The pyroxenite-diamond connection
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Abstract
Kiseeva, E.S., Yaxley, G.M., Stepanov, A.S., Tkalcic, H., Litasov, K.D., Kamenetsky, V.S. (2013a) Metapyroxenite in the mantle transition zone revealed from majorite inclusions in diamonds. Geology 41, 883-886.
). In this study we show that the pyroxenite-diamond association is a consequence of the interaction between basaltic and peridotitic compositions in the presence of carbonate melt and that layering of the pyroxenites is a natural consequence of this interaction. Reduction of carbonate to carbon at high pressures is responsible for the genetic connection between pyroxenite and diamond and the abundance of pyroxenitic inclusions reflects this connection rather than a high abundance of this rock type in the mantle.Figures and Tables
Figure 1 Compositions of 16 eclogitic, 75 pyroxenitic and 32 peridotitic majorite inclusions in natural diamonds as functions of (Si + Ti) pfu (per formula unit), showing (dashed lines) the theoretical “peridotitic” and “eclogitic” substitutions discussed in the text (after Kiseeva et al., 2013a). | Figure 2 Bulk compositions of natural pyroxenites (grey circles) plotted in MgO-Al2O3 compositional space. Dashed red line shows the regression line for all the pyroxenites. (a) Compositions of majoritic inclusions in diamonds of eclogitic (red), pyroxenitic (blue) and peridotitic (light green) affinities. Fields of bulk rock peridotite and MORB are shown as blue ovals. (b) Tie line between a majoritic garnet and calculated coexisting clinopyroxene (Cpx; see text for details). A possible bulk rock composition for this pair was placed on the red regression line. (c) Population of natural majoritic garnets and reconstructed clinopyroxene compositions. Field of Cpx compositions is shown with the yellow oval. Note wide range of potential bulk (pyroxenitic) source rock compositions. Placement of the latter around the regression line is meant only to be indicative. (d) Majoritic inclusions in diamonds (green circles) which coexist with clinopyroxene(s) (green triangles) within the same diamond. The range of observed natural clinopyroxene compositions occupy the area predicted by our modelling. Orange circles show the bulk composition and the majorite-clinopyroxene pair which crystallised in an experimental run at 15 GPa and 2150 °C. | Figure 3 Chemical potential diagram (at fixed pressure and temperature) showing stabilities of phases coexisting with clinopyroxene. Curvature of garnet field boundaries is due to changing composition on passing from eclogite to peridotite (see text). Interaction between eclogite and peridotite will lead to gradients in chemical potentials of MgO and CaO (red dashed line) and layers of orthopyroxene next to peridotite and garnet next to eclogite. Fo-forsterite, En-orthopyroxene, Q/Co – quartz/coesite, Grt – garnet, An – anorthite, Cpx – clinopyroxene. | Figure 4 Back-scattered electron images of SA2-1 run products. The experimental conditions are 3 GPa and 1350 °C. Panel (b) shows an enlarged area from panel (a). Orthopyroxene (on the peridotite side) and garnet (on the eclogite-side) are formed within the reaction zone between carbonated eclogite and peridotite. |
Figure 1 | Figure 2 | Figure 3 | Figure 4 |
Supplementary Figures and Tables
Figure S-1 Bulk rock compositions of natural pyroxenites (grey circles), majoritic inclusions in diamonds of eclogitic (orange triangles), pyroxenitic (purple triangles) and peridotitic (green triangles) affinities and reconstructed clinopyroxene compositions of eclogitic (orange diamonds) and pyroxenitic (purple diamonds) affinities. Blue lines represent selected tie lines between natural majoritic garnets and reconstructed clinopyroxenes. | Figure S-2 Majoritic garnet LILE and HFSE abundances normalised to CI-chondrite. (McDonough and Sun, 1995). Majorites of peridotitic affinity are significantly more depleted in Nb, Ti, Zr, Hf and Y than pyroxenitic majorites. Low Ba and Sr abundances in pyroxenitic majorite is possibly due to coexisting clinopyroxene. Red circles show abundances for primitive (>8.7 wt. % MgO) MORB glasses (Jenner and O'Neill, 2012). | Figure S-3 Majoritic garnet REE abundances normalised to CI-chondrite (McDonough and Sun, 1995). Majorites of peridotitic affinity are significantly more depleted in Heavy REE. Red circles show abundances for primitive (>8.7 wt. % MgO) MORB glasses (Jenner and O'Neill, 2012). | Figure S-4 Comparison of Mg#, CaO, Al2O3 and Na2O contents of natural clinopyroxene inclusions with those calculated to be in equilibrium with pyroxenitic and eclogitic majorite. Clinopyroxene compositions are taken from the following studies: Moore and Gurney, 1989; Wilding, 1990; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel et al., 2000; Davies et al., 2004; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Bulanova et al., 2010. | Figure S-5 Estimated pressure of majoritic inclusions based on three different geobarometers. | Table S-1 Experimental run products. | Table S-2 Compositions of run products. |
Figure S-1 | Figure S-2 | Figure S-3 | Figure S-4 | Figure S-5 | Table S-1 | Table S-2 |
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Letter
Between 8-15 GPa, with increasing pressure the orthopyroxene and clinopyroxene of peridotite dissolve into garnet through the peridotitic “majorite” substitution: 2Al3+ = Si4+ + M2+, where M2+ represents divalent Mg, Fe, Ca and Mn (Fig. 1). In the transition zone (410-660 km depth) “peridotite” thus becomes a bimineralic rock composed of majorite plus a high pressure polymorph of (Mg,Fe)2SiO4 (wadsleyite or ringwoodite). Under the same conditions basalt initially transforms to eclogite (garnet plus clinopyroxene) and then with increasing pressure the clinopyroxene dissolves into the garnet through a combination of the peridotitic substitution and a second eclogitic substitution: M2+ + Al3+ = Na+ +Si4+. In this case, the garnets become richer in Si and Na and poorer in Al and, in the deepest parts of the transition zone (pressure >18 GPa), eclogite becomes monomineralic garnetite.
Majoritic garnets are fairly common inclusions in sublithospheric diamond and, based on their compositions, are generally categorised as either “eclogitic” (high Ca, low Cr, low Mg# = 100Mg/(Mg+Fe)) or “peridotitic” (low Ca, high Cr, high Mg#). Kiseeva et al. (2013a)
Kiseeva, E.S., Yaxley, G.M., Stepanov, A.S., Tkalcic, H., Litasov, K.D., Kamenetsky, V.S. (2013a) Metapyroxenite in the mantle transition zone revealed from majorite inclusions in diamonds. Geology 41, 883-886.
showed, however, that the majority of the inclusions exhibit the peridotitic substitution but have high Ca (up to 14.7 wt. % CaO), low Cr (<0.53 wt. % Cr2O3) and low Mg# (~50-80) indicating source compositions intermediate between those of eclogite and peridotite (Figs. 1, 2; Hirschmann and Stolper, 1996Hirschmann, M.M., Stolper, E.M. (1996) A possible role for garnet pyroxenite in the origin of the ''garnet signature'' in MORB. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 124, 185-208.
). These intermediate compositions are broadly pyroxenitic (Kiseeva et al., 2013aKiseeva, E.S., Yaxley, G.M., Stepanov, A.S., Tkalcic, H., Litasov, K.D., Kamenetsky, V.S. (2013a) Metapyroxenite in the mantle transition zone revealed from majorite inclusions in diamonds. Geology 41, 883-886.
). The potential implication is that pyroxenite could be a major rock type in the mantle transition zone, a hypothesis explored extensively 30 years ago (Anderson and Bass, 1986Anderson, D.L., Bass, J.D. (1986) Transition region of the Earths upper mantle. Nature 320, 321-328.
). An alternative possibility is that inclusions in diamond are biased toward the pyroxenite lithology, which requires an intimate connection between the source of diamond carbon and pyroxenite generation. This connection is investigated here.Figure 2a shows the compositions of majoritic inclusions, MORB, peridotites and pyroxenites. Garnets of pyroxenitic affinity are higher in MgO and lower in Al2O3 than those of eclogitic affinity. Using geobarometers based on the Si content of majoritic garnet (Collerson et al., 2010
Collerson, K.D., Williams, Q., Kamber, B.S., Omori, S., Arai, H., Ohtani, E. (2010) Majoritic garnet: a new approach to pressure estimation of shock events in meteorites and the encapsulation of sub-lithospheric inclusions in diamond. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 74, 5939-5957.
; Beyer, 2015Beyer, C. (2015) Geobarometry, phase relations and elasticity of eclogite under conditions of Earth’s upper mantle. PhD thesis, University of Bayreuth, Interdisciplinary Institutions, 217pp. 143, 56-70.
), these inclusions were formed at pressures of 7-18 GPa with values above 15 GPa being rare. At these pressures clinopyroxene should coexist with the garnet in some, but not all, pyroxenitic compositions, an inference which is supported by general compositional differences between majorite garnet and bulk MORB and pyroxenite (Fig. 2a and Supplementary Information). Instances of 2 phase (clinopyroxene-garnet) assemblages in the same diamond are, however, rare, which may reflect a specific connection between the diamond-forming process discussed below and garnet. Nevertheless, we began by estimating the compositions of the clinopyroxenes with which the observed majoritic garnets should coexist. We used around 50 high-pressure experiments on garnet-clinopyroxene pairs as a basis of our estimates (Supplementary Information). These experiments give us a Na partitioning expression:where P is in GPa and T is in K. In Equation 1 the Na contents of clinopyroxene (Cpx) and garnet (Grt) are cation values on 6 and 12 oxygen bases, respectively. We then assumed that, at these high pressures, tetrahedral Al in clinopyroxene is low (0.01 cations per formula unit) and that octahedral Al on the M1 site is Na plus octahedral Al coupled to tetrahedral Al (i.e. NaAlSi2O6 and CaAl2SiO6 substitutions respectively). We calculated the Ca content of the M2 clinopyroxene site by assuming that Na+Ca on this site is 0.95 cations per formula unit, thus allowing 0.05 of (Mg+Fe) on the large M2 site. We then assumed that Si is 2.0 minus tetrahedral Al and that Mg+Fe fill the remaining M1 and M2 sites. The ratio Mg/(Mg+Fe)cpx was obtained from the garnet composition using our experimental observations which yield:
In this study we use a database of 16 eclogitic, 75 pyroxenitic and 32 peridotitic majorites reported in the literature (Fig. 2a) and calculate a clinopyroxene composition for each one, shown in Figure 2b.
