Li enrichment in peridotites and chromitites tracks mantle-crust interaction
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
González Pérez, Igor; González Jiménez, José María; A.S. Dare, Sarah; Schettino, Erwin; Piña, Rubén; Marchesi, Claudio; Yesares, Lola; Gervilla Linares, FernandoEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Ronda peridotites lithium Chromitites
Fecha
2024-10-04Referencia bibliográfica
González Pérez, I. et. al. L I T H O S 4 8 8 – 489 (2024) 107819. [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lithos.2024.107819]
Patrocinador
Grant NANOMET PID2022- 138768OB-I00 funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/50110001133; “ERDF A way of making Europe” by the “European Union”; Grant PRE2019-088262 “Ayudas para contratos predoctorales para la formaci´on de doctores” (FPI), from the “Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovaci´on y Universidades"Resumen
The ultramafic massifs of the Serranía de Ronda in southern Spain are the Earth’s largest exposures of subcontinental
lithospheric mantle (SCLM) peridotites (~450 km2). These ultramafic massifs experienced
asthenosphere melt percolation during their crustal emplacement. Mixing of these mafic melts with anatectic
melts and fluids led to the formation of a world’s unique Ni-arsenide-rich chromitite ores (hereafter Cr–Ni ores)
associated with orthopyroxenite and/or cordieritite (i.e., > 90 % volume of cordierite) hosted within the peridotites.
This study uses laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) to investigate
the Li in rock-forming minerals of peridotite and Cr–Ni ores to evaluate the role of Li as crustal tracer. Clinopyroxene
crystallized from asthenospheric melts exhibits high Li contents (up to 8.5 ppm), exceeding the average
values of the upper mantle (~ 0.7 ppm), whereas orthopyroxene, olivine, and Cr-spinel from peridotite are
mostly Li-depleted. In contrast, all rock-forming minerals of Cr–Ni ores have abnormally high Li contents,
displaying an overall Li enrichment trend toward the external parts of ultramafic massifs, on the way to the
crustal rocks. This trend is evident in Cr-spinel from the Cr–Ni ores, which display 6.9–7.9 ppm Li in the deepest
portions of the massif (Arroyo de la Cala Cr–Ni ore) up to 1.4–8.5 ppm in the shallowest part (La Gallega Cr–Ni
ore), as well as in orthopyroxenes that have 31.3–44.7 ppm Li in Arroyo de la Cala, and 45.1–51.4 ppm Li in La
Gallega. Cordierite is present only in the Cr–Ni ores situated in the external part of the ultramafic massifs,
exhibiting 113.15–160.82 ppm Li in the Barranco de las Acedías Cr–Ni ore and 36.5–60.5 ppm Li in La Gallega
Cr–Ni ore. Similarly to Li, LREE, fluid-mobile elements (K, Rb, Ba), and Sr in orthopyroxenes from the Cr–Ni
ores display enrichment from the inner to the outer parts of the ultramafic massif. These geochemical variations
suggest that Li enrichment in Cr–Ni ores and host peridotites was a twofold process: (1) asthenospheric melt
percolation slightly increased Li abundances in the SCLM peridotites by modal and cryptic metasomatism
involving clinopyroxene; (2) additional infiltration of Li-bearing crustally-derived fluids during the intracrustal
emplacement of the mantle section boosted the Li contents of minerals in the Cr–Ni ores. Our results highlight
that Li may effectively track the interaction of the SCLM with crustal components.





