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Depleted subcontinental lithospheric mantle and its tholeiitic melt metasomatism beneath NE termination of the Eger Rift (Europe): the case study of the Steinberg (Upper Lusatia, SE Germany) xenoliths

  • Anna Kukula
  • , Jacek Puziewicz
  • , Magdalena Matusiak-Malek
  • , Theodoros Ntaflos
  • , Joerg Buechner
  • , Olaf Tietz

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

The ca. 30 Ma Steinberg basanite occurs at the NE termination of the Eger (Ohře) Rift in the NW Bohemian Massif, Central Europe, and belongs to the Cenozoic alkaline Central European Volcanic Province. The basanite hosts a suite of mantle xenoliths, most of which are harzburgites containing relatively magnesian olivine (Fo 90.5–91.6) and Al-poor (0.04–0.13 a pfu) orthopyroxene (mg# 0.90–0.92). Some of these harzburgites also contain volumetrically minor clinopyroxene (mg# 0.92–0.95, Al 0.03–0.13 a pfu) and have U-shaped LREE-enriched REE patterns. The Steinberg harzburgites are typical for the Lower Silesian - Upper Lusatian domain of the European subcontinental lithospheric mantle. They represent residual mantle that has undergone extensive partial melting and was subsequently affected by mantle metasomatism by mixed carbonatite-silicate melts. The Steinberg xenolith suite comprises also dunitic xenoliths affected by metasomatism by melt similar to the host basanite, which lowered the Fo content in olivine to 87.6 %. This metasomatism happened shortly before xenolith entrainment in the erupting lava. One of the xenoliths is a wehrlite (olivine Fo 73 %, clinopyroxene mg# 0.83–0.85, subordinate orthopyroxene mg# 0.76–0.77). Its clinopyroxene REE pattern is flat and slightly LREE-depleted. This wehrlite is considered to be a tholeiitic cumulate. One of the studied harzburgites contains clinopyroxene with similar trace element contents to those in wehrlite. This type of clinopyroxene records percolation of tholeiitic melt through harzburgite. The tholeiitic melt might be similar to Cenozoic continental tholeiites occurring in the Central European Volcanic Province (e.g., Vogelsberg, Germany).

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)761-787
Number of pages27
JournalMineralogy and Petrology
Volume109
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2015

Funding

We are grateful to Dmitri Ionov and Lukas Ackerman for their thoughtful reviews, which inspired significant improvement of the paper. The authors are indebted to Hilary Downes for help in language editing. We thank our MSc student Michal Dajek who prepared the map presented in Fig. 1. The data presented in this paper are one of the results of the project DEC-2011/03/B/ST10/06248 (2012-2015) of Polish National Centre for Scientific Research to MMM. Large part of analytical work was performed thanks to the joint 2010-2011 and 2013-2104 projects in the frame of Austrian-Polish scientific and cultural cooperation agreement (Institute of Geological Sciences University of Wroclaw and Department of Lithospheric Sciences, University of Vienna, WTZ project Nr. PL 11/2013) and the fellowship of Austrian Government to AK in 2013.

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 105105 Geochemistry
  • 105120 Petrology

Keywords

  • SPINEL PERIDOTITE XENOLITHS
  • TRACE-ELEMENT COMPOSITIONS
  • CARBONATITE METASOMATISM
  • 4-PHASE LHERZOLITES
  • SIBERIAN CRATON
  • ORTHO-PYROXENE
  • WEST EIFEL
  • MASSIF
  • GEOCHEMISTRY
  • POLAND

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