Figures 2a,b,c show bulk rock compositions of natural pyroxenites (e.g., Hirschmann and Stolper, 1996
Hirschmann, M.M., Stolper, E.M. (1996) A possible role for garnet pyroxenite in the origin of the ''garnet signature'' in MORB. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 124, 185-208.
) together with observed compositions of garnet inclusions in diamond and those of clinopyroxenes calculated to coexist with these garnets. Tie lines between garnet and clinopyroxene cross the pyroxenite field and, for the “pyroxenitic” inclusions cover almost the entire range of compositions of pyroxenites (Fig. 2c and Supplementary Information). For simplicity we have placed a putative “bulk” composition for the source of each inclusion on the red regression line through the pyroxenite compositional data of Hirschmann and Stolper (1996)Hirschmann, M.M., Stolper, E.M. (1996) A possible role for garnet pyroxenite in the origin of the ''garnet signature'' in MORB. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 124, 185-208.
. Note that the recalculated clinopyroxenes occupy a fairly narrow field highlighted in Figure 2c by a yellow oval.As mentioned above, inclusions of majoritic garnet and clinopyroxene in the same diamond are extremely rare, but nevertheless the few occurrences available enable us to test our calculation method (Fig. 2d). In Figure 2d we compare our field of calculated clinopyroxene compositions with the observed compositions of clinopyroxenes coexisting with garnet in the same diamond. As can be seen, the agreement is excellent. Similarly, in Figure 2d we show the results of an experiment in which a pyroxenitic bulk composition was reacted at 15 GPa and 2150 °C. Despite the extreme temperature, used to enhance reaction rates, the composition of clinopyroxene coexisting with garnet can also be seen to be in excellent agreement with our calculation approach.
The large number of pyroxenites found in ophiolitic complexes, alpine massifs, and as mantle xenoliths (Hirschmann and Stolper, 1996
Hirschmann, M.M., Stolper, E.M. (1996) A possible role for garnet pyroxenite in the origin of the ''garnet signature'' in MORB. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 124, 185-208.
; Fig. 2a) suggest that there are common and widespread mechanisms for the formation of lithologies intermediate between a typical basalt (or eclogite) and peridotite. Given the wide range of compositions and mineralogies found in such “pyroxenites” it is likely that more than one mechanism applies (Downes, 2007Downes, H. (2007) Origin and significance of spinel and garnet pyroxenites in the shallow lithospheric mantle: Ultramafic massifs in orogenic belts in Western Europe and NW Africa. Lithos 99, 1-24.
). However, the predominance of sublithospheric garnet inclusions of pyroxenitic affinity (Kiseeva et al., 2013aKiseeva, E.S., Yaxley, G.M., Stepanov, A.S., Tkalcic, H., Litasov, K.D., Kamenetsky, V.S. (2013a) Metapyroxenite in the mantle transition zone revealed from majorite inclusions in diamonds. Geology 41, 883-886.
) strongly suggests that one important and widespread mechanism involves carbon. Since diamond is inert, the most plausible origin of the association is through interaction between eclogite and peridotite in the presence of carbonated melt or fluid.In order to investigate the possible formation of pyroxenite through the interaction of carbonated eclogite with peridotite we performed high-pressure sandwich experiments in a piston-cylinder apparatus. Model quartz-eclogite and peridotite compositions in the system CaO-MgO-Al2O3-SiO2 (reduced in CaO content to take account of added carbonate) were mixed with ~5 % of CaCO3 and loaded on top of one another in a 3 mm Pt capsule. The capsule was welded shut and the experiments performed at 3 GPa and 1350 °C for between 1.5 and 8 hours (Supplementary Information). Under these conditions a SiO2-poor carbonate melt develops from the CaCO3 introduced in the starting materials and enhances the rates of reaction between the two principal lithologies.
The experiments simulate a sharp compositional boundary between peridotite and basalt (coesite-eclogite at 3 GPa), analogous to the situation in subducted lithosphere having veins and lenses of basaltic composition dispersed in peridotite (Allègre and Turcotte, 1986
Allegre, C.J., Turcotte, D.L. (1986) Implications of a 2-component marble-cake mantle. Nature 323, 123-127.
). In such cases, according to Korzhinskii (1959)Korzhinskii, D.S. (1959) Physicochemical basis of the analysis of the paragenesis of minerals. Translated from Russian. Consultants Bureau, New York. 142pp.
, we would expect development of high variance assemblages, typically monomineralic zones, controlled by diffusion of major elements between the two components. Figure 3 shows a schematic (simplified) chemical potential diagram in µCaO-µMgO space which exhibits how mineralogical banding should develop between coesite-eclogite and peridotite.Both rocks contain clinopyroxene and garnet, but the excess SiO2 in the eclogite should react with the peridotite to form a layer of orthopyroxene (± clinopyroxene) next to the peridotite and a layer enriched in garnet and without coesite next to the eclogite. The garnet should become more Mg-rich as we pass from eclogite to peridotite and we have represented this predicted change with curved boundaries to the garnet field. Figure 4 shows back-scattered electron images of the products of experiment Sa2-1 which generated the predicted monomineralic layers between eclogite and peridotite. As predicted, after 8 hours of reaction at 1350 °C, garnet composition changes progressively from 22.9 wt. % MgO, 8.8 wt. % CaO in the eclogite layer to 25.1 wt. % MgO, 7.0 wt. % CaO in the garnet layer to 27.0 wt. % MgO, 6.1 wt. % CaO in the peridotite. These phase compositions, in an idealised Fe-free system are consistent with those found in lherzolites and eclogites. The model sandwich experiments demonstrate, therefore, that zoned garnet pyroxenites may be formed as a result of a wall-rock reaction between silica-saturated, carbonated eclogite and silica-undersaturated peridotite.
In the Beni Bousera peridotite massif of Morocco there are frequent veins and lenses of pyroxenite, with or without garnet. That these rocks have been subjected to high pressure (>4.5 GPa) is evidenced by the presence in the pyroxenites of graphite pseudomorphs after diamond (Pearson et al., 1993
Pearson, D.G., Davies, G.R., Nixon, P.H. (1993) Geochemical constraints on the petrogenesis of diamond facies pyroxenites from the Beni Bousera peridotite massif, North Morocco. Journal of Petrology 34, 125-172.
). Boundaries between pyroxenite and peridotite are generally sharp and pyroxenite veins are often layered with margins of orthopyroxenite or websterite, consistent with Figure 3 and our experiments. The layering has previously been recognised as likely due to interaction between melts and peridotite, and the association with carbon is consistent with our hypothesis of a connection between carbon and high pressure pyroxenite formation. In this case the carbon has ∂13C of -16 to -28 per mil, consistent with subducted carbon and the pyroxenites have ∂18O of +4.9 to 9.3 per mil suggesting an origin as altered oceanic crust. Trace element patterns of websteritic garnet inclusions in diamonds also suggest a mafic precursor source, most likely subducted heterogeneous oceanic crust (Aulbach et al., 2002Aulbach, S., Stachel, T., Viljoen, K.S., Brey, G.P., Harris, J.W. (2002) Eclogitic and websteritic diamond sources beneath the Limpopo Belt - is slab-melting the link? Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 143, 56-70.
).Estimates of the amounts of carbonate subducted into the mantle range from 2.4 to 4.8 x 1013 g of C per year (Dasgupta and Hirschmann, 2010
Dasgupta, R., Hirschmann, M.M. (2010) The deep carbon cycle and melting in Earth's interior. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 298, 1-13.
) and numerous studies have indicated that most carbonate survives this process, carrying a characteristic isotopic signature into the deeper mantle (e.g., Kerrick and Connolly, 2001Kerrick, D.M., Connolly, J.A.D. (2001) Metamorphic devolatilization of subducted oceanic metabasalts: implications for seismicity, arc magmatism and volatile recycling. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 189, 19-29.
; Yaxley and Brey, 2004Yaxley, G.M., Brey, G.P. (2004) Phase relations of carbonate-bearing eclogite assemblages from 2.5 to 5.5 GPa: implications for petrogenesis of carbonatites. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 146, 606-619.
). Based initially on density considerations and later on oxygen thermobarometry of garnet peridotites, however, Wood et al. (1990,Wood, B.J., Bryndzia, L.T., Johnson, K.E. (1990) Mantle oxidation state and its relationship to tectonic environment and fluid speciation. Science 248, 337-345.
1996)Wood, B.J., Pawley, A., Frost, D.R. (1996) Water and carbon in the Earth's mantle. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London Series A-Mathematical Physical and Engineering Sciences 354, 1495-1511.
calculated that carbonate would be unstable in the mantle at depths greater than 140-150 km and would oxidise Fe2+ into Fe3+, the latter dissolving into garnet in reactions similar to:Measurements of Fe3+/Fe2+ ratios in garnets from the deeper parts of the continental lithosphere (e.g., Woodland and Koch, 2003
Woodland, A.B., Koch, M. (2003) Variation in oxygen fugacity with depth in the upper mantle beneath the Kaapvaal craton, Southern Africa. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 214, 295-310.
) support this hypothesis of increasing stability of diamond relative to carbonate with increasing depth. We also found direct evidence of diamond growing in carbonate in an experiment performed on carbonated eclogite at 13 GPa and 1400 °C (Kiseeva et al., 2013bKiseeva, E.S., Litasov, K.D., Yaxley, G.M., Ohtani, E., Kamenetsky, V.S. (2013b) Melting and phase relations of carbonated eclogite at 9–21 GPa and the petrogenesis of alkali-rich melts in the deep mantle. Journal of Petrology 54, 1555-1583.
