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American Mineralogist; May 2005; v. 90; no. 5-6; p. 864-870; DOI: 10.2138/am.2005.1670
© 2005 Mineralogical Society of America
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Subducted carbonates, metasomatism of mantle wedges, and possible connections to diamond formation: An example from California

Mihai N. Ducea1,*, Jason Saleeby2, Jean Morrison3 and Victor A. Valencia1

1 University of Arizona, Department of Geosciences, Tucson, Arizona 85721, U.S.A.
2 California Institute of Technology, Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences, Pasadena, California 91125, U.S.A.
3 University of Southern California, Department of Earth Sciences, Los Angeles, California 90089, U.S.A.

Correspondence: * E-mail: ducea{at}geo.arizona.edu

We investigated calcite globules and veins in two spinel-garnet peridotite xenoliths from the sub-Sierra Nevada mantle. The studied xenoliths were entrained in a Miocene (11 Ma) volcanic plug. These carbonates are associated spatially with silicate glass inclusions, suggesting that they are primary inclusions—inclusions that formed at high temperature in the mantle and not at or close to the Earth’s surface. The host peridotites represent samples of the lithospheric mantle wedge beneath the Mesozoic California magmatic arc, as indicated by radiogenic isotopic ratios measured on clinopyroxene separates [87Sr/86Sr(11 Ma) = 0.7058–0.7061, {varepsilon}Nd (11 Ma) = –1.9 to –0.7]. Mineral chemistry of the peridotite major phases is typical of a mantle section that was depleted of melt. The {delta}18O values of olivine and orthopyroxene from the two samples are also typical of mantle rocks ({delta}18O = 6–6.5{per thousand}). In contrast, calcite veins have {delta}18O of 18–20{per thousand} and {delta}13C of –14{per thousand}, arguing for a subducted sedimentary origin for these carbonates. Presumably, the carbonates were expelled from the downgoing slab and fluxed into the overlying mantle wedge as CO2- or CO2-H2O-rich fluids or melts. The trace-element patterns of two analyzed calcite veins are typical of the arc signatures (e.g., depletions in high-field-strength elements) seen in calc-alkaline magmatic rocks worldwide. However, the cores of peridotite clinopyroxenes do not show that pattern, suggesting that the arc-like trace element signature was introduced via the recycled carbonate agent. A connection between mantle wedge carbonation and diamond formation in a subduction environment is proposed based on these observations.







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