Cj. Robinson et al., Low degree melting under the Southwest Indian Ridge: the roles of mantle temperature, conductive cooling and wet melting, EARTH PLAN, 188(3-4), 2001, pp. 383-398
Both low mantle temperatures and conductive cooling have been suggested as
the cause of the atypically thin oceanic crust and the incompatible element
enrichment characteristic of very slow-spreading ridges. Here we present a
model of melting under the Southwest Indian Ridge (SWIR), which takes into
account mantle temperature, conductive cooling, source composition and wet
melting. The model parameters are constrained by oceanic crustal thickness
, lava chemistry and isotopic composition and water content. The results su
ggest that conductive cooling to a depth of around 20 km, expected in areas
with a full spreading rate of 15 mm/yr, is necessary to generate the SWIR
lava chemistry, but not that from faster spreading rate ridges at 23 degree
sN on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge or 45 degreesN on the Juan de Fuca Ridge. The
mantle potential temperatures of similar to 1280 degreesC, estimated for th
e SWIR lavas, are close to the global average of the upper mantle. Mantle w
ater contents of 150-300 ppm can explain the observed melt water contents a
nd allow sufficient melting at depth to explain the observed heavy rare ear
th element depletions in the melts. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All righ
ts reserved.