). Similarly, Stagno et al. (2013)Stagno, V., Ojwang, D.O., McCammon, C.A., Frost, D.J. (2013) The oxidation state of the mantle and the extraction of carbon from Earth's interior. Nature 493, 84-90.
have shown experimentally that, in normal mantle, carbonate is replaced by diamond and Fe3+-bearing garnet at depths below ~160 km further confirming the validity of our model.Our experimentally-tested model of the formation of inclusions in diamonds of pyroxenitic affinity therefore follows reaction between eclogite and peridotite in the presence of subducted carbonate to produce garnet-pyroxenite. This is followed by dissolution of pyroxene components into the garnet via the majorite substitution at pressures above ~7 GPa which shifts garnet composition into the general field of pyroxenite (Fig. 2a). The intimate association of C and garnet-bearing pyroxenite culminates with the breakdown of carbonate to diamond plus Fe3+, the latter dissolving in the majoritic garnet. The preponderance of garnet inclusions over those of clinopyroxene may be explained by a combination of the shift of garnet composition into the pyroxenite field with increasing pressure (Fig. 2a) and the potential bias introduced by the diamond-garnet connection described above. The inheritance of shallow crustal signatures observed in sublithospheric pyroxenitic inclusion assemblages (e.g., negative Eu anomalies at elevated MREE-HREEN; Tappert et al., 2005
Tappert, R., Stachel, T., Harris, J.W., Muehlenbachs, K., Ludwig, T., Brey, G.P. (2005) Subducting oceanic crust: the source of deep diamonds. Geology 33, 565-568.
) and elevated δ18O signatures (Ickert et al., 2015Ickert, R.B., Stachel, T., Stern, R.A., Harris, J.W. (2015) Extreme 18O-enrichment in majorite constrains a crustal origin of transition zone diamonds. Geochemical Perspectives Letters 1, 65-74.
) are predictable outcomes of our model. We conclude that the high relative abundance of “pyroxenitic” garnets as inclusions in diamonds is a consequence of the genetic relationship between carbon and pyroxenite-formation rather than an indication of the high abundance of pyroxenite in the transition zone.top
Acknowledgements
We thank Marc Hirschmann and Dante Canil for thorough and constructive reviews. We acknowledge support from European Research Council grant 267764 to BJW and the NERC grant NE/L010828/1 to ESK.
Editor: Bruce Watson
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References
Allègre, C.J., Turcotte, D.L. (1986) Implications of a 2-component marble-cake mantle. Nature 323, 123-127.
Show in context
The experiments simulate a sharp compositional boundary between peridotite and basalt (coesite-eclogite at 3 GPa), analogous to the situation in subducted lithosphere having veins and lenses of basaltic composition dispersed in peridotite (Allègre and Turcotte, 1986).
View in article
Anderson, D.L., Bass, J.D. (1986) Transition region of the Earths upper mantle. Nature 320, 321-328.
Show in context
The potential implication is that pyroxenite could be a major rock type in the mantle transition zone, a hypothesis explored extensively 30 years ago (Anderson and Bass, 1986).
View in article
Aulbach, S., Stachel, T., Viljoen, K.S., Brey, G.P., Harris, J.W. (2002) Eclogitic and websteritic diamond sources beneath the Limpopo Belt - is slab-melting the link? Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 143, 56-70.
Show in context
Trace element patterns of websteritic garnet inclusions in diamonds also suggest a mafic precursor source, most likely subducted heterogeneous oceanic crust (Aulbach et al., 2002).
View in article
Beyer, C. (2015) Geobarometry, phase relations and elasticity of eclogite under conditions of Earth’s upper mantle. PhD thesis, University of Bayreuth, Interdisciplinary Institutions, 217pp. 143, 56-70.
Show in context
Using geobarometers based on the Si content of majoritic garnet (Collerson et al., 2010; Beyer, 2015), these inclusions were formed at pressures of 7-18 GPa with values above 15 GPa being rare.
View in article
Collerson, K.D., Williams, Q., Kamber, B.S., Omori, S., Arai, H., Ohtani, E. (2010) Majoritic garnet: a new approach to pressure estimation of shock events in meteorites and the encapsulation of sub-lithospheric inclusions in diamond. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 74, 5939-5957.
Show in context
Using geobarometers based on the Si content of majoritic garnet (Collerson et al., 2010; Beyer, 2015), these inclusions were formed at pressures of 7-18 GPa with values above 15 GPa being rare.
View in article
Dasgupta, R., Hirschmann, M.M. (2010) The deep carbon cycle and melting in Earth's interior. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 298, 1-13.
Show in context
Estimates of the amounts of carbonate subducted into the mantle range from 2.4 to 4.8 x 1013 g of C per year (Dasgupta and Hirschmann, 2010) and numerous studies have indicated that most carbonate survives this process, carrying a characteristic isotopic signature into the deeper mantle (e.g., Kerrick and Connolly, 2001; Yaxley and Brey, 2004).
View in article
Downes, H. (2007) Origin and significance of spinel and garnet pyroxenites in the shallow lithospheric mantle: Ultramafic massifs in orogenic belts in Western Europe and NW Africa. Lithos 99, 1-24.
Show in context
Given the wide range of compositions and mineralogies found in such “pyroxenites” it is likely that more than one mechanism applies (Downes, 2007).
View in article
Hirschmann, M.M., Stolper, E.M. (1996) A possible role for garnet pyroxenite in the origin of the ''garnet signature'' in MORB. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 124, 185-208.
Show in context
Kiseeva et al. (2013a) showed, however, that the majority of the inclusions exhibit the peridotitic substitution but have high Ca (up to 14.7 wt. % CaO), low Cr (<0.53 wt. % Cr2O3) and low Mg# (~50-80) indicating source compositions intermediate between those of eclogite and peridotite (Figs. 1, 2; Hirschmann and Stolper, 1996).
View in article
Figures 2 a,b,c show bulk rock compositions of natural pyroxenites (e.g., Hirschmann and Stolper, 1996) together with observed compositions of garnet inclusions in diamond and those of clinopyroxenes calculated to coexist with these garnets.
View in article
For simplicity we have placed a putative “bulk” composition for the source of each inclusion on the red regression line through the pyroxenite compositional data of Hirschmann and Stolper (1996).
View in article
The large number of pyroxenites found in ophiolitic complexes, alpine massifs, and as mantle xenoliths (Hirschmann and Stolper, 1996; Fig. 2a) suggest that there are common and widespread mechanisms for the formation of lithologies intermediate between a typical basalt (or eclogite) and peridotite.
View in article
Ickert, R.B., Stachel, T., Stern, R.A., Harris, J.W. (2015) Extreme 18O-enrichment in majorite constrains a crustal origin of transition zone diamonds. Geochemical Perspectives Letters 1, 65-74.
Show in context
The inheritance of shallow crustal signatures observed in sublithospheric pyroxenitic inclusion assemblages (e.g., negative Eu anomalies at elevated MREE-HREEN; Tappert et al., 2005) and elevated δ18O signatures (Ickert et al., 2015) are predictable outcomes of our model.
View in article
Kerrick, D.M., Connolly, J.A.D. (2001) Metamorphic devolatilization of subducted oceanic metabasalts: implications for seismicity, arc magmatism and volatile recycling. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 189, 19-29.
Show in context
Estimates of the amounts of carbonate subducted into the mantle range from 2.4 to 4.8 x 1013 g of C per year (Dasgupta and Hirschmann, 2010) and numerous studies have indicated that most carbonate survives this process, carrying a characteristic isotopic signature into the deeper mantle (e.g., Kerrick and Connolly, 2001; Yaxley and Brey, 2004).
View in article
Kiseeva, E.S., Yaxley, G.M., Stepanov, A.S., Tkalcic, H., Litasov, K.D., Kamenetsky, V.S. (2013a) Metapyroxenite in the mantle transition zone revealed from majorite inclusions in diamonds. Geology 41, 883-886.
Show in context
Surprisingly, despite their subordinate abundance in mantle fragments, pyroxenitic compositions appear be the dominant sources of majoritic garnet inclusions in diamonds, the principal window into the mineralogy of the deep upper mantle and the transition zone (Kiseeva et al., 2013a).
View in article
Kiseeva et al. (2013a) showed, however, that the majority of the inclusions exhibit the peridotitic substitution but have high Ca (up to 14.7 wt. % CaO), low Cr (<0.53 wt. % Cr2O3) and low Mg# (~50-80) indicating source compositions intermediate between those of eclogite and peridotite (Figs. 1, 2; Hirschmann and Stolper, 1996).
View in article
These intermediate compositions are broadly pyroxenitic (Kiseeva et al., 2013a).
View in article
Figure 1 Compositions of 16 eclogitic, 75 pyroxenitic and 32 peridotitic majorite inclusions in natural diamonds as functions of (Si + Ti) pfu (per formula unit), showing (dashed lines) the theoretical “peridotitic” and “eclogitic” substitutions discussed in the text (after Kiseeva et al., 2013a).
View in article
However, the predominance of sublithospheric garnet inclusions of pyroxenitic affinity (Kiseeva et al., 2013a) strongly suggests that one important and widespread mechanism involves carbon.
View in article
Kiseeva, E.S., Litasov, K.D., Yaxley, G.M., Ohtani, E., Kamenetsky, V.S. (2013b) Melting and phase relations of carbonated eclogite at 9–21 GPa and the petrogenesis of alkali-rich melts in the deep mantle. Journal of Petrology 54, 1555-1583.
Show in context
We also found direct evidence of diamond growing in carbonate in an experiment performed on carbonated eclogite at 13 GPa and 1400 °C (Kiseeva et al 2013b).
