Geochemistry of Kauai shield-stage lavas: Implications for the chemical evolution of the Hawaiian plume

نویسندگان

  • S. Mukhopadhyay
  • J. C. Lassiter
  • K. A. Farley
  • S. W. Bogue
چکیده

[1] We measured He, Sr, Nd, Pb, and Os isotope ratios and major and trace element concentrations in stratigraphically and paleomagnetically controlled shield-stage lavas from Kauai, Hawaii. The range of He/He ratios (17–28 RA) from Kauai is similar to that reported from Loihi and thus challenges the prevailing notion that high He/He ratios are restricted to the preshield stage of Hawaiian magmatism. He/He ratios vary erratically with stratigraphic position, and chronostratigraphic control from paleomagnetic data indicates very rapid changes in the He/He ratios (up to 8 RA in 10 years). These variations in helium isotopic ratios are correlated with variations in radiogenic isotope ratios, suggesting rapid changes in melt composition supplying the magma reservoir. A three-component mixing model, previously proposed for Hawaiian shield lavas, does not adequately explain the isotopic data in Kauai shield lavas. The addition of a depleted-mantle (DM) component with the isotopic characteristics similar to posterosional basalts explains the isotopic variability in Kauai shield lavas. The DM component is most apparent in lavas from the Kauai shield and is present in varying proportion in other Hawaiian shield volcanoes. Shield lavas from Kauai sample a high He/He end-member (Loihi component), but while lavas from western Kauai have a larger contribution from the Kea component (high Pb/Pb, anomalously low Pb/Pb relative to Pb/Pb), lavas from eastern Kauai have a larger proportion of an enriched (Koolau) component. The systematic isotopic differences between eastern and western Kauai reflect a gradual migration of the locus of volcanism from west to east, or alternatively east and west Kauai are two distinct shield volcanoes. In the latter case, the two shield volcanoes have maintained distinct magma supply sources and plumbing systems. Our new geochemical data from Kauai are consistent with the existence of a single high He/He reservoir in the Hawaiian plume and suggest that the proportion of the different mantle components in the plume have changed significantly in the past 5 Myr. The long-term evolution of the Hawaiian plume and the temporal variability recorded in Kauai lavas require more complex geochemical heterogeneities than suggested by radially zoned plume models. These complexities may arise from heterogeneities in the thermal boundary layer and through variable entrainment of ambient mantle by the upwelling plume. G Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems

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تاریخ انتشار 2003