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Rock suites, trace elements and radiogenic isotopes

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Title: Rock suites, trace elements and radiogenic isotopes


1
Rock suites, trace elements and radiogenic
isotopes
  • GEOS 408/508
  • Lectures 4-6

2
  • MgO and FeO
  • Al2O3 and CaO
  • SiO2
  • Na2O, K2O, TiO2, P2O5

3
Rock suites
  • The totality of major compositions found in a
    spatio-temporal domain of interest
  • Typically display a range of major, trace and
    isotopic compositions
  • Examples calc-alkaline (banatite) suites in arc
    regions bimodal (basalt-rhyolite) suites in
    continental extension, etc
  • Perhaps the most important lesson to take home
    regarding rocks suites is that no single magmatic
    rock composition can be indicative of a past
    tectonic setting - use instead the range of rock
    compositions.

4
More Trace Elements
Note magnitue of major element changes
Harker variation diagram for 310 analyzed
volcanic rocks from Crater Lake (Mt. Mazama),
Oregon Cascades. Data compiled by Rick Conrey
(personal communication). From Winter (2001) An
Introduction to Igneous and Metamorphic
Petrology. Prentice Hall.
5
Generating diversity
  • Fractionation selective crystallization and
    removal of crystals from an evolving magma
  • Mixing co-aggregation of two (or more) different
    magmas
  • Unmixxing (not common) Generation of two
    liquids out of one via melt immiscibility
  • Assimilation and fractional crystallization
    (AFC) wall rock incorporation coupled with
    internal fractionation
  • Source heterogeneity
  • secondary, postmagmatic processes
    hydrothermal alteration, weathering, etc.

6
Bivariate (x-y) diagrams
Harker diagram for Crater Lake
Figure 2. Harker variation diagram for 310
analyzed volcanic rocks from Crater Lake (Mt.
Mazama), Oregon Cascades. Data compiled by Rick
Conrey (personal communication).
7
Bivariate (x-y) diagrams
Harker diagram for Crater Lake
Figure 2. Harker variation diagram for 310
analyzed volcanic rocks from Crater Lake (Mt.
Mazama), Oregon Cascades. Data compiled by Rick
Conrey (personal communication).
8
Models of Magmatic Evolution
9
  • Harker diagram
  • Smooth trends
  • Model with 3 assumptions
  • 1 Rocks are related by FX
  • 2 Trends liquid line of descent
  • 3 The basalt is the parent magma from which the
    others are derived

Figure 7. Stacked variation diagrams of
hypothetical components X and Y (either weight or
mol ). P parent, D daughter, S solid
extract, A, B, C possible extracted solid
phases. For explanation, see text. From Ragland
(1989). Basic Analytical Petrology, Oxford Univ.
Press.
10
  • Extrapolate BA ? B and further to low SiO2
  • K2O is first element to ? 0 (at SiO2 46.5)

46.5 SiO2 is interpreted to be the concentration
in the bulk solid extract and the blue line ? the
concentration of all other oxides
Figure 7. Stacked Harker diagrams for the
calc-alkaline volcanic series of Table 8-5 (dark
circles). From Ragland (1989). Basic Analytical
Petrology, Oxford Univ. Press.
11
Extrapolate the other curves back BA ? B ? blue
line and read off X of mineral extract
Results Remove plagioclase, olivine,
pyroxene and Fe-Ti oxide
Oxide Wt Cation Norm SiO2 46.5 ab 18.3 TiO2 1.
4 an 30.1 Al2O3 14.2 di 23.2 Fe2O3 11.5 hy 4.7
MgO 10.8 ol 19.3 CaO 11.5 mt 1.7 Na2O 2.1 il 2.
7 K2O 0 Total 98.1 100
Then repeat for each increment BA ? A etc.
12
Now note magnitude of trace element changes
Figure 1. Harker Diagram for Crater Lake. From
data compiled by Rick Conrey. From Winter (2001)
An Introduction to Igneous and Metamorphic
Petrology. Prentice Hall.
13
Element Distribution Goldschmidts rules
(simplistic, but useful) 1. 2 ions with the same
valence and radius should exchange easily and
enter a solid solution in amounts equal to their
overall proportions
14
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15
Goldschmidts rules 2. If 2 ions have a similar
radius and the same valence the smaller ion is
preferentially incorporated into the solid over
the liquid
16
3. If 2 ions have a similar radius, but
different valence the ion with the higher charge
is preferentially incorporated into the solid
over the liquid
17
Chemical Fractionation
  • The uneven distribution of an ion between two
    competing (equilibrium) phases