View in article
Korzhinskii, D.S. (1959) Physicochemical basis of the analysis of the paragenesis of minerals. Translated from Russian. Consultants Bureau, New York. 142pp.
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In such cases, according to Korzhinskii (1959), we would expect development of high variance assemblages, typically monomineralic zones, controlled by diffusion of major elements between the two components.
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Pearson, D.G., Davies, G.R., Nixon, P.H. (1993) Geochemical constraints on the petrogenesis of diamond facies pyroxenites from the Beni Bousera peridotite massif, North Morocco. Journal of Petrology 34, 125-172.
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That these rocks have been subjected to high pressure (>4.5 GPa) is evidenced by the presence in the pyroxenites of graphite pseudomorphs after diamond (Pearson et al., 1993).
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Stagno, V., Ojwang, D.O., McCammon, C.A., Frost, D.J. (2013) The oxidation state of the mantle and the extraction of carbon from Earth's interior. Nature 493, 84-90.
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Similarly, Stagno et al. (2013) have shown experimentally that, in normal mantle, carbonate is replaced by diamond and Fe3+-bearing garnet at depths below ~160 km further confirming the validity of our model.
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Tappert, R., Stachel, T., Harris, J.W., Muehlenbachs, K., Ludwig, T., Brey, G.P. (2005) Subducting oceanic crust: the source of deep diamonds. Geology 33, 565-568.
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The inheritance of shallow crustal signatures observed in sublithospheric pyroxenitic inclusion assemblages (e.g., negative Eu anomalies at elevated MREE-HREEN; Tappert et al., 2005) and elevated δ18O signatures (Ickert et al., 2015) are predictable outcomes of our model.
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Wood, B.J., Bryndzia, L.T., Johnson, K.E. (1990) Mantle oxidation state and its relationship to tectonic environment and fluid speciation. Science 248, 337-345.
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Based initially on density considerations and later on oxygen thermobarometry of garnet peridotites, however, Wood et al. (1990; 1996) calculated that carbonate would be unstable in the mantle at depths greater than 140-150 km and would oxidise Fe2+ into Fe3+, the latter dissolving into garnet in reactions similar to:
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Wood, B.J., Pawley, A., Frost, D.R. (1996) Water and carbon in the Earth's mantle. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London Series A-Mathematical Physical and Engineering Sciences 354, 1495-1511.
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Based initially on density considerations and later on oxygen thermobarometry of garnet peridotites, however, Wood et al. (1990; 1996) calculated that carbonate would be unstable in the mantle at depths greater than 140-150 km and would oxidise Fe2+ into Fe3+, the latter dissolving into garnet in reactions similar to:
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Woodland, A.B., Koch, M. (2003) Variation in oxygen fugacity with depth in the upper mantle beneath the Kaapvaal craton, Southern Africa. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 214, 295-310.
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Measurements of Fe3+/Fe2+ ratios in garnets from the deeper parts of the continental lithosphere (e.g., Woodland and Koch, 2003) support this hypothesis of increasing stability of diamond relative to carbonate with increasing depth.
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Yaxley, G.M., Brey, G.P. (2004) Phase relations of carbonate-bearing eclogite assemblages from 2.5 to 5.5 GPa: implications for petrogenesis of carbonatites. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 146, 606-619.
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Estimates of the amounts of carbonate subducted into the mantle range from 2.4 to 4.8 x 1013 g of C per year (Dasgupta and Hirschmann, 2010) and numerous studies have indicated that most carbonate survives this process, carrying a characteristic isotopic signature into the deeper mantle (e.g., Kerrick and Connolly, 2001; Yaxley and Brey, 2004).
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Supplementary Information
Pyroxenite compositions
In Figure 2 of the paper we define the compositional space occupied by peridotites, eclogites, pyroxenites and diamond inclusions solely in terms of a plot of bulk MgO versus Al2O3. We show that pyroxenites are intermediate between peridotite and MORB in MgO-Al2O3 space. Supplementary Figure S-1a-d adds data for CaO, FeO, SiO2 and Na2O and shows that many of the majoritic inclusions in diamonds are themselves of broadly pyroxenitic composition even in the absence of clinopyroxene. When we add different amounts of calculated equilibrium clinopyroxene (see tie lines) a large fraction of the pyroxenite field is covered by the 2-phase assemblages.
Trace element compositions of majoritic inclusions in diamonds
In Figures S-2 and S-3 we show the few available data in the literature on the REE, LILE and HFSE contents of majoritic diamond inclusions (Wilding, 1990
Wilding, M.C. (1990) A study of diamonds with syngenetic inclusions. PhD thesis. University of Edinburgh, p. 281.
; Moore et al., 1991Moore, R.O., Gurney, J.J., Griffin, W.L., Shimizu, N., 1991. Ultra-high pressure garnet inclusions in Monastery diamonds: trace element abundance patterns and conditions of origin. European Journal of Mineralogy 3, 213-230.
; Hutchinson, 1997Hutchinson, M.T. (1997) Constitution of the deep transition zone and lower mantle shown by diamonds and their inclusions. PhD thesis. University of Edinburgh, pp. vol. 1. 340 pp., vol. 2. 306 pp.
; Stachel and Harris, 1997Stachel, T., Harris, J.W. (1997) Diamond precipitation and mantle metasomatism - evidence from the trace element chemistry of silicate inclusions in diamonds from Akwatia, Ghana. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 129, 143-154.
; Stachel et al., 1998aStachel, T., Harris, J.W., Brey, G.P. (1998a) Rare and unusual mineral inclusions in diamonds from Mwadui, Tanzania. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 132, 34-47.
, bStachel, T., Viljoen, K.S., Brey, G., Harris, J.W. (1998b) Metasomatic processes in lherzolitic and harzburgitic domains of diamondiferous lithospheric mantle: REE in garnets from xenoliths and inclusions in diamonds. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 159, 1-12.
; Wang et al., 2000Wang, W.Y., Sueno, S., Takahashi, E., Yurimoto, H., Gasparik, T. (2000) Enrichment processes at the base of the Archean lithospheric mantle: observations from trace element characteristics of pyropic garnet inclusions in diamonds. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 139, 720-733.
; Kaminsky et al., 2001Kaminsky, F.V., Zakharchenko, O.D., Davies, R., Griffin, W.L., Khachatryan-Blinova, G.K., Shiryaev, A.A. (2001) Superdeep diamonds from the Juina area, Mato Grosso State, Brazil. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 140, 734-753.
; Pokhilenko et al., 2001Pokhilenko, N.P., Sobolev, N.V., McDonald, J.A., Hall, A.E., Yefimova, E.S., Zedgenizov, D.A., Logvinova, A.M., Reimers, L.F. (2001) Crystalline inclusions in diamonds from kimberlites of the Snap Lake area (Slave Craton, Canada): new evidences for the anomalous lithospheric structure. Doklady Earth Sciences 380, 806-811.
; Davies et al., 2003Davies, R.M., Griffin, W.L., O'Reilly, S.Y., Andrew, A.S. (2003) Unusual mineral inclusions and carbon isotopes of alluvial diamonds from Bingara, eastern Australia. Lithos 69, 51-66.
; Pokhilenko et al., 2004Pokhilenko, N.P., Sobolev, N.V., Reutsky, V.N., Hall, A.E., Taylor, L.A. (2004) Crystalline inclusions and C isotope ratios in diamonds from the Snap Lake/King Lake kimberlite dyke system: evidence of ultradeep and enriched lithospheric mantle. Lithos 77, 57-67.
; Tappert et al., 2005Tappert, R., Stachel, T., Harris, J.W., Muehlenbachs, K., Ludwig, T., Brey, G.P. (2005) Diamonds from Jagersfontein (South Africa): messengers from the sublithospheric mantle. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 150, 505-522.
; Bulanova et al., 2010Bulanova, G., Walter, M., Smith, C., Kohn, S., Armstrong, L., Blundy, J., Gobbo, L. (2010) Mineral inclusions in sublithospheric diamonds from Collier 4 kimberlite pipe, Juina, Brazil: subducted protoliths, carbonated melts and primary kimberlite magmatism. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 160, 489-510.
). As can be seen, despite the evident scatter all the peridotitic majorites are significantly more depleted in LILE, HFSE and REE than pyroxenitic majorites. According to our model of basalt-peridotite interaction, the pyroxenites inherit large fractions of these trace elements from their basaltic precursors.Measured and calculated clinopyroxene compositions
We developed a model of Na partitioning between garnet and clinopyroxene at P of 7.5-21.5 GPa and T of 900-1700 °C using experimentally recrystallised garnet-clinopyroxene pairs from a number of experimental studies (Irifune, 1987
Irifune, T. (1987) An experimental investigation of the pyroxene garnet transformation in a pyrolite composition and its bearing on the constitution of the mantle. Physics of The Earth and Planetary Interiors 45, 324-336.
; Yasuda et al., 1994Yasuda, A., Fujii, T., Kurita, K. (1994) Melting phase relations of an anhydrous mid-ocean ridge basalt from 3 to 20 GPa: implications for the behavior of subducted oceanic crust in the mantle. Journal of Geophysical Research-Solid Earth 99, 9401-9414.
; Okamoto and Maruyama, 1998Okamoto, K., Maruyama, S. (1998) Multi-anvil re-equilibration experiments of a Dabie Shan ultrahigh-pressure eclogite within the diamond-stability fields. The Island Arc 7, 52-69.
; Wang and Takahashi, 1999Wang, W.Y., Takahashi, E. (1999) Subsolidus and melting experiments of a K-rich basaltic composition to 27 GPa: implication for the behavior of potassium in the mantle. American Mineralogist 84, 357-361.
; Litasov and Ohtani, 2005Litasov, K.D., Ohtani, E. (2005) Phase relations in hydrous MORB at 18-28 GPa: implications for heterogeneity of the lower mantle. Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors 150, 239-263.
, 2009Litasov, K.D., Ohtani, E. (2009) Solidus and phase relations of carbonated peridotite in the system CaO-Al2O3-MgO-SiO2-Na2O-CO2 to the lower mantle depths. Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors 177, 46-58.
