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Boninite

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Ultramafic extrusive rock high in both magnesium and silica
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Boninite is anextrusiverock high in bothmagnesium andsilica, thought to be usually formed infore-arc environments, typically during the early stages ofsubduction. The rock is named for its occurrence in theIzu-Boninarc south ofJapan. It is characterized by extreme depletion in incompatible trace elements that are not fluid mobile (e.g., the heavyrare-earth elements plus Nb, Ta, Hf) but variable enrichment in the fluid mobile elements (e.g., Rb, Ba, K). They are found almost exclusively in the fore-arc ofprimitiveisland arcs (that is, closer to theocean trench) and inophiolite complexes thought to represent former fore-arc settings or at least formed above a subduction zone.

Boninite is considered to be aprimitiveandesite derived from melting ofmetasomatisedmantle.

SimilarArcheanintrusive rocks, calledsanukitoids, have been reported in the rocks of several earlycratons. Archean boninite lavas are also reported.

Petrology

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Boninite typically consists ofphenocrysts ofpyroxenes andolivine in a crystallite-rich glassymatrix.

Geochemistry

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Boninite is defined by

  • high magnesium content (MgO = >8%)
  • lowtitanium (TiO2 < 0.5%)
  • silica content is 52–63%
  • high Mg/(Mg +Fe) (0.55–0.83)
  • Mantle-normalcompatible elementsNi = 70–450 parts per million,Cr = 200–1800 ppm
  • Ba,Sr, LREE enrichments compared totholeiite
  • Characteristic Ti/Zr ratios (23–63) andLa/Yb ratios (0.6–4.7)

Genesis

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Most boninitemagma is formed by second stage melting inforearcs viahydration of previously depletedmantle within the mantle wedge above asubducted slab, causing further melting of the already depletedperidotite. A forearc environment is ideal for boninite genesis, but other tectonic environments, such asbackarcs, might be able to form boninite.[1] The content of titanium (an incompatible element within melting of peridotite) is extremely low because previous melting events had removed most of the incompatible elements from the residual mantle source. The first stage melting typically forms island arcbasalt. The second melting event is partly made possible by hydrous fluids being added to the shallow hot depleted mantle, leading the enrichment in large ion lithophile elements in the boninite.

Boninite attains its high magnesium and very low titanium content via high degrees of partial melting within theconvecting mantle wedge. The high degrees of partial melting are caused by the high water content of the mantle. With the addition of slab-derived volatiles, and incompatible elements derived from the release of low-volume partial melts of the subducted slab, the depleted mantle in the mantle wedge undergoes melting.

Evidence for variable enrichment or depletion of incompatible elements suggests that boninites are derived from refractory peridotite which has been metasomatically enriched inLREE, strontium, barium, andalkalis. Enrichment in Ba, Sr and alkalis may result from a component derived from subducted oceanic crust. This is envisaged as contamination from the underlying subducted slab, either as a sedimentary source or as melts derived from the dehydrating slab.

Boninites can be derived from the peridotite residue of earlier arc tholeiite generation which is metasomatically enriched in LREE before boninitevolcanism, or arc tholeiites and boninites can be derived from a variably depleted peridotite source which has been variably metasomatised in LREE.

Areas of fertile peridotite would yield tholeiites, and refractory areas would yield boninites.

Examples

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Examples of Boninite
NameLocationAgeComments
Bonin IslandsPacific OceanEocenemostly volcanicbreccias andpillow lava flows[2]
Zambales ophiolitewesternLuzonEoceneupper volcanic unit: high silica boninite, low silica boninite, boninitic basalt.

lower volcanic unit: low silica boninite series volcanics[3]

Cape VogelPapua New GuineaPaleocene[2]
TroodosCyprusCretaceousupper pillow lavas ofophiolite complex[2]
GuamPacific OceanPaleogenelate Eocene to earlyOligocene[2]
SetouchiJapanMiocenesanukitoids, 13 million years old[2]
Baja CaliforniaMexicoMiocene14 to 12 million years old, includesbajaite[2]
New CaledoniaPacific OceanMesozoicPermian-Triassic and Cretaceous age[2]
Mariana TrenchPacific OceanEocene[2]
North-eastLau BasinPacific OceanModernEruption of boninite lava was observed in 2009 atWest Mata volcano in the Lau Basin by scientists using a remotely-operatedsubmersible. Previously, boninite had been found only near extinct volcanoes more than one million years old.[4]

References

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  1. ^Encarnación, John; Mukasa, Samuel B; Evans, Cynthia A (1999-04-01). "Subduction components and the generation of arc-like melts in the Zambales ophiolite, Philippines: Pb, Sr and Nd isotopic constraints".Chemical Geology.156 (1–4):343–357.Bibcode:1999ChGeo.156..343E.doi:10.1016/S0009-2541(98)00190-9.
  2. ^abcdefghCrawford, A.J. (1989).Boninites. London: Unwin Hyman.ISBN 978-0-04-445003-0.
  3. ^Perez, Americus; Umino, Susumu; Yumul Jr., Graciano P.; Ishizuka, Osamu (2018-06-05)."Boninite and boninite-series volcanics in northern Zambales ophiolite: doubly vergent subduction initiation along Philippine Sea plate margins"(PDF).Solid Earth.9 (3):713–733.Bibcode:2018SolE....9..713P.doi:10.5194/se-9-713-2018.ISSN 1869-9529.
  4. ^"Marine Scientists Discover Deepest Undersea Erupting Volcano".News Release 09-243.National Science Foundation. 17 December 2009. Retrieved20 February 2016.
  • Anthony J. Crawford and W. E. Cameron, 1985. Petrology and geochemistry of Cambrian boninites and low-Ti andesites from Heathcote, Victoria Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology, vol 91 no. 1.Abstract
  • Dobson, P.F., Blank, J.G., Maruyama, S., and Liou, J.G. (2006)Petrology and geochemistry of boninite series volcanic rocks, Chichi-jima, Bonin Islands, Japan. International Geology Review 48, 669–701 (LBNL #57671)
  • Dobson, P.F., Skogby, H, and Rossman, G.R. (1995)Water in boninite glass and coexisting orthopyroxene: concentration and partitioning. Contrib. Mineral. Petrol. 118,414-419.
  • Le Maitre, R. W. and others (Editors), 2002,Igneous Rocks: A Classification and Glossary of Terms: Recommendations of the International Union of Geological Sciences Subcommission on the Systematics of Igneous Rocks, Cambridge University Press, 2nd,ISBN 0-521-66215-X
  • Blatt, Harvey and Robert Tracy, 1995,Petrology, Second Edition: Igneous, Sedimentary, and Metamorphic, W. H. Freeman, 2nd, p. 176ISBN 0-7167-2438-3
  • Hickey, Rosemary L.; Frey, Frederick A. (1982)Geochemical characteristics of boninite series volcanics: implications for their source. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, vol. 46, Issue 11, pp. 2099–2115
  • Resing, J. A., K.H. Rubin, R. Embley, J. Lupton, E. Baker, R. Dziak, T. Baumberger, M. Lilley, J. Huber, T.M. Shank, D. Butterfield, D. Clague, N. Keller, S. Merle, N.J. Buck, P. Michael, A. Soule, D. Caress, S. Walker, R. Davis, J. Cowen, A-L. Reysenbach, and H. Thomas, (2011): Active Submarine Eruption of Boninite at West Mata Volcano in the Extensional NE Lau Basin, Nature Geosciences, 10.1038/ngeo1275.

Petrology

Types of rocks
Igneous rock
Sedimentary rock
Metamorphic rock
Specific varieties
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