WHY ARE SO MANY ARC MAGMAS CLOSE TO U-238 TH-230 RADIOACTIVE EQUILIBRIUM

Citation
M. Condomines et O. Sigmarsson, WHY ARE SO MANY ARC MAGMAS CLOSE TO U-238 TH-230 RADIOACTIVE EQUILIBRIUM, Geochimica et cosmochimica acta, 57(18), 1993, pp. 4491-4497
Citations number
31
Categorie Soggetti
Geosciences, Interdisciplinary
ISSN journal
00167037
Volume
57
Issue
18
Year of publication
1993
Pages
4491 - 4497
Database
ISI
SICI code
0016-7037(1993)57:18<4491:WASMAM>2.0.ZU;2-8
Abstract
New analyses of U-238-Th-230 disequilibria are reported for four activ e volcanoes: Merapi and Krakatoa in the Sunda arc (Indonesia), Masaya in Central America (Nicaragua), and Ambrym in the New Hebrides island arc. Despite a large range in (Th-230/Th-232) ratios (from 0.65 in Mer api andesites to 2.5 in Masaya basalts), U-238 and Th-230 are close to radioactive equilibrium, as in many other arc magmas. In several mant le sources, Th/U ratios have clearly been modified by metasomatic proc esses associated with subduction. This is demonstrated in Central Amer ica by the correlation between (Th-230/Th-232) and Be-10/Be-9 ratios f or several active volcanoes along the arc. It is proposed that the U-2 38-Th-230 radioactive equilibrium found in many arc magmas is the resu lt of disequilibrium melting involving an easily melted, slab-derived, metasomatic component which dominates the uranium and thorium budget of the mantle sources. The departure from equilibrium may be either du e to mixing with Th-230 enriched melts derived from unmetasomatized ma ntle sources or to a late stage uranium addition by fluids. This latte r process, producing uranium enriched magmas, has a greater influence in uranium and thorium poor magmas.