; Bobrov et al., 2008Bobrov, A.V., Litvin, Y.A., Bindi, L., Dymshits, A.M. (2008) Phase relations and formation of sodium-rich majoritic garnet in the system Mg3Al2Si3O12-Na2MgSi5O12 at 7.0 and 8.5 GPa. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 156, 243-257.
; Litasov and Ohtani, 2010Litasov, K., Ohtani, E. (2010) The solidus of carbonated eclogite in the system CaO-Al2O3-MgO-SiO2-Na2O-CO2 to 32 GPa and carbonatite liquid in the deep mantle. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 295, 115-126.
; Kiseeva et al., 2013Kiseeva, E.S., Litasov, K.D., Yaxley, G.M., Ohtani, E., Kamenetsky, V.S. (2013) Melting and phase relations of carbonated eclogite at 9–21 GPa and the petrogenesis of alkali-rich melts in the deep mantle. Journal of Petrology 54, 1555-1583.
). We tried several fairly complex exchange reactions, but found it difficult to improve on a simple empirical relationship fitted to the experimental data:where P is in GPa and T is in K. In Equation S-1, the Na contents of clinopyroxene (Cpx) and garnet (Grt) are atomic values on 6 and 12 oxygen bases respectively. By inspection of the experimental data we see that tetrahedral Al in clinopyroxene is generally very low at these pressures, so we fixed it at 0.01 cations per formula unit. This assumption, coupled with Na partitioning leads to octahedral Al on the M1 site being Na plus tetrahedral Al (i.e. NaAlSi2O6 and CaAl2SiO6 substitutions respectively). We observe that the experimental clinopyroxenes have little occupancy of the large M2 site by small cations Mg2+ and Fe2+ so we calculated the Ca content of the M2 clinopyroxene site by assuming that Na+Ca on this site is 0.95 cations per formula unit, thus allowing only 0.05 of (Mg+Fe) on M2. We then assumed that Si is 2.0 minus tetrahedral Al and that (Mg+Fe) fill the remaining M1 and M2 sites. The experimental products exhibit an approximate Fe-Mg Kd between garnet and clinopyroxene given by:
Equation S-2 enables us to use the garnet composition to calculate Mg/(Mg+Fe)cpx. We then have all relationships necessary to calculate the bulk clinopyroxene composition except for minor elements such as Ti, Cr and Mn. We used our model to reconstruct the compositions of clinopyroxenes in equilibrium with majoritic garnet inclusions prior to estimating a pyroxenitic bulk rock composition for the sources of the inclusions.
A number of studies have reported clinopyroxene(s) included in the same diamond as majoritic garnet (Moore and Gurney, 1989
Moore, R.O., Gurney, J.J. (1989) Mineral inclusions in diamond from Monastery kimberlite, South Africa, in: Ross et al..(Editors), Kimberlites and related rocks, Proceedings of the IVth International Kimberlite Conference. Blackwell, Carlton, Perth, pp. 1029-1041.
; Wilding, 1990Wilding, M.C. (1990) A study of diamonds with syngenetic inclusions. PhD thesis. University of Edinburgh, p. 281.
; Hutchinson, 1997Hutchinson, M.T. (1997) Constitution of the deep transition zone and lower mantle shown by diamonds and their inclusions. PhD thesis. University of Edinburgh, pp. vol. 1. 340 pp., vol. 2. 306 pp.
; Stachel et al., 2000Stachel, T., Brey, G.P., Harris, J.W. (2000) Kankan diamonds (Guinea) I: from the lithosphere down to the transition zone. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 140, 1-15.
; Davies et al., 2004Davies, R.A., Griffin, W.L., O'Reilly, S.Y., McCandless, T.E. (2004) Inclusions in diamonds from the K14 and K10 kimberlites, Buffalo Hills, Alberta, Canada: diamond growth in a plume? Lithos 77, 99-111.
; Pokhilenko et al., 2004Pokhilenko, N.P., Sobolev, N.V., Reutsky, V.N., Hall, A.E., Taylor, L.A. (2004) Crystalline inclusions and C isotope ratios in diamonds from the Snap Lake/King Lake kimberlite dyke system: evidence of ultradeep and enriched lithospheric mantle. Lithos 77, 57-67.
; Bulanova et al., 2010Bulanova, G., Walter, M., Smith, C., Kohn, S., Armstrong, L., Blundy, J., Gobbo, L. (2010) Mineral inclusions in sublithospheric diamonds from Collier 4 kimberlite pipe, Juina, Brazil: subducted protoliths, carbonated melts and primary kimberlite magmatism. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 160, 489-510.
). In Figure S-4 we compare calculated and reported (measured) clinopyroxene compositions for these occurrences of clinopyroxene-garnet pairs.As can be seen, agreement between calculated and observed compositions is generally good, despite the distinct possibility that in some cases, the garnet and pyroxene were never in equilibrium with one another.
Pressure estimates for the majoritic inclusions in diamond
Pressure was estimated using three geobarometers: by Collerson et al. (2010)
Collerson, K.D., Williams, Q., Kamber, B.S., Omori, S., Arai, H., Ohtani, E. (2010) Majoritic garnet: a new approach to pressure estimation of shock events in meteorites and the encapsulation of sub-lithospheric inclusions in diamond. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 74, 5939-5957.
, by Beyer (2015)Beyer, C. (2015) Geobarometry, phase relations and elasticity of eclogite under conditions of Earth’s upper mantle. PhD thesis. University of Bayreuth, Interdisciplinary Institutions. 217pp.
and by our simplified geobarometer, based on Si-content of the majorite: P = (Si-3 + 0.11) / 0.026, where Si is the number of Si cations in majoritic garnet per 12 oxygen formula unit.All three geobarometers indicate that the majority of majoritic inclusions in diamond formed at pressures below 13-15 GPa, which means that they are likely in equilibrium with clinopyroxene.
Experimental and analytical procedures
We performed experiments to simulate reaction across a sharp compositional boundary between peridotite and basalt (coesite-eclogite at 3 GPa), analogous to the situation in subducted lithosphere having veins and lenses of basaltic composition dispersed in peridotite (Allègre and Turcotte, 1986
Allègre, C.J., Turcotte, D.L. (1986) Implications of a 2-component marble-cake mantle. Nature 323, 123-127.
). Model carbonated (~5 % CaCO3) peridotite and eclogite in the CMAS system were loaded into a Pt capsule in roughly 50/50 proportions (see Table S-1).The experiments were performed in an end-loaded Boyd–England-type piston-cylinder apparatus at the University of Oxford. The experimental assembly consisted of a 12.7 mm O.D. calcium fluoride cylinder with inner graphite heater of 8 mm O.D and 6 mm I.D. Interior spacers were of 6 mm O.D. machineable MgO, fired at 1000 °C to ensure dryness. The 3 mm O.D. platinum capsule was surrounded and separated from the graphite furnace by a 6 mm O.D. ring of machineable MgO. The experimental pressure (3 GPa) used the calibration of McDade et al. (2002)
McDade, P., Wood, B.J., Van Westrenen, W., Brooker, R., Gudmundsson, G., Soulard, H., Najorka, J., Blundy, J. (2002) Pressure corrections for a selection of piston-cylinder cell assemblies. Mineralogical Magazine 66, 1021-1028.
.Temperature (1350 °C) was controlled and measured using a C-type (W95Re5–W74Re26) thermocouple separated from the capsule by a 0.8 mm alumina disc (Table S-1). Experiment duration was between 1.5 and 8 hours after which the run was quenched by cutting the power to the graphite heater while maintaining run pressure, which was subsequently slowly released. The recovered experimental products were mounted in acrylic resin, sectioned and hand-polished using water based lubricants and diamond pastes. We report in Table S-2 phase compositions from the longest experiment (Sa2-1) in which the reaction between eclogite and peridotite was best developed (Fig. 4 of main text).
Experiment 15-1 was carried out in a 1000–ton Walker-type multianvil device at the Institute of Geochemistry and Petrology, ETH Zürich. We used a 14/8 assembly with chromium doped MgO octahedron, stepped LaCrO3 furnace and pyrophyllite gaskets. Details of assembly design and pressure calibration of the Zurich multianvil is given in Grassi and Schmidt (2011)
Grassi, D., Schmidt, M.W. (2011) The melting of carbonated pelites from 70 to 700 km depth. Journal of Petrology 52, 765-789.
.Table S-1 Experimental run products.
Exp № | T, ºC | P, GPa | Duration, h | Capsule material | Composition | Eclogite layer | Peridotite layer | Reaction zone |
Sa2-1 | 1350 | 3 | 8 | Pt | Al-rich sandwich | Grt, Co, Cor, melt | Fo, Grt, Opx, Cpx | Opx, Grt, Cpx |
15-1 | 2150 | 15 | 2 | Re | Pyroxenite |
A Re capsule was used and the pyroxenite sample (Table S-2) was held at 15 GPa and 2150 °C for 2 hours. The experiment was quenched by turning off the power supply, resulting in temperature dropping below 500 °C in less than 1 second. The recovered capsule was mounted into a low-viscosity epoxy resin ground and polished with diamond powder (1 and 3 microns diameter). Finally, polished mounts were coated with a carbon film for electron microprobe analysis.
All experimental run products were analysed using a JEOL JXA8600 electron microprobe at the Department of Archaeology at the University of Oxford. WDS analyses were conducted using a 15 kV accelerating voltage and 20 nA beam current with a focused beam of 1 micron spot in order to avoid overlapping phases. At least 50 repeat analyses were collected for each of the phases in the products. Counting times were as follows: 30 seconds peak and 15 seconds background for major elements (e.g., Si, Al, Ca, Mg, Fe); 60 seconds peak and 30 seconds background for minor elements Ti, Mn, Na, K, Cr. A range of synthetic and natural standards was used for calibration. Standards for silicate glass and olivine analysis were natural wollastonite (Ca, Si), synthetic periclase (Mg), rutile (Ti), fowlerite (Mn), natural albite (Na, Al) and hematite (Fe), orthoclase (K), chromite (Cr).
