Affiliation:
1. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences University of California Riverside Riverside CA USA
2. City of Fort Worth Environmental Sciences Fort Worth TX USA
3. Earth and Planetary Sciences University of New Mexico Albuquerque NM USA
4. School of Earth and Sustainability Northern Arizona University Flagstaff AZ USA
Abstract
AbstractThe upper mantle under the Afar Depression in the East African Rift displays some of the slowest seismic wave speeds observed globally. Despite the extreme nature of the geophysical anomaly, lavas that erupted along the East African Rift record modest thermal anomalies. We present measurements of major elements, H2O, S, and CO2, and Fe3+/ΣFe and S6+/ΣS in submarine glasses from the Gulf of Aden seafloor spreading center and olivine‐, plagioclase‐, and pyroxene‐hosted melt inclusions from Erta Ale volcano in the Afar Depression. We combine these measurements with literature data to place constraints on the temperature, H2O, and fO2 of the mantle sources of these lavas as well as the initial and final pressures of melting. The Afar mantle plume is C/FOZO/PHEM in isotopic composition, and we suggest that this mantle component is damp, with 852 ± 167 ppm H2O, not elevated in fO2 compared to the depleted MORB mantle, and has temperatures of ∼1401–1458°C. This is similar in fO2 and H2O to the estimates of C/FOZO/PHEM in other locations. Using the moderate H2O contents of the mantle together with the moderate thermal anomaly, we find that melting begins at around 93 km depth and ceases at around 63 km depth under the Afar Depression and at around 37 km depth under the Gulf of Aden, and that ∼1%–29% partial melts of the mantle can be generated under these conditions. We speculate that the presence of melt, and not elevated temperatures or high H2O contents, are the cause for the prominent geophysical anomaly observed in this region.
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU)