Noble gases recycled into the mantle through cold subduction zones

Subduction of hydrous and carbonated oceanic lithosphere replenishes the mantle volatile inventory. Substantial uncertainties exist on the magnitudes of the recycled volatile fluxes and it is unclear whether Earth surface reservoirs are undergoing net-loss or net-gain of H2O and CO2. Here, we use no...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Smye, A, Jackson, C, Konrad-Schmolke, M, Hesse, M, Parman, S, Shuster, D, Ballentine, C
Format: Journal article
Published: Elsevier 2017
_version_ 1797071560127807488
author Smye, A
Jackson, C
Konrad-Schmolke, M
Hesse, M
Parman, S
Shuster, D
Ballentine, C
author_facet Smye, A
Jackson, C
Konrad-Schmolke, M
Hesse, M
Parman, S
Shuster, D
Ballentine, C
author_sort Smye, A
collection OXFORD
description Subduction of hydrous and carbonated oceanic lithosphere replenishes the mantle volatile inventory. Substantial uncertainties exist on the magnitudes of the recycled volatile fluxes and it is unclear whether Earth surface reservoirs are undergoing net-loss or net-gain of H2O and CO2. Here, we use noble gases as tracers for deep volatile cycling. Specifically, we construct and apply a kinetic model to estimate the effect of subduction zone metamorphism on the elemental composition of noble gases in amphibole – a common constituent of altered oceanic crust. We show that progressive dehydration of the slab leads to the extraction of noble gases, linking noble gas recycling to H2O. Noble gases are strongly fractionated within hot subduction zones, whereas minimal fractionation occurs along colder subduction geotherms. In the context of our modelling, this implies that the mantle heavy noble gas inventory is dominated by the injection of noble gases through cold subduction zones. For cold subduction zones, we estimate a present-day bulk recycling efficiency, past the depth of amphibole breakdown, of 5–35% and 60–80% for 36Ar and H2O bound within oceanic crust, respectively. Given that hotter subduction dominates over geologic history, this result highlights the importance of cooler subduction zones in regassing the mantle and in affecting the modern volatile budget of Earth's interior.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T22:55:04Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:6016a589-4e1c-4f80-b685-265c9936d824
institution University of Oxford
last_indexed 2024-03-06T22:55:04Z
publishDate 2017
publisher Elsevier
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:6016a589-4e1c-4f80-b685-265c9936d8242022-03-26T17:51:10ZNoble gases recycled into the mantle through cold subduction zonesJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:6016a589-4e1c-4f80-b685-265c9936d824Symplectic Elements at OxfordElsevier2017Smye, AJackson, CKonrad-Schmolke, MHesse, MParman, SShuster, DBallentine, CSubduction of hydrous and carbonated oceanic lithosphere replenishes the mantle volatile inventory. Substantial uncertainties exist on the magnitudes of the recycled volatile fluxes and it is unclear whether Earth surface reservoirs are undergoing net-loss or net-gain of H2O and CO2. Here, we use noble gases as tracers for deep volatile cycling. Specifically, we construct and apply a kinetic model to estimate the effect of subduction zone metamorphism on the elemental composition of noble gases in amphibole – a common constituent of altered oceanic crust. We show that progressive dehydration of the slab leads to the extraction of noble gases, linking noble gas recycling to H2O. Noble gases are strongly fractionated within hot subduction zones, whereas minimal fractionation occurs along colder subduction geotherms. In the context of our modelling, this implies that the mantle heavy noble gas inventory is dominated by the injection of noble gases through cold subduction zones. For cold subduction zones, we estimate a present-day bulk recycling efficiency, past the depth of amphibole breakdown, of 5–35% and 60–80% for 36Ar and H2O bound within oceanic crust, respectively. Given that hotter subduction dominates over geologic history, this result highlights the importance of cooler subduction zones in regassing the mantle and in affecting the modern volatile budget of Earth's interior.
spellingShingle Smye, A
Jackson, C
Konrad-Schmolke, M
Hesse, M
Parman, S
Shuster, D
Ballentine, C
Noble gases recycled into the mantle through cold subduction zones
title Noble gases recycled into the mantle through cold subduction zones
title_full Noble gases recycled into the mantle through cold subduction zones
title_fullStr Noble gases recycled into the mantle through cold subduction zones
title_full_unstemmed Noble gases recycled into the mantle through cold subduction zones
title_short Noble gases recycled into the mantle through cold subduction zones
title_sort noble gases recycled into the mantle through cold subduction zones
work_keys_str_mv AT smyea noblegasesrecycledintothemantlethroughcoldsubductionzones
AT jacksonc noblegasesrecycledintothemantlethroughcoldsubductionzones
AT konradschmolkem noblegasesrecycledintothemantlethroughcoldsubductionzones
AT hessem noblegasesrecycledintothemantlethroughcoldsubductionzones
AT parmans noblegasesrecycledintothemantlethroughcoldsubductionzones
AT shusterd noblegasesrecycledintothemantlethroughcoldsubductionzones
AT ballentinec noblegasesrecycledintothemantlethroughcoldsubductionzones