Table S-2 Compositions of run products.
SiO2 | TiO2 | Al2O3 | Cr2O3 | FeO | MgO | CaO | MnO | Na2O | K2O | CO2 | Sum | |
Sa2-1 eclogite | ||||||||||||
Bulk | 53.42 | 17.96 | 11.42 | 14.62 | 2.58 | 100.00 | ||||||
Garnet | 44.46 | 24.90 | 22.88 | 8.78 | 101.01 | |||||||
σ | 0.96 | 0.61 | 0.70 | 0.85 | ||||||||
Melt | 59.49 | 17.49 | 4.53 | 11.36 | 7.15 | 100.01 | ||||||
σ | 3.63 | 2.06 | 1.94 | 1.18 | ||||||||
Sa2-1 peridotite | ||||||||||||
Bulk | 45.90 | 4.97 | 41.99 | 4.88 | 2.26 | 100.00 | ||||||
Fo | 42.94 | 58.26 | 0.28 | 101.48 | ||||||||
σ | 0.33 | 0.29 | 0.14 | |||||||||
Opx | 57.64 | 4.47 | 37.29 | 2.06 | 101.47 | |||||||
σ | 0.50 | 0.70 | 0.50 | 0.34 | ||||||||
Garnet | 45.03 | 23.15 | 27.03 | 6.14 | 101.36 | |||||||
σ | 1.77 | 2.62 | 2.10 | 0.85 | ||||||||
Cpx | 53.31 | 4.40 | 23.58 | 18.39 | 99.68 | |||||||
σ | 2.22 | 0.83 | 1.93 | 2.72 | ||||||||
Sa2-1 zone | ||||||||||||
Peridotite side | ||||||||||||
Opx | 57.07 | 4.16 | 37.17 | 2.27 | 100.67 | |||||||
σ | 1.28 | 0.48 | 0.63 | 0.58 | ||||||||
Sa2-1 zone | ||||||||||||
Eclogite side | ||||||||||||
Garnet | 44.61 | 24.13 | 25.12 | 6.95 | 100.80 | |||||||
σ | 0.49 | 1.16 | 2.63 | 1.57 | ||||||||
Cpx | 55.06 | 2.62 | 22.84 | 19.41 | 99.93 | |||||||
σ | 1.53 | 1.02 | 1.29 | 0.88 | ||||||||
15-1 Bulk | 48.99 | 0.06 | 11.63 | 0.35 | 6.30 | 20.04 | 11.29 | 0.15 | 1.20 | 100.00 | ||
Garnet | 46.49 | 0.04 | 18.84 | 0.49 | 3.62 | 20.93 | 9.57 | 0.15 | 0.33 | 100.46 | ||
σ | 0.50 | 0.01 | 0.94 | 0.05 | 0.39 | 0.42 | 0.40 | 0.02 | 0.08 | |||
Cpx | 56.07 | 0.04 | 3.13 | 0.22 | 4.25 | 16.31 | 17.04 | 0.11 | 1.50 | 98.66 | ||
σ | 0.39 | 0.03 | 0.83 | 0.05 | 0.85 | 0.24 | 0.47 | 0.02 | 0.18 |
CO2 in melt estimated by difference.
Cpx – clinopyroxene, Opx – orthopyroxene, Grt – garnet, Fo - forsterite, Co - coesite, Cor - corundum.
Supplementary Information References
Allègre, C.J., Turcotte, D.L. (1986) Implications of a 2-component marble-cake mantle. Nature 323, 123-127.
Show in context
We performed experiments to simulate reaction across a sharp compositional boundary between peridotite and basalt (coesite-eclogite at 3 GPa), analogous to the situation in subducted lithosphere having veins and lenses of basaltic composition dispersed in peridotite (Allègre and Turcotte, 1986).
View in article
Beyer, C. (2015) Geobarometry, phase relations and elasticity of eclogite under conditions of Earth’s upper mantle. PhD thesis. University of Bayreuth, Interdisciplinary Institutions. 217pp.
Show in context
Pressure was estimated using three geobarometers: by Collerson et al. (2010), by Beyer (2015) and by our simplified geobarometer, based on Si-content of the majorite: P = (Si-3 + 0.11) / 0.026, where Si is the number of Si cations in majoritic garnet per 12 oxygen formula unit.
View in article
Bobrov, A.V., Litvin, Y.A., Bindi, L., Dymshits, A.M. (2008) Phase relations and formation of sodium-rich majoritic garnet in the system Mg3Al2Si3O12-Na2MgSi5O12 at 7.0 and 8.5 GPa. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 156, 243-257.
Show in context
We developed a model of Na partitioning between garnet and clinopyroxene at P of 7.5-21.5 GPa and T of 900-1700 °C using experimentally recrystallised garnet-clinopyroxene pairs from a number of experimental studies (Irifune, 1987; Yasuda et al., 1994; Okamoto and Maruyama, 1998; Wang and Takahashi, 1999; Litasov and Ohtani, 2005, 2009; Bobrov et al., 2008; Litasov and Ohtani, 2010; Kiseeva et al., 2013).
View in article
Bulanova, G., Walter, M., Smith, C., Kohn, S., Armstrong, L., Blundy, J., Gobbo, L. (2010) Mineral inclusions in sublithospheric diamonds from Collier 4 kimberlite pipe, Juina, Brazil: subducted protoliths, carbonated melts and primary kimberlite magmatism. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 160, 489-510.
Show in context
In Figures S-2 and S-3 we show the few available data in the literature on the REE, LILE and HFSE contents of majoritic diamond inclusions (Wilding, 1990; Moore et al., 1991; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel and Harris, 1997; Stachel et al., 1998a,b; Wang et al., 2000; Kaminsky et al., 2001; Pokhilenko et al., 2001; Davies et al., 2003; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Tappert et al., 2005; Bulanova et al., 2010).
View in article
Figure S-4 [...] Clinopyroxene compositions are taken from the following studies: Moore and Gurney, 1989; Wilding, 1990; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel et al., 2000; Davies et al., 2004; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Bulanova et al., 2010.
View in article
A number of studies have reported clinopyroxene(s) included in the same diamond as majoritic garnet (Moore and Gurney, 1989; Wilding, 1990; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel et al., 2000; Davies et al., 2004; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Bulanova et al., 2010).
View in article
Collerson, K.D., Williams, Q., Kamber, B.S., Omori, S., Arai, H., Ohtani, E. (2010) Majoritic garnet: a new approach to pressure estimation of shock events in meteorites and the encapsulation of sub-lithospheric inclusions in diamond. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 74, 5939-5957.
Show in context
Pressure was estimated using three geobarometers: by Collerson et al. (2010), by Beyer (2015) and by our simplified geobarometer, based on Si-content of the majorite: P = (Si-3 + 0.11) / 0.026, where Si is the number of Si cations in majoritic garnet per 12 oxygen formula unit.
View in article
Davies, R.A., Griffin, W.L., O'Reilly, S.Y., McCandless, T.E. (2004) Inclusions in diamonds from the K14 and K10 kimberlites, Buffalo Hills, Alberta, Canada: diamond growth in a plume? Lithos 77, 99-111.
Show in context
Figure S-4 [...] Clinopyroxene compositions are taken from the following studies: Moore and Gurney, 1989; Wilding, 1990; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel et al., 2000; Davies et al., 2004; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Bulanova et al., 2010.
View in article
A number of studies have reported clinopyroxene(s) included in the same diamond as majoritic garnet (Moore and Gurney, 1989; Wilding, 1990; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel et al., 2000; Davies et al., 2004; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Bulanova et al., 2010).
View in article
Davies, R.M., Griffin, W.L., O'Reilly, S.Y., Andrew, A.S. (2003) Unusual mineral inclusions and carbon isotopes of alluvial diamonds from Bingara, eastern Australia. Lithos 69, 51-66.
Show in context
In Figures S-2 and S-3 we show the few available data in the literature on the REE, LILE and HFSE contents of majoritic diamond inclusions (Wilding, 1990; Moore et al., 1991; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel and Harris, 1997; Stachel et al., 1998a,b; Wang et al., 2000; Kaminsky et al., 2001; Pokhilenko et al., 2001; Davies et al., 2003; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Tappert et al., 2005; Bulanova et al., 2010).
View in article
Grassi, D., Schmidt, M.W. (2011) The melting of carbonated pelites from 70 to 700 km depth. Journal of Petrology 52, 765-789.
Show in context
Details of assembly design and pressure calibration of the Zurich multianvil is given in Grassi and Schmidt (2011).
View in article
Hutchinson, M.T. (1997) Constitution of the deep transition zone and lower mantle shown by diamonds and their inclusions. PhD thesis. University of Edinburgh, pp. vol. 1. 340 pp., vol. 2. 306 pp.
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In Figures S-2 and S-3 we show the few available data in the literature on the REE, LILE and HFSE contents of majoritic diamond inclusions (Wilding, 1990; Moore et al., 1991; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel and Harris, 1997; Stachel et al., 1998a,b; Wang et al., 2000; Kaminsky et al., 2001; Pokhilenko et al., 2001; Davies et al., 2003; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Tappert et al., 2005; Bulanova et al., 2010).
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Figure S-4 [...] Clinopyroxene compositions are taken from the following studies: Moore and Gurney, 1989; Wilding, 1990; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel et al., 2000; Davies et al., 2004; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Bulanova et al., 2010.
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A number of studies have reported clinopyroxene(s) included in the same diamond as majoritic garnet (Moore and Gurney, 1989; Wilding, 1990; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel et al., 2000; Davies et al., 2004; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Bulanova et al., 2010).
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Irifune, T. (1987) An experimental investigation of the pyroxene garnet transformation in a pyrolite composition and its bearing on the constitution of the mantle. Physics of The Earth and Planetary Interiors 45, 324-336.
