Regularities of Variations in the Composition of Plume-Related Volcanic Rocks in the South Atlantic and on the African Plate


如何引用文章

全文:

开放存取 开放存取
受限制的访问 ##reader.subscriptionAccessGranted##
受限制的访问 订阅存取

详细

The paper demonstrates the distinct difference between plume volcanism on oceanic and continental plates. A specific characteristic inherent solely to a continental setting is the generation of ultramafic alkali melts of the kimberlite–melilitite–carbonatite series, which has recurred many times in Earth’s history. The main cause of the different types of volcanism in the South Atlantic and Africa was the accumulation of C, H, F, K, Na, and other elements at the base of the subcontinental lithosphere under the influence of the African superplume. Alkali and volatile components to not accumulate on an oceanic plate. The interaction of alkali–carbonate fluids with mantle peridotites under the very thick continental plate led to their metasomatic transformation and the melting of low-silicate CO2-saturated magmas in hypogene conditions and basalt magmas even more enriched in silica at smaller depths. The melting of hypogene melts of the kimberlite–melilitite–carbonatite family anomalously enriched in REE impurities is controlled by the CO2 pressure regime. The composition of basalt melts significantly depends on the tectonic formation conditions.

作者简介

E. Chernysheva

Atlantic Branch, Shirshov Institute of Oceanology, Russian Academy of Sciences

Email: eroshenko@atlas.baltnet.ru
俄罗斯联邦, Kaliningrad, 236022

D. Eroshenko

Atlantic Branch, Shirshov Institute of Oceanology, Russian Academy of Sciences

编辑信件的主要联系方式.
Email: eroshenko@atlas.baltnet.ru
俄罗斯联邦, Kaliningrad, 236022

补充文件

附件文件
动作
1. JATS XML

版权所有 © Pleiades Publishing, Inc., 2019