Eoarchean within-plate basalts from southwest Greenland
Eoarchean within-plate basalts from southwest Greenland
Geology (Boulder) (January 2013) 41 (3): 327-330
- Archean
- Arctic region
- basalts
- chemical composition
- concentration
- Eoarchean
- fractional crystallization
- genesis
- geochemistry
- Greenland
- igneous rocks
- magmas
- major elements
- mantle
- metabasalt
- metaigneous rocks
- metamorphic rocks
- mid-ocean ridge basalts
- ocean-island basalts
- Precambrian
- South Greenland
- trace elements
- volcanic rocks
- West Greenland
- Innersuartuut Island
The majority of >3 Ga metabasalts have chemical features, such as high field strength element (HFSE) depletions, that are characteristic of modern island-arc basalts. These compositions have been interpreted as evidence for subduction of oceanic crust early in Earth's history. Alternatively, the apparent absence of Archean mafic rocks with mid-oceanic ridge basalt (MORB) and ocean island basalt (OIB) compositions and the ubiquitous occurrence of metabasalts with HFSE anomalies suggest that these chemical features may instead be a widespread characteristic of the Archean mantle related to early chemical differentiation and unrelated to modern-style recycling of crust. Here we present major- and trace-element data for a suite of metabasalts from Innersuartuut Island, southwest Greenland, which have a minimum age constraint of 3.75 Ga and are likely as old as > or =3.85 Ga. Samples from Innersuartuut show no evidence for crustal contamination or subduction-related magmatism, and have a petrogenesis comparable to modern OIB. The new data demonstrate that a compositional range for volcanic rocks comparable to that seen in the Phanerozoic existed in the Eoarchean. Therefore, rather than a global anomaly, subduction-related processes are the likely origin for the compositions of the most commonly preserved Archean mafic rocks with island-arc basalt characteristics.