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We developed a model of Na partitioning between garnet and clinopyroxene at P of 7.5-21.5 GPa and T of 900-1700 °C using experimentally recrystallised garnet-clinopyroxene pairs from a number of experimental studies (Irifune, 1987; Yasuda et al., 1994; Okamoto and Maruyama, 1998; Wang and Takahashi, 1999; Litasov and Ohtani, 2005, 2009; Bobrov et al., 2008; Litasov and Ohtani, 2010; Kiseeva et al., 2013).
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Jenner, F.E., O'Neill, H.S. (2012) Analysis of 60 elements in 616 ocean floor basaltic glasses. Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems 13. 45, 324-336.
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Figure S-2[...] Red circles show abundances for primitive (>8.7 wt. % MgO) MORB glasses (Jenner and O'Neill, 2012).
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Figure S-3[...] Red circles show abundances for primitive (>8.7 wt. % MgO) MORB glasses (Jenner and O'Neill, 2012).
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Kaminsky, F.V., Zakharchenko, O.D., Davies, R., Griffin, W.L., Khachatryan-Blinova, G.K., Shiryaev, A.A. (2001) Superdeep diamonds from the Juina area, Mato Grosso State, Brazil. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 140, 734-753.
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In Figures S-2 and S-3 we show the few available data in the literature on the REE, LILE and HFSE contents of majoritic diamond inclusions (Wilding, 1990; Moore et al., 1991; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel and Harris, 1997; Stachel et al., 1998a,b; Wang et al., 2000; Kaminsky et al., 2001; Pokhilenko et al., 2001; Davies et al., 2003; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Tappert et al., 2005; Bulanova et al., 2010).
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Kiseeva, E.S., Litasov, K.D., Yaxley, G.M., Ohtani, E., Kamenetsky, V.S. (2013) Melting and phase relations of carbonated eclogite at 9–21 GPa and the petrogenesis of alkali-rich melts in the deep mantle. Journal of Petrology 54, 1555-1583.
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We developed a model of Na partitioning between garnet and clinopyroxene at P of 7.5-21.5 GPa and T of 900-1700 °C using experimentally recrystallised garnet-clinopyroxene pairs from a number of experimental studies (Irifune, 1987; Yasuda et al., 1994; Okamoto and Maruyama, 1998; Wang and Takahashi, 1999; Litasov and Ohtani, 2005, 2009; Bobrov et al., 2008; Litasov and Ohtani, 2010; Kiseeva et al., 2013).
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Litasov, K.D., Ohtani, E. (2005) Phase relations in hydrous MORB at 18-28 GPa: implications for heterogeneity of the lower mantle. Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors 150, 239-263.
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We developed a model of Na partitioning between garnet and clinopyroxene at P of 7.5-21.5 GPa and T of 900-1700 °C using experimentally recrystallised garnet-clinopyroxene pairs from a number of experimental studies (Irifune, 1987; Yasuda et al., 1994; Okamoto and Maruyama, 1998; Wang and Takahashi, 1999; Litasov and Ohtani, 2005, 2009; Bobrov et al., 2008; Litasov and Ohtani, 2010; Kiseeva et al., 2013).
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Litasov, K.D., Ohtani, E. (2009) Solidus and phase relations of carbonated peridotite in the system CaO-Al2O3-MgO-SiO2-Na2O-CO2 to the lower mantle depths. Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors 177, 46-58.
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We developed a model of Na partitioning between garnet and clinopyroxene at P of 7.5-21.5 GPa and T of 900-1700 °C using experimentally recrystallised garnet-clinopyroxene pairs from a number of experimental studies (Irifune, 1987; Yasuda et al., 1994; Okamoto and Maruyama, 1998; Wang and Takahashi, 1999; Litasov and Ohtani, 2005, 2009; Bobrov et al., 2008; Litasov and Ohtani, 2010; Kiseeva et al., 2013).
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Litasov, K., Ohtani, E. (2010) The solidus of carbonated eclogite in the system CaO-Al2O3-MgO-SiO2-Na2O-CO2 to 32 GPa and carbonatite liquid in the deep mantle. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 295, 115-126.
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We developed a model of Na partitioning between garnet and clinopyroxene at P of 7.5-21.5 GPa and T of 900-1700 °C using experimentally recrystallised garnet-clinopyroxene pairs from a number of experimental studies (Irifune, 1987; Yasuda et al., 1994; Okamoto and Maruyama, 1998; Wang and Takahashi, 1999; Litasov and Ohtani, 2005, 2009; Bobrov et al., 2008; Litasov and Ohtani, 2010; Kiseeva et al., 2013).
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McDade, P., Wood, B.J., Van Westrenen, W., Brooker, R., Gudmundsson, G., Soulard, H., Najorka, J., Blundy, J. (2002) Pressure corrections for a selection of piston-cylinder cell assemblies. Mineralogical Magazine 66, 1021-1028.
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The experimental pressure (3 GPa) used the calibration of McDade et al. (2002).
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McDonough, W.F., Sun, S.S. (1995) The Composition of the Earth. Chemical Geology 120, 223-253.
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Figure S-2[...] Majoritic garnet LILE and HFSE abundances normalised to CI-chondrite. (McDonough and Sun, 1995).
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Figure S-3[...] Majoritic garnet REE abundances normalised to CI-chondrite (McDonough and Sun, 1995).
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Moore, R.O., Gurney, J.J. (1989) Mineral inclusions in diamond from Monastery kimberlite, South Africa, in: Ross et al..(Editors), Kimberlites and related rocks, Proceedings of the IVth International Kimberlite Conference. Blackwell, Carlton, Perth, pp. 1029-1041.
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Figure S-4 [...] Clinopyroxene compositions are taken from the following studies: Moore and Gurney, 1989; Wilding, 1990; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel et al., 2000; Davies et al., 2004; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Bulanova et al., 2010.
View in article
A number of studies have reported clinopyroxene(s) included in the same diamond as majoritic garnet (Moore and Gurney, 1989; Wilding, 1990; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel et al., 2000; Davies et al., 2004; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Bulanova et al., 2010).
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Moore, R.O., Gurney, J.J., Griffin, W.L., Shimizu, N., 1991. Ultra-high pressure garnet inclusions in Monastery diamonds: trace element abundance patterns and conditions of origin. European Journal of Mineralogy 3, 213-230.
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In Figures S-2 and S-3 we show the few available data in the literature on the REE, LILE and HFSE contents of majoritic diamond inclusions (Wilding, 1990; Moore et al., 1991; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel and Harris, 1997; Stachel et al., 1998a,b; Wang et al., 2000; Kaminsky et al., 2001; Pokhilenko et al., 2001; Davies et al., 2003; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Tappert et al., 2005; Bulanova et al., 2010).
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Okamoto, K., Maruyama, S. (1998) Multi-anvil re-equilibration experiments of a Dabie Shan ultrahigh-pressure eclogite within the diamond-stability fields. The Island Arc 7, 52-69.
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We developed a model of Na partitioning between garnet and clinopyroxene at P of 7.5-21.5 GPa and T of 900-1700 °C using experimentally recrystallised garnet-clinopyroxene pairs from a number of experimental studies (Irifune, 1987; Yasuda et al., 1994; Okamoto and Maruyama, 1998; Wang and Takahashi, 1999; Litasov and Ohtani, 2005, 2009; Bobrov et al., 2008; Litasov and Ohtani, 2010; Kiseeva et al., 2013).
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Pokhilenko, N.P., Sobolev, N.V., McDonald, J.A., Hall, A.E., Yefimova, E.S., Zedgenizov, D.A., Logvinova, A.M., Reimers, L.F. (2001) Crystalline inclusions in diamonds from kimberlites of the Snap Lake area (Slave Craton, Canada): new evidences for the anomalous lithospheric structure. Doklady Earth Sciences 380, 806-811.
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In Figures S-2 and S-3 we show the few available data in the literature on the REE, LILE and HFSE contents of majoritic diamond inclusions (Wilding, 1990; Moore et al., 1991; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel and Harris, 1997; Stachel et al., 1998a,b; Wang et al., 2000; Kaminsky et al., 2001; Pokhilenko et al., 2001; Davies et al., 2003; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Tappert et al., 2005; Bulanova et al., 2010).
View in article
A number of studies have reported clinopyroxene(s) included in the same diamond as majoritic garnet (Moore and Gurney, 1989; Wilding, 1990; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel et al., 2000; Davies et al., 2004; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Bulanova et al., 2010).
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Pokhilenko, N.P., Sobolev, N.V., Reutsky, V.N., Hall, A.E., Taylor, L.A. (2004) Crystalline inclusions and C isotope ratios in diamonds from the Snap Lake/King Lake kimberlite dyke system: evidence of ultradeep and enriched lithospheric mantle. Lithos 77, 57-67.
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In Figures S-2 and S-3 we show the few available data in the literature on the REE, LILE and HFSE contents of majoritic diamond inclusions (Wilding, 1990; Moore et al., 1991; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel and Harris, 1997; Stachel et al., 1998a,b; Wang et al., 2000; Kaminsky et al., 2001; Pokhilenko et al., 2001; Davies et al., 2003; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Tappert et al., 2005; Bulanova et al., 2010).
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Figure S-4 [...] Clinopyroxene compositions are taken from the following studies: Moore and Gurney, 1989; Wilding, 1990; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel et al., 2000; Davies et al., 2004; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Bulanova et al., 2010.
View in article
A number of studies have reported clinopyroxene(s) included in the same diamond as majoritic garnet (Moore and Gurney, 1989; Wilding, 1990; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel et al., 2000; Davies et al., 2004; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Bulanova et al., 2010).
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Stachel, T., Harris, J.W. (1997) Diamond precipitation and mantle metasomatism - evidence from the trace element chemistry of silicate inclusions in diamonds from Akwatia, Ghana. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 129, 143-154.
