclusions and host lavas related by mixing
37- Basaltic melt generation and transport systems
are variable at scales smaller than individual
eruptive units (factors of 10s) - Phenocrysts
- Melt inclusions sample this variation
- Some real and apparent homogenization (mixing)
occurs prior to eruption - Rates Transport gtgt Re-equilibration
38Comparison between melt inclusions and host lavas
Baffin Island olivine-hosted
Melt inclusions sample the same population of
melts as host lavas Variability in trace element
composition is driven by the same processes in
inclusions and in lavas
39Magma
Magma
Melt Inclusion
Kellogg et al. 2002
40Baffin Island olivine-hosted
41Borgahraun, Iceland
Maclennan et al. 2003
42Comparison between host and inclusions provides a
means to assess relationship between inclusions
and magmatic systems
439N MAR
Ultra-depleted
Sobolev et al 2000
Sobolev Shimizu 1993
- Anomalous melt inclusions
- Low volume melts?
- Magma chamber or primary?
- Artifacts of trapping?
44 There is no necessary connexion between the
size of an object and the value of a fact,
andthough the objects I have described are
minute the conclusions to be derived from the
facts are great Sorby 1858 Geol. Soc. London.
Quart. Jour. 14 453-500 from Roedder (1979)
Bull. Mineral.