Molybdenumisotopes in plume-influenced MORBs reveal recycling of ancient anoxic sediments
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2022-10-12Referencia bibliográfica
Ahmad, Q... [et al.] (2022) Molybdenum isotopes in plume-influenced MORBs reveal recycling of ancient anoxic sediments. Geochem. Persp. Let. 23, 43–48. [https://doi.org/10.7185/geochemlet.2236]
Patrocinador
Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) 1NF40-141881 Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF); European Commission 636808; European Research Council (ERC) RYC2020-030014-I; Spanish Government 182508Resumen
Under modern oxidising Earth surface conditions, dehydrated subducted slabs show
Mo isotope compositions as low as δ98/95Mo = −1.5 ‰, compared to the depleted
mantle δ98/95Mo = −0.2 ‰. Such light Mo isotope compositions reflect the redoxdependent
aqueous mobility of isotopically heavy Mo associated with slab dehydration.
Here we analysed basaltic glasses from the South-Mid Atlantic Ridge, whose
parental melts are influenced by the enriched Discovery and Shona mantle plumes.
We report increasingly higher δ98/95Mo of up to −0.1‰from the most depleted samples
towards those tapping more enriched mantle sources. δ98/95Mo values correlate
with radiogenic Sr and Nd isotopes, which indicates the recycling of Proterozoic sediments
with a Mo isotopic composition that was not affected by subduction-related,
oxic dehydration. We propose that the Mo isotope signatures were retained during subduction and reflect anoxic conditions
during deep sea sedimentation in the mid-Proterozoic. Finally, Mo isotope fractionation between different terrestrial reservoirs
likely depends on the slab redox budget, and therefore on the timing of subduction with regard to Earth’s surface oxygenation.