Melting controls on the lutetium–hafnium evolution of Archaean crust

© 2017 Elsevier B.V. The lutetium–hafnium (Lu–Hf) isotope record, typically measured in zircon crystals, provides a major tool for the study of crustal growth and differentiation. Interpretations of Hf isotope datasets use an evolution array defined by source 176 Lu/ 177 Hf. However, the very proces...

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Main Authors: Gardiner, Nicholas, Johnson, Tim, Kirkland, Chris, Smithies, R.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Elsevier BV 2018
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/66422
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author Gardiner, Nicholas
Johnson, Tim
Kirkland, Chris
Smithies, R.
author_facet Gardiner, Nicholas
Johnson, Tim
Kirkland, Chris
Smithies, R.
author_sort Gardiner, Nicholas
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description © 2017 Elsevier B.V. The lutetium–hafnium (Lu–Hf) isotope record, typically measured in zircon crystals, provides a major tool for the study of crustal growth and differentiation. Interpretations of Hf isotope datasets use an evolution array defined by source 176 Lu/ 177 Hf. However, the very process that drives crustal differentiation to produce such arrays – partial melting – is precisely that which may modify the trajectory of the array due to variable degrees of anatexis allied with the differing compatibilities of Lu and Hf in residual minerals. Further, Lu/Hf estimates derived from the composition of present-day continental crust may be inappropriate for modelling Archaean crustal evolution, where different geodynamic styles and magmatic sources prevailed. Using an approach combining phase equilibria, and trace element and isotopic modelling, we quantify the effects of partial melting of both a modern (N-MORB) and Archaean (C-F2) mafic source on melt Lu/Hf. Melting N-MORB shows that the 176 Lu/ 177 Hf of the melt, which modelling predicts to be between 0.015 and 0.022, is sensitive to the degree of melting. This difference results in a variation of 4.5 epsilon units/billion years. By contrast, anatexis of C-F2 yields melts with 176 Lu/ 177 Hf ~0.009 that are less affected by the degree of melting. Remelting TTG yields K-rich granitic melts (TTG + G) with 176 Lu/ 177 Hf ~0.005. Thus, a partial melting event imposes a greater control on the resulting crustal reservoir Lu/Hf than the degree of melting. Archaean continental crust has a lower Lu/Hf than that of the average mid to upper continental crust, and therefore a lower 176 Lu/ 177 Hf (here 0.005–0.009) is appropriate to modelling its Hf isotopic evolution. There has been a secular change in average crustal Lu/Hf, with the median Lu/Hf of Proterozoic and Phanerozoic magmatic rocks being higher than that of Archaean TTG + G. We show that an enriched Archaean mafic source (C-F2) with a Lu/Hf ratio of ~0.12 may produce TTG continental crust with a 176 Lu/ 177 Hf approaching that calculated in real rocks worldwide.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-664222018-04-30T02:48:32Z Melting controls on the lutetium–hafnium evolution of Archaean crust Gardiner, Nicholas Johnson, Tim Kirkland, Chris Smithies, R. © 2017 Elsevier B.V. The lutetium–hafnium (Lu–Hf) isotope record, typically measured in zircon crystals, provides a major tool for the study of crustal growth and differentiation. Interpretations of Hf isotope datasets use an evolution array defined by source 176 Lu/ 177 Hf. However, the very process that drives crustal differentiation to produce such arrays – partial melting – is precisely that which may modify the trajectory of the array due to variable degrees of anatexis allied with the differing compatibilities of Lu and Hf in residual minerals. Further, Lu/Hf estimates derived from the composition of present-day continental crust may be inappropriate for modelling Archaean crustal evolution, where different geodynamic styles and magmatic sources prevailed. Using an approach combining phase equilibria, and trace element and isotopic modelling, we quantify the effects of partial melting of both a modern (N-MORB) and Archaean (C-F2) mafic source on melt Lu/Hf. Melting N-MORB shows that the 176 Lu/ 177 Hf of the melt, which modelling predicts to be between 0.015 and 0.022, is sensitive to the degree of melting. This difference results in a variation of 4.5 epsilon units/billion years. By contrast, anatexis of C-F2 yields melts with 176 Lu/ 177 Hf ~0.009 that are less affected by the degree of melting. Remelting TTG yields K-rich granitic melts (TTG + G) with 176 Lu/ 177 Hf ~0.005. Thus, a partial melting event imposes a greater control on the resulting crustal reservoir Lu/Hf than the degree of melting. Archaean continental crust has a lower Lu/Hf than that of the average mid to upper continental crust, and therefore a lower 176 Lu/ 177 Hf (here 0.005–0.009) is appropriate to modelling its Hf isotopic evolution. There has been a secular change in average crustal Lu/Hf, with the median Lu/Hf of Proterozoic and Phanerozoic magmatic rocks being higher than that of Archaean TTG + G. We show that an enriched Archaean mafic source (C-F2) with a Lu/Hf ratio of ~0.12 may produce TTG continental crust with a 176 Lu/ 177 Hf approaching that calculated in real rocks worldwide. 2018 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/66422 10.1016/j.precamres.2017.12.026 Elsevier BV restricted
spellingShingle Gardiner, Nicholas
Johnson, Tim
Kirkland, Chris
Smithies, R.
Melting controls on the lutetium–hafnium evolution of Archaean crust
title Melting controls on the lutetium–hafnium evolution of Archaean crust
title_full Melting controls on the lutetium–hafnium evolution of Archaean crust
title_fullStr Melting controls on the lutetium–hafnium evolution of Archaean crust
title_full_unstemmed Melting controls on the lutetium–hafnium evolution of Archaean crust
title_short Melting controls on the lutetium–hafnium evolution of Archaean crust
title_sort melting controls on the lutetium–hafnium evolution of archaean crust
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/66422