Authors
RS White, TA Minshull, MJ Bickle, CJ Robinson
Publication date
2001/6/1
Journal
Journal of Petrology
Volume
42
Issue
6
Pages
1171-1196
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
We show that there is a strong and consistent correlation between geochemical and geophysical estimates of the amount of melt generated in the mantle beneath oceanic ridges. This correlation holds across all spreading rates and on scales down to the size of individual ridge segments. There is an abrupt decrease in the amount of melt generated at full spreading rates below ∼20 mm/a. Our observations are consistent with the conclusion that <10% of the melt is frozen in the mantle before it reaches the crust and that serpentine probably represents only a small percentage of the material above the Moho. The melt is well mixed on a ridge segment scale, probably in high-level magma chambers, but the melts remain distinct between segments. The rare earth element concentrations of basalts from very slow-spreading ridges are higher than those from normal oceanic ridges, which is directly indicative of …
Total citations
2001200220032004200520062007200820092010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320241510757410712776151112129861110810