18
Exchange equilibrium of a component i between two
phases (solid and liquid) i (liquid) i
(solid) eq. 2 K K
equilibrium constant
X solid X liquid
a solid a liquid
i
i
i
i
i
19
  • Trace element concentrations are in the Henrys
    Law region of concentration, so their activity
    varies in direct relation to their concentration
    in the system
  • Thus if XNi in the system doubles the XNi in all
    phases will double
  • This does not mean that XNi in all phases is the
    same, since trace elements do fractionate. Rather
    the XNi within each phase will vary in proportion
    to the system concentration

20
  • incompatible elements are concentrated in the
    melt
  • (KD or D) 1
  • compatible elements are concentrated in the solid
  • KD or D 1

21
  • For dilute solutions can substitute D for KD
  • D
  • Where CS the concentration of some element in
    the solid phase

22
  • Incompatible elements commonly ? two subgroups
  • Smaller, highly charged high field strength (HFS)
    elements (REE, Th, U, Ce, Pb4, Zr, Hf, Ti, Nb,
    Ta)
  • Low field strength large ion lithophile (LIL)
    elements (K, Rb, Cs, Ba, Pb2, Sr, Eu2) are more
    mobile, particularly if a fluid phase is involved

23
Compatibility depends on minerals and melts
involved. Which are incompatible? Why?
24
  • For a rock, determine the bulk distribution
    coefficient D for an element by calculating the
    contribution for each mineral

25
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26
Homework 3
  • Calculate partition coefficient of Sr for one
    (any) one of the rocks in Cecils data, assuming
    that the actual minerals are the norms you
    calculated for that rock. Get the Kds from
    GERMs tabulated source online and use
    mineral-silicic melt coefficient.

27
  • Trace elements strongly partitioned into a single
    mineral
  • Ni - olivine 14

Figure 1a. Ni Harker Diagram for Crater Lake.
From data compiled by Rick Conrey. From Winter
(2001) An Introduction to Igneous and Metamorphic
Petrology. Prentice Hall.
28
  • Incompatible trace elements concentrate ? liquid
  • Reflect the proportion of liquid at a given state
    of crystallization or melting

Figure 1b. Zr Harker Diagram for Crater Lake.
From data compiled by Rick Conrey. From Winter
(2001) An Introduction to Igneous and Metamorphic
Petrology. Prentice Hall.
29
Trace element concentrations are in the Henrys
Law region of concentration, so their activity
varies in direct relation to their concentration
in the system
30
Trace element concentrations are in the Henrys
Law region of concentration, so their activity
varies in direct relation to their concentration
in the system Because of this, the ratios of
trace elements are often superior to the
concentration of a single element in identifying
the role of a specific mineral
31
  • K/Rb often used ? the importance of amphibole in
    a source rock
  • K Rb behave very similarly, so K/Rb should be
    constant
  • If amphibole, almost all K and Rb reside in it
  • Amphibole has a D of about 1.0 for K and 0.3 for
    Rb

32
  • Sr and Ba (also incompatible elements)
  • Sr is excluded from most common minerals except
    plagioclase
  • Ba similarly excluded except in alkali feldspar

33
  • Compatible example
  • Ni strongly fractionated ? olivine gt pyroxene
  • Cr and Sc ? pyroxenes olivine
  • Ni/Cr or Ni/Sc can distinguish the effects of
    olivine and augite in a partial melt or a suite
    of rocks produced by fractional crystallization

