2020
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2009663117
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Ancient helium and tungsten isotopic signatures preserved in mantle domains least modified by crustal recycling

Abstract: Rare high-3He/4He signatures in ocean island basalts (OIB) erupted at volcanic hotspots derive from deep-seated domains preserved in Earth’s interior. Only high-3He/4He OIB exhibit anomalous 182W—an isotopic signature inherited during the earliest history of Earth—supporting an ancient origin of high 3He/4He. However, it is not understood why some OIB host anomalous 182W while others do not. We provide geochemical data for the highest-3He/4He lavas from Iceland (up to 42.9 times atmospheric) with anomalous 182… Show more

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Cited by 54 publications
(56 citation statements)
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“…This extreme core value developed because tungsten is a moderately siderophile element that, during core formation, became enriched in the Earth's core relative to the short-lived, lithophile radioactive parent ( 182 Hf) that remained in the mantle 86,87 . It is possible that this core material is partitioned back into the mantle at appear in some plume-generated ocean island basalt volcanoes, with no relation to long-lived 87 Sr/ 86 Sr signatures, but a relation between μ 182 W and the presence of recycled oceanic and continental material does emerge from the data 239 . One interpretation of these observations is that some deeply sourced mantle plumes with strongly negative μ 182 W anomalies have inherited a W-isotopic signature of Earth's core 86,87 , but other interpretations exist, as discussed in the main text.…”
Section: Geochemical Heterogeneitymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This extreme core value developed because tungsten is a moderately siderophile element that, during core formation, became enriched in the Earth's core relative to the short-lived, lithophile radioactive parent ( 182 Hf) that remained in the mantle 86,87 . It is possible that this core material is partitioned back into the mantle at appear in some plume-generated ocean island basalt volcanoes, with no relation to long-lived 87 Sr/ 86 Sr signatures, but a relation between μ 182 W and the presence of recycled oceanic and continental material does emerge from the data 239 . One interpretation of these observations is that some deeply sourced mantle plumes with strongly negative μ 182 W anomalies have inherited a W-isotopic signature of Earth's core 86,87 , but other interpretations exist, as discussed in the main text.…”
Section: Geochemical Heterogeneitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The grey band represents the 2σ reproducibility (±5 ppm) on the terrestrial tungsten isotope standard, which, by definition, has μ 182 W = 0. Data and errors shown are 2σ measurement errors summarized in REFS 87,239 . We note that the estimated μ 182 W is as low as −220 in Earth's core 328 .…”
Section: Geochemical Heterogeneitymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This would potentially result in preferential overprinting of Hadean µ 142 Nd compositions while leaving Hadean µ 182 W compositions relatively unchanged. Similarly, a mantle assimilant with a high intrinsic Nd/W ratio, such as depleted MORB mantle or an ancient, W-depleted reservoir, could also efficiently overprint µ 142 Nd while leaving µ 182 W unchanged (cf., Jackson et al, 2020).…”
Section: Preservation Of Hadean Components In Global Oib Magmasmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…All data published in this manuscript are available in Jackson et al (2020), Spatial characteristics of recycled and primordial reservoirs in the deep mantle, Version 1.0. Interdisciplinary Earth Data Alliance (IEDA).…”
Section: Data Availability Statementmentioning
confidence: 99%