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In Figures S-2 and S-3 we show the few available data in the literature on the REE, LILE and HFSE contents of majoritic diamond inclusions (Wilding, 1990; Moore et al., 1991; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel and Harris, 1997; Stachel et al., 1998a,b; Wang et al., 2000; Kaminsky et al., 2001; Pokhilenko et al., 2001; Davies et al., 2003; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Tappert et al., 2005; Bulanova et al., 2010).
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Stachel, T., Harris, J.W., Brey, G.P. (1998a) Rare and unusual mineral inclusions in diamonds from Mwadui, Tanzania. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 132, 34-47.
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In Figures S-2 and S-3 we show the few available data in the literature on the REE, LILE and HFSE contents of majoritic diamond inclusions (Wilding, 1990; Moore et al., 1991; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel and Harris, 1997; Stachel et al., 1998a,b; Wang et al., 2000; Kaminsky et al., 2001; Pokhilenko et al., 2001; Davies et al., 2003; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Tappert et al., 2005; Bulanova et al., 2010).
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Stachel, T., Viljoen, K.S., Brey, G., Harris, J.W. (1998b) Metasomatic processes in lherzolitic and harzburgitic domains of diamondiferous lithospheric mantle: REE in garnets from xenoliths and inclusions in diamonds. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 159, 1-12.
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In Figures S-2 and S-3 we show the few available data in the literature on the REE, LILE and HFSE contents of majoritic diamond inclusions (Wilding, 1990; Moore et al., 1991; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel and Harris, 1997; Stachel et al., 1998a,b; Wang et al., 2000; Kaminsky et al., 2001; Pokhilenko et al., 2001; Davies et al., 2003; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Tappert et al., 2005; Bulanova et al., 2010).
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Stachel, T., Brey, G.P., Harris, J.W. (2000) Kankan diamonds (Guinea) I: from the lithosphere down to the transition zone. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 140, 1-15.
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Figure S-4 [...] Clinopyroxene compositions are taken from the following studies: Moore and Gurney, 1989; Wilding, 1990; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel et al., 2000; Davies et al., 2004; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Bulanova et al., 2010.
View in article
A number of studies have reported clinopyroxene(s) included in the same diamond as majoritic garnet (Moore and Gurney, 1989; Wilding, 1990; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel et al., 2000; Davies et al., 2004; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Bulanova et al., 2010).
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Tappert, R., Stachel, T., Harris, J.W., Muehlenbachs, K., Ludwig, T., Brey, G.P. (2005) Diamonds from Jagersfontein (South Africa): messengers from the sublithospheric mantle. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 150, 505-522.
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In Figures S-2 and S-3 we show the few available data in the literature on the REE, LILE and HFSE contents of majoritic diamond inclusions (Wilding, 1990; Moore et al., 1991; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel and Harris, 1997; Stachel et al., 1998a,b; Wang et al., 2000; Kaminsky et al., 2001; Pokhilenko et al., 2001; Davies et al., 2003; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Tappert et al., 2005; Bulanova et al., 2010).
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Wang, W.Y., Sueno, S., Takahashi, E., Yurimoto, H., Gasparik, T. (2000) Enrichment processes at the base of the Archean lithospheric mantle: observations from trace element characteristics of pyropic garnet inclusions in diamonds. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 139, 720-733.
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In Figures S-2 and S-3 we show the few available data in the literature on the REE, LILE and HFSE contents of majoritic diamond inclusions (Wilding, 1990; Moore et al., 1991; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel and Harris, 1997; Stachel et al., 1998a,b; Wang et al., 2000; Kaminsky et al., 2001; Pokhilenko et al., 2001; Davies et al., 2003; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Tappert et al., 2005; Bulanova et al., 2010).
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Wang, W.Y., Takahashi, E. (1999) Subsolidus and melting experiments of a K-rich basaltic composition to 27 GPa: implication for the behavior of potassium in the mantle. American Mineralogist 84, 357-361.
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We developed a model of Na partitioning between garnet and clinopyroxene at P of 7.5-21.5 GPa and T of 900-1700 °C using experimentally recrystallised garnet-clinopyroxene pairs from a number of experimental studies (Irifune, 1987; Yasuda et al., 1994; Okamoto and Maruyama, 1998; Wang and Takahashi, 1999; Litasov and Ohtani, 2005, 2009; Bobrov et al., 2008; Litasov and Ohtani, 2010; Kiseeva et al., 2013).
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Wilding, M.C. (1990) A study of diamonds with syngenetic inclusions. PhD thesis. University of Edinburgh, p. 281.
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In Figures S-2 and S-3 we show the few available data in the literature on the REE, LILE and HFSE contents of majoritic diamond inclusions (Wilding, 1990; Moore et al., 1991; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel and Harris, 1997; Stachel et al., 1998a,b; Wang et al., 2000; Kaminsky et al., 2001; Pokhilenko et al., 2001; Davies et al., 2003; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Tappert et al., 2005; Bulanova et al., 2010).
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Figure S-4 [...] Clinopyroxene compositions are taken from the following studies: Moore and Gurney, 1989; Wilding, 1990; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel et al., 2000; Davies et al., 2004; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Bulanova et al., 2010.
View in article
A number of studies have reported clinopyroxene(s) included in the same diamond as majoritic garnet (Moore and Gurney, 1989; Wilding, 1990; Hutchinson, 1997; Stachel et al., 2000; Davies et al., 2004; Pokhilenko et al., 2004; Bulanova et al., 2010).
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Yasuda, A., Fujii, T., Kurita, K. (1994) Melting phase relations of an anhydrous mid-ocean ridge basalt from 3 to 20 GPa: implications for the behavior of subducted oceanic crust in the mantle. Journal of Geophysical Research-Solid Earth 99, 9401-9414.
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We developed a model of Na partitioning between garnet and clinopyroxene at P of 7.5-21.5 GPa and T of 900-1700 °C using experimentally recrystallised garnet-clinopyroxene pairs from a number of experimental studies (Irifune, 1987; Yasuda et al., 1994; Okamoto and Maruyama, 1998; Wang and Takahashi, 1999; Litasov and Ohtani, 2005, 2009; Bobrov et al., 2008; Litasov and Ohtani, 2010; Kiseeva et al., 2013).
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Figures and Tables
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Supplementary Figures and Tables
Table S-1 Experimental run products.
Exp № | T, ºC | P, GPa | Duration, h | Capsule material | Composition | Eclogite layer | Peridotite layer | Reaction zone |
Sa2-1 | 1350 | 3 | 8 | Pt | Al-rich sandwich | Grt, Co, Cor, melt | Fo, Grt, Opx, Cpx | Opx, Grt, Cpx |
15-1 | 2150 | 15 | 2 | Re | Pyroxenite |
Table S-2 Compositions of run products.
SiO2 | TiO2 | Al2O3 | Cr2O3 | FeO | MgO | CaO | MnO | Na2O | K2O | CO2 | Sum | |
Sa2-1 eclogite | ||||||||||||
Bulk | 53.42 | 17.96 | 11.42 | 14.62 | 2.58 | 100.00 | ||||||
Garnet | 44.46 | 24.90 | 22.88 | 8.78 | 101.01 | |||||||
σ | 0.96 | 0.61 | 0.70 | 0.85 | ||||||||
Melt | 59.49 | 17.49 | 4.53 | 11.36 | 7.15 | 100.01 | ||||||
σ | 3.63 | 2.06 | 1.94 | 1.18 | ||||||||
Sa2-1 peridotite | ||||||||||||
Bulk | 45.90 | 4.97 | 41.99 | 4.88 | 2.26 | 100.00 | ||||||
Fo | 42.94 | 58.26 | 0.28 | 101.48 | ||||||||
σ | 0.33 | 0.29 | 0.14 | |||||||||
Opx | 57.64 | 4.47 | 37.29 | 2.06 | 101.47 | |||||||
σ | 0.50 | 0.70 | 0.50 | 0.34 | ||||||||
Garnet | 45.03 | 23.15 | 27.03 | 6.14 | 101.36 | |||||||
σ | 1.77 | 2.62 | 2.10 | 0.85 | ||||||||
Cpx | 53.31 | 4.40 | 23.58 | 18.39 | 99.68 | |||||||
σ | 2.22 | 0.83 | 1.93 | 2.72 | ||||||||
Sa2-1 zone | ||||||||||||
Peridotite side | ||||||||||||
Opx | 57.07 | 4.16 | 37.17 | 2.27 | 100.67 | |||||||
σ | 1.28 | 0.48 | 0.63 | 0.58 | ||||||||
Sa2-1 zone | ||||||||||||
Eclogite side | ||||||||||||
Garnet | 44.61 | 24.13 | 25.12 | 6.95 | 100.80 | |||||||
σ | 0.49 | 1.16 | 2.63 | 1.57 | ||||||||
Cpx | 55.06 | 2.62 | 22.84 | 19.41 | 99.93 | |||||||
σ | 1.53 | 1.02 | 1.29 | 0.88 | ||||||||
15-1 Bulk | 48.99 | 0.06 | 11.63 | 0.35 | 6.30 | 20.04 | 11.29 | 0.15 | 1.20 | 100.00 | ||
Garnet | 46.49 | 0.04 | 18.84 | 0.49 | 3.62 | 20.93 | 9.57 | 0.15 | 0.33 | 100.46 | ||
σ | 0.50 | 0.01 | 0.94 | 0.05 | 0.39 | 0.42 | 0.40 | 0.02 | 0.08 | |||
Cpx | 56.07 | 0.04 | 3.13 | 0.22 | 4.25 | 16.31 | 17.04 | 0.11 | 1.50 | 98.66 | ||
σ | 0.39 | 0.03 | 0.83 | 0.05 | 0.85 | 0.24 | 0.47 | 0.02 | 0.18 |
CO2 in melt estimated by difference.
Cpx – clinopyroxene, Opx – orthopyroxene, Grt – garnet, Fo - forsterite, Co - coesite, Cor - corundum.