34
Models of Magma Evolution
  • Batch Melting
  • The melt remains resident until at some point it
    is released and moves upward
  • Equilibrium melting process with variable
    melting

35
Models of Magma Evolution
  • Batch Melting
  • eq. 5
  • CL trace element concentration in the liquid
  • CO trace element concentration in the original
    rock before melting began
  • F wt fraction of melt produced melt/(melt
    rock)

36
Batch Melting A plot of CL/CO vs. F for various
values of Di using eq. 5
  • Di 1.0

Figure 9-2. Variation in the relative
concentration of a trace element in a liquid vs.
source rock as a fiunction of D and the fraction
melted, using equation (9-5) for equilibrium
batch melting. From Winter (2001) An Introduction
to Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology. Prentice
Hall.
37
  • Di 1.0 (compatible element)
  • Very low concentration in melt
  • Especially for low melting (low F)

Figure 2. Variation in the relative concentration
of a trace element in a liquid vs. source rock as
a fiunction of D and the fraction melted, using
equation (9-5) for equilibrium batch melting.
From Winter (2001) An Introduction to Igneous and
Metamorphic Petrology. Prentice Hall.
38
  • Highly incompatible elements
  • Greatly concentrated in the initial small
    fraction of melt produced by partial melting
  • Subsequently diluted as F increases

Figure 2. Variation in the relative concentration
of a trace element in a liquid vs. source rock as
a fiunction of D and the fraction melted, using
equation (9-5) for equilibrium batch melting.
From Winter (2001) An Introduction to Igneous and
Metamorphic Petrology. Prentice Hall.
39
  • As F ? 1 the concentration of every trace element
    in the liquid the source rock (CL/CO ? 1)
  • As F ? 1
  • CL/CO ? 1

Figure 2. Variation in the relative concentration
of a trace element in a liquid vs. source rock as
a fiunction of D and the fraction melted, using
equation (9-5) for equilibrium batch melting.
From Winter (2001) An Introduction to Igneous and
Metamorphic Petrology. Prentice Hall.
40
As F ? 0 CL/CO ? 1/Di
If we know CL of a magma derived by a small
degree of batch melting, and we know Di we can
estimate the concentration of that element in the
source region (CO)
Figure 2. Variation in the relative concentration
of a trace element in a liquid vs. source rock as
a fiunction of D and the fraction melted, using
equation (9-5) for equilibrium batch melting.
From Winter (2001) An Introduction to Igneous and
Metamorphic Petrology. Prentice Hall.
41
  • For very incompatible elements as Di ? 0
  • equation 5 reduces to
  • eq. 7

If we know the concentration of a very
incompatible element in both a magma and the
source rock, we can determine the fraction of
partial melt produced
42
Worked Example of Batch Melting Rb and Sr
Basalt with the mode 1. Convert
to weight minerals (Wol Wcpx etc.)
43
Worked Example of Batch Melting Rb and Sr
Basalt with the mode 1. Convert
to weight minerals (Wol Wcpx etc.) 2. Use
equation eq. 4 Di ? WA Di and the
table of D values for Rb and Sr in each mineral
to calculate the bulk distribution coefficients
DRb 0.045 and DSr 0.848
44
3. Use the batch melting equation (5)
to calculate CL/CO for various values of F
From Winter (2001) An Introduction to Igneous and
Metamorphic Petrology. Prentice Hall.
45
4. Plot CL/CO vs. F for each element
Figure 3. Change in the concentration of Rb and
Sr in the melt derived by progressive batch
melting of a basaltic rock consisting of
plagioclase, augite, and olivine. From Winter
(2001) An Introduction to Igneous and Metamorphic
Petrology. Prentice Hall.
46
Incremental Batch Melting
  • Calculate batch melting for successive batches
    (same equation)
  • Must recalculate Di as solids change as minerals
    are selectively melted (computer)

47
Fractional Crystallization 1. Crystals remain in
equilibrium with each melt increment
48
  • Rayleigh fractionation
  • The other extreme separation of each crystal
    as it formed perfectly continuous fractional
    crystallization in a magma chamber

