The chemical compositions of island arc basalts (IAB) reflect contributions from the mantle as well as fluids and melts from the subducting slab. Addition of radiogenic seawater Sr to oceanic crust through hydrothermal alteration and subsequent subduction is often invoked to explain elevated
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Sr/
86
Sr signatures in modern IAB. However, changes in the
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Sr/
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Sr of island arc magmatic rocks through time has not been investigated, limiting our understanding of the factors influencing the Sr budgets of arcs throughout Earth’s history. To address this, we compiled
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Sr/
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Sr values from island arc magmatic rocks ranging in age from modern to Paleoproterozoic, only including data from island arc localities that best preserve initial magmatic
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Sr/
86
Sr. Median initial
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Sr/
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Sr values are consistently elevated compared to depleted mantle
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Sr/
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Sr over this period, indicating persistent enrichment in radiogenic Sr in island arcs. Moreover, the elevation in island arc
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Sr/
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Sr relative to the depleted mantle is variable. A notable rise in island arc
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Sr/
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Sr during the late Neoproterozoic coincides with a steep increase in seawater
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Sr/
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Sr and Sr concentration. To investigate this potential connectivity, we modeled the
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Sr/
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Sr of island arc magmas between 0 and 830 Ma with inputs of depleted mantle
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Sr/
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Sr, seawater
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Sr/
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Sr, and seawater Sr concentration. The model reproduces the overall trajectory of the compiled data. We interpret the observed temporal variation in island arc
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Sr/
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Sr values and its close association with fluctuations in seawater chemistry as evidence that changes in marine geochemistry have strongly influenced the Sr isotopic record of island arc magmas over time.