182W and HSE constraints from 2.7 Ga komatiites on the heterogeneous nature of the Archean mantle

View/ Open
Date
2018Author
Puchtel, Igor S
Blichert-Toft, Janne
Touboul, Mathieu
Walker, Richard J.
Citation
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2018.02.030
DRUM DOI
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
While the isotopically heterogeneous nature of the terrestrial mantle has long been established, the origin, scale, and longevity
of the heterogeneities for different elements and isotopic systems are still debated. Here, we report Nd, Hf, W, and Os
isotopic and highly siderophile element (HSE) abundance data for the Boston Creek komatiitic basalt lava flow (BCF) in the
2.7 Ga Abitibi greenstone belt, Canada. This lava flow is characterized by strong depletions in Al and heavy rare earth elements
(REE), enrichments in light REE, and initial epsilon143Nd = +2.5 ± 0.2 and initial epsilon176Hf = +4.2 ± 0.9 indicative of derivation
from a deep mantle source with time-integrated suprachondritic Sm/Nd and Lu/Hf ratios. The data plot on the terrestrial
Nd-Hf array suggesting minimal involvement of early magma ocean processes in the fractionation of lithophile trace elements
in the mantle source. This conclusion is supported by a mean mu142Nd = -3.8 ± 2.8 that is unresolvable from terrestrial standards.
By contrast, the BCF exhibits a positive 182W anomaly (mu182W = +11.7 ± 4.5), yet is characterized by chondritic initial
gamma187Os = +0.1 ± 0.3 and low inferred source HSE abundances (35 ± 5% of those estimated for the present-day Bulk Silicate
Earth, BSE). Collectively, these characteristics are unique among Archean komatiite systems studied so far. The deficit in the
HSE, coupled with the chondritic Os isotopic composition, but a positive 182W anomaly, are best explained by derivation of
the parental BCF magma from a mantle domain characterized by a predominance of HSE-deficient, differentiated late
accreted material. According to the model presented here, the mantle domain that gave rise to the BCF received only
~35% of the present-day HSE complement in the BSE before becoming isolated from the rest of the convecting mantle until
the time of komatiite emplacement at 2.72 Ga. These new data provide strong evidence for a highly heterogeneous Archean
mantle in terms of absolute HSE abundances and W isotopic composition, and also indicate slow mixing, on a timescale of at
least 1.8 billion years. Additionally, the data are consistent with a stagnant-lid plate tectonic regime in the Hadean and Archean,
prior to the onset of modern-style plate tectonics.