49
  • Rayleigh fractionation
  • The other extreme separation of each crystal
    as it formed perfectly continuous fractional
    crystallization in a magma chamber
  • Concentration of some element in the residual
    liquid, CL is modeled by the Rayleigh equation
  • eq. 8 CL/CO F (D -1) Rayleigh Fractionation

50
  • Other models are used to analyze
  • Mixing of magmas
  • Wall-rock assimilation
  • Zone refining
  • Combinations of processes

51
The Rare Earth Elements (REE)
52
Contrasts and similarities in the D values All
are incompatible
Also Note HREE are less incompatible
Especially in garnet Eu can ? 2 which conc. in
plagioclase
53
REE Diagrams
  • Plots of concentration as the ordinate (y-axis)
    against increasing atomic number
  • Degree of compatibility increases from left to
    right across the diagram

Concentration
La Ce Nd Sm Eu Tb Er Dy Yb Lu
54
  • Eliminate Oddo-Harkins effect and make y-scale
    more functional by normalizing to a standard
  • estimates of primordial mantle REE
  • chondrite meteorite concentrations

55
What would an REE diagram look like for an
analysis of a chondrite meteorite?
56
Divide each element in analysis by the
concentration in a chondrite standard
57
REE diagrams using batch melting model of a
garnet lherzolite for various values of F
Figure 4. Rare Earth concentrations (normalized
to chondrite) for melts produced at various
values of F via melting of a hypothetical garnet
lherzolite using the batch melting model
(equation 9-5). From Winter (2001) An
Introduction to Igneous and Metamorphic
Petrology. Prentice Hall.
58
  • Europium anomaly when plagioclase is
  • a fractionating phenocryst
  • or
  • a residual solid in source

Figure 5. REE diagram for 10 batch melting of a
hypothetical lherzolite with 20 plagioclase,
resulting in a pronounced negative Europium
anomaly. From Winter (2001) An Introduction to
Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology. Prentice Hall.
59
Spider Diagrams
An extension of the normalized REE technique to a
broader spectrum of elements
Chondrite-normalized spider diagrams are commonly
organized by (the authors estimate) of
increasing incompatibility L ? R Different
estimates ? different ordering (poor
standardization)
Fig. 6. Spider diagram for an alkaline basalt
from Gough Island, southern Atlantic. After Sun
and MacDonough (1989). In A. D. Saunders and M.
J. Norry (eds.), Magmatism in the Ocean Basins.
Geol. Soc. London Spec. Publ., 42. pp. 313-345.
60
MORB-normalized Spider
Separates LIL and HFS
Figure 7. Ocean island basalt plotted on a
mid-ocean ridge basalt (MORB) normalized spider
diagram of the type used by Pearce (1983). Data
from Sun and McDonough (1989). From Winter (2001)
An Introduction to Igneous and Metamorphic
Petrology. Prentice Hall.
61
Application of Trace Elements to Igneous Systems
  • 1. Use like major elements on variation diagrams
    to document FX, assimilation, etc. in a suite of
    rocks
  • More sensitive ? larger variations as process
    continues

Figure 1a. Ni Harker Diagram for Crater Lake.
From data compiled by Rick Conrey. From Winter
(2001) An Introduction to Igneous and Metamorphic
Petrology. Prentice Hall.
62
  • 2. Identification of the source rock or a
    particular mineral involved in either partial
    melting or fractional crystallization processes

