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- Title
Nickel Isotope Fractionation During Magmatic Differentiation.
- Authors
Yang, Xi‐Ming; Wang, Shui‐Jiong; Zhang, Ya‐Wen; Dong, Xu‐Han; Teng, Fang‐Zhen; Helz, Rosalind T.; Huang, Jian; Li, Xian‐Hua; Huang, Shichun
- Abstract
The behavior of nickel (Ni) isotopes during magmatic differentiation is not adequately explored. Here, we find that tholeiitic rocks in the Kīlauea Iki (KI) lava lake, Hawai'i, show progressively lighter Ni isotopic compositions with increasing magmatic differentiation, whereas calc‐alkaline rocks from the thick Kamchatka arc (30–45 km), located at the convergent boundary of the Eurasian and Pacific plates show increasing Ni isotope values as MgO and Ni decrease. Forty‐three global intermediate‐felsic continental igneous rocks analyzed in this study display large Ni isotopic variations, with the Eoarchean samples having light Ni isotopic compositions that fall in the trend defined by the KI lavas, and the post‐Eoarchean samples showing systematically heavier Ni isotopic compositions overlapping those of Kamchatka arc rocks. The isotopic dichotomy results from the crystallization of isotopically heavy magnetite during low‐pressure differentiation of KI lavas, whereas the participation of sulfide separation that removes isotopically light Ni during high‐pressure differentiation of magmas traversing thick continental crust. Combined with Rhyolite‐MELTS and sulfur concentration at sulfide saturation simulations, we demonstrate that the Ni isotope fractionation during magmatic differentiation is mainly controlled by the tempo of magnetite crystallization and sulfide formation, which is a function of pressure, oxygen fugacity, and water activity. High‐pressure calc‐alkaline differentiation usually suppresses magnetite crystallization while stabilizing sulfide, leading to heavy Ni isotopic compositions for the evolved magmas, significantly deviating from the low‐pressure fractionation trend seen in the KI lavas. Ni isotopes can be used in the future as a tracer of magmatic differentiation and processes of continent formation and differentiation. Plain Language Summary: Magmatic differentiation plays an important role in generating the distinctive calc‐alkaline compositions of the continental crust. We show that low‐pressure differentiation of the Kīlauea Iki tholeiitic lavas displays progressively lighter Ni isotopes with differentiation, whereas high‐pressure differentiation of calc‐alkaline volcanic rocks from the thick Kamchatka arc leads to heavier Ni isotopes. This difference may result from the fact that higher pressure may have suppressed magnetite crystallization while stabilized sulfide relative to low‐pressure differentiation. The degree and direction of Ni isotope fractionation during magmatic differentiation are mainly controlled by the differentiation pressure, oxygen fugacity, and water activity. Thus, Ni isotopes can be a novel tracer of magmatic differentiation and processes of continent formation and differentiation. Key Points: Nickel isotopic compositions of Kīlauea Iki lavas become lighter with increasing magmatic differentiationNickel isotopic compositions of Kamchatka arc lavas become heavier with increasing magmatic differentiationNickel isotope fractionation during magmatic differentiation is controlled by the tempo of magnetite crystallization and sulfide formation
- Subjects
KAMCHATKA Peninsula (Russia); NICKEL isotopes; ISOTOPIC fractionation; MAGNETITE; CONTINENTAL crust; IGNEOUS rocks; VOLCANIC ash, tuff, etc.; SULFUR cycle
- Publication
Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems: G3, 2023, Vol 24, Issue 6, p1
- ISSN
1525-2027
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1029/2023GC010926