63
Garnet concentrates the HREE and fractionates
among them Thus if garnet is in equilibrium with
the partial melt (a residual phase in the source
left behind) expect a steep (-) slope in REE and
HREE
64
Garnet and Plagioclase effect on HREE
65
Figure 3. Change in the concentration of Rb and
Sr in the melt derived by progressive batch
melting of a basaltic rock consisting of
plagioclase, augite, and olivine. From Winter
(2001) An Introduction to Igneous and Metamorphic
Petrology. Prentice Hall.
66
Table 6 A brief summary of some particularly
useful trace elements in igneous petrology
Use as a petrogenetic indicator
Element
Ni, Co, Cr
Highly compatible elements. Ni (and Co) are
concentrated in olivine, and Cr in spinel and
clinopyroxene. High concentrations indicate a
mantle source.
V, Ti
Both show strong fractionation into Fe-Ti oxides
(ilmenite or titanomagnetite). If they behave
differently, Ti probably fractionates into an
accessory phase, such as sphene or rutile.
Zr, Hf
Very incompatible elements that do not substitute
into major silicate phases (although they may
replace Ti in sphene or rutile).
Ba, Rb
Incompatible element that substitutes for K in
K-feldspar, micas, or hornblende. Rb substitutes
less readily in hornblende than K-spar and micas,
such that the K/Ba ratio may distinguish these
phases.
Sr
Substitutes for Ca in plagioclase (but not in
pyroxene), and, to a lesser extent, for K in K-
feldspar. Behaves as a compatible element at low
pressure where plagioclase forms early, but
as an incompatible at higher pressure where
plagioclase is no longer stable.
REE
Garnet accommodates the HREE more than the LREE,
and orthopyroxene and hornblende do
2
so to a lesser degree. Sphene and plagioclase
accommodates more LREE. Eu
is strongly
partitioned into plagioclase.
Y
Commonly incompatible (like HREE). Strongly
partitioned into garnet and amphibole. Sphene
and apatite also concentrate Y, so the presence
of these as accessories could have a
significant effect.
Table 6. After Green (1980). Tectonophys., 63,
367-385. From Winter (2001) An Introduction to
Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology. Prentice Hall.

67
Trace elements as a tool to determine
paleotectonic environment
  • Useful for rocks in mobile belts that are no
    longer recognizably in their original setting
  • Can trace elements be discriminators of igneous
    environment?
  • Approach is empirical on modern occurrences
  • Concentrate on elements that are immobile during
    low/medium grade metamorphism

68
Figure 8. (a) after Pearce and Cann (1973), Earth
Planet, Sci. Lett., 19, 290-300. (b) after Pearce
(1982) in Thorpe (ed.), Andesites Orogenic
andesites and related rocks. Wiley. Chichester.
pp. 525-548, Coish et al. (1986), Amer. J. Sci.,
286, 1-28. (c) after Mullen (1983), Earth Planet.
Sci. Lett., 62, 53-62.
69
Degree of melting, incompatible, compatible
elements
70
REEs, spidergrams, HFSE, anomalies
HFSE
71
Isotopes
Same Z, different A (variable of
neutrons) General notation for a nuclide
72
Isotopes
Same Z, different A (variable of
neutrons) General notation for a nuclide
As n varies ? different isotopes of an
element 12C 13C 14C
73
HW 4
  • Use the Cecil database to plot the incompatible
    trace element data relative to primitive mantle
    values for granitoids do they exhibit any
    significant anomalies, are there any trends
    worthwhile interpreting?
  • Determine the REE patterns (rel. to PM) and the
    magnitude of Eu anomalies
  • Use the Girardi et al 2012 paper as an example
    to make interpretations re the origin of magmas
    from the Rotberg area.

74
Stable Isotopes
  • Stable last forever
  • Chemical fractionation is impossible
  • Mass fractionation is the only type possible

75
Example Oxygen Isotopes
16O 99.756 of natural oxygen 17O
0.039 18O 0.205
Concentrations expressed by reference to a
standard International standard for O isotopes
standard mean ocean water (SMOW)
76
18O and 16O are the commonly used isotopes and
their ratio is expressed as d d (18O/16O)
eq 9-10 result expressed in per
mille ()
What is d of SMOW?? What is d for meteoric water?
77
  • What is d for meteoric water?
  • Evaporation seawater ? water vapor (clouds)
  • Light isotope enriched in vapor gt liquid
  • Pretty efficient, since D mass 1/8 total mass

78
  • What is d for meteoric water?
  • Evaporation seawater ? water vapor (clouds)
  • Light isotope enriched in vapor gt liquid
  • Pretty efficient, since D mass 1/8 total mass
  • d
  • therefore lt
  • thus dclouds is (-)

79
Figure 9-9. Relationship between d(18O/16O) and
mean annual temperature for meteoric
precipitation, after Dansgaard (1964). Tellus,
16, 436-468.
80
Oxygen isotopes
Can determine crustal recycling
81
Mantle-derived rocks delta18O 5-6.5
permil Crustal Rocks that have interacted with
waters Anything between -2 to 24
permil Oxygen has the mass advantage over other
isotopes
82
Stable isotopes useful in assessing relative
contribution of various reservoirs, each with a
distinctive isotopic signature
  • O and H isotopes - juvenile vs. meteoric vs.
    brine water
  • d18O for mantle rocks ? surface-reworked
    sediments evaluate contamination of
    mantle-derived magmas by crustal sediments

83
Radioactive Isotopes
  • Unstable isotopes decay to other nuclides
  • The rate of decay is constant, and not affected
    by P, T, X
  • Parent nuclide radioactive nuclide that decays
  • Daughter nuclide(s) are the radiogenic atomic
    products

84
Isotopic variations between rocks, etc. due
to 1. Mass fractionation (as for stable
isotopes) Only effective for light isotopes H
He C O S
85
Isotopic variations between rocks, etc. due
to 1. Mass fractionation (as for stable
isotopes) 2. Daughters produced in varying
proportions resulting from previous event of
chemical fractionation
40K ? 40Ar by radioactive decay Basalt ? rhyolite
by FX (a chemical fractionation process)
Rhyolite has more K than basalt 40K ? more 40Ar
over time in rhyolite than in basalt 40Ar/39Ar
ratio will be different in each
86
  • Isotopic variations between rocks, etc. due to
  • 1. Mass fractionation (as for stable isotopes)
  • 2. Daughters produced in varying proportions
    resulting from previous event of chemical
    fractionation
  • 3. Time
  • The longer 40K ? 40Ar decay takes place, the
    greater
  • the difference between the basalt and rhyolite
    will be

87
Radioactive Decay
The Law of Radioactive Decay eq. 11
1 ½ ¼
parent atoms
time ?
88
D Nelt - N N(elt -1) eq 14 ? age of a
sample (t) if we know D the amount of
the daughter nuclide produced N the
amount of the original parent nuclide remaining
l the decay constant for the system in
question
89
The appropriate decay equation is eq 16 40Ar
40Aro 40K(e-lt -1) Where le 0.581
x 10-10 a-1 (proton capture) and l
5.543 x 10-10 a-1 (whole process)
90
Sr-Rb System
  • 87Rb ? 87Sr a beta particle (l 1.42 x
    10-11 a-1)
  • Rb behaves like K ? micas and alkali feldspar
  • Sr behaves like Ca ? plagioclase and apatite (but
    not clinopyroxene)
  • 88Sr 87Sr 86Sr 84Sr ave. sample 10 0.7
    1 0.07
  • 86Sr is a stable isotope, and not created by
    breakdown of any other parent

91
Isochron Technique Requires 3 or more
cogenetic samples with a range of Rb/Sr
  • Could be
  • 3 cogenetic rocks derived from a single source by
    partial melting, FX, etc.

Figure 9-3. Change in the concentration of Rb and
Sr in the melt derived by progressive batch
melting of a basaltic rock consisting of
plagioclase, augite, and olivine. From Winter
(2001) An Introduction to Igneous and Metamorphic
Petrology. Prentice Hall.
92
Isochron Technique Requires 3 or more
cogenetic samples with a range of Rb/Sr
  • Could be
  • 3 cogenetic rocks derived from a single source by
    partial melting, FX, etc.
  • 3 coexisting minerals with different K/Ca ratios
    in a single rock

93
Recast age equation by dividing through by stable
86Sr 87Sr/86Sr (87Sr/86Sr)o (87Rb/86Sr)(elt
-1) eq 9-17 l 1.4 x 10-11 a-1
For values of lt less than 0.1 elt-1 ? lt Thus
eq. 9-15 for t lt 70 Ga (!!) reduces to eq 9-18
87Sr/86Sr (87Sr/86Sr)o (87Rb/86Sr)lt y
b x m
equation for a line in 87Sr/86Sr vs. 87Rb/86Sr
plot
94
Begin with 3 rocks plotting at a b c at time to
to
a
b
c
95
After some time increment (t0 ?t1) each sample
loses some 87Rb and gains an equivalent amount of
87Sr
96
At time t2 each rock system has evolved ? new
line Again still linear and steeper line
97
Isochron technique produces 2 valuable things 1.
The age of the rocks (from the slope lt) 2.
(87Sr/86Sr)o the initial value of 87Sr/86Sr
Figure 9-9. Rb-Sr isochron for the Eagle Peak
Pluton, central Sierra Nevada Batholith,
California, USA. Filled circles are whole-rock
analyses, open circles are hornblende separates.
The regression equation for the data is also
given. After Hill et al. (1988). Amer. J. Sci.,
288-A, 213-241.
98
Figure 9-13. Estimated Rb and Sr isotopic
evolution of the Earths upper mantle, assuming a
large-scale melting event producing granitic-type
continental rocks at 3.0 Ga b.p After Wilson
(1989). Igneous Petrogenesis. Unwin Hyman/Kluwer.
99
The Sm-Nd System
  • Both Sm and Nd are LREE
  • Incompatible elements fractionate ? melts
  • Nd has lower Z ? larger ? liquids gt does Sm

100
  • 147Sm ? 143Nd by alpha decay
  • l 6.54 x 10-13 a-1 (half life 106 Ga)
  • Decay equation derived by reference to the
    non-radiogenic 144Nd
  • 143Nd/144Nd (143Nd/144Nd)o
  • (147Sm/144Nd)lt

101
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102
Evolution curve is opposite to Rb - Sr
Figure 9-15. Estimated Nd isotopic evolution of
the Earths upper mantle, assuming a large-scale
melting or enrichment event at 3.0 Ga b.p. After
Wilson (1989). Igneous Petrogenesis. Unwin
Hyman/Kluwer.
103
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104
Systematic geographic distribution of isotopic
ratios
The 0.706 line through the Sierra Nevada and
north
105
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106
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107
Fractionation, assimilation, mixing
108
Simple Mixing Models
Ternary All analyses fall within triangle
determined by three reservoirs
Binary All analyses fall between two reservoirs
as magmas mix
Figure 14-5. Winter (2001) An Introduction to
Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology. Prentice Hall.
109
HW5
  • Determine the initial Sr and Nd isotopes for the
    Cecil database
  • Plot the initial Sr vs. Nd isotopes, 87Sr/86Sr
    vs. 1/Sr and 143Nd/144Nd vs. 1/Nd is there one
    or are there more sources of magmas? How many?
  • Do the isotopes and isotope-elemental plots
    indicate any mixing curves? How many components?
    Plot at least one mixing line using IgPet (or
    similar).

110
Other radiogenic systems and utilities
  • Pb-Pb (u and Th decay)- good for identifying
    sedimentary sources in magma (high U/Pb)
  • He isotopes - can detect pristine, undegassed
    mantle in some plumes
  • Ca isotopes - can trace old crustal components
  • Hf isotopes - useless except perhaps when used in
    situ with U-Pb dating of zircons
  • Re-Os - can effectively fingerprint crustal
    sources and date mantle events.

111
The U-Pb-Th System
  • Very complex system.
  • 3 radioactive isotopes of U 234U, 235U, 238U
  • 3 radiogenic isotopes of Pb 206Pb, 207Pb, and
    208Pb
  • Only 204Pb is strictly non-radiogenic
  • U, Th, and Pb are incompatible elements,
    concentrate in early melts
  • Isotopic composition of Pb in rocks function of
  • 238U ? 234U ? 206Pb (l 1.5512 x 10-10 a-1)
  • 235U ? 207Pb (l 9.8485 x 10-10 a-1)
  • 232Th ? 208Pb (l 4.9475 x 10-11 a-1)

112
Common Pb
113
He isotopes
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