Nature Publishing Group, publisher of Nature, and other science journals and reference works
Nature
my account e-alerts subscribe register
   
Tuesday 24 November 2009
Journal Home
Current Issue
AOP
Archive
Download PDF
References
Export citation
Export references
Send to a friend
More articles like this

Letters
Nature 278, 156 - 159 (08 March 1979); doi:10.1038/278156a0

Preferential formation of the atmosphere−sialic crust system from the upper mantle

ROGER HART, JACK DYMOND & LEWIS HOGAN

School of Oceanography, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon 97331School of Oceanography, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon 97331

IN the past decade, extensive studies of the rare gas content of mantle derived rocks have led to several models of Earth degassing, all of which assume that the argon of the atmosphere degassed from the entire mantle. We give evidence here to support the concept of concurrent transfer of elements to the atmosphere and sialic crust preferentially from the upper mantle. This concept accounts for the following observations: (1) the 40Ar concentrations in the rapidly quenched glassy margins of deep sea pillow basalts are too low for many estimates of the K concentration of the mantle1,2; (2) the 40Ar/36Ar ratio of rocks derived from the deep mantle is similar to the atmospheric 40Ar/36Ar ratio3−7; (3) the upper mantle under oceanic ridges is depleted in K and other large-ion-lithophile elements. A schematic representation of the upper mantle depletion process is given in Fig. 1 which shows that partial melting associated with spreading ridges and Benioff zones exclusively in the upper mantle is responsible for the accretion of continents and associated degassing to the atmosphere.

------------------

References
1. Hart, R. A. & Hogan, L. G. in A.E.P.S. 3, Terrestrial Rare Gases, 193 (eds Alexander, E. C. Jr & Ozima, M. (Cent. Acad. Publ. Japan, Tokyo, 1978).
2. Hart, R. A. & Dymond, J. Short Papers of the 4th int. Conf. on Geochronology, Cosmology, and Isotope Geology (ed. Zartman, R. E.) 78–701 (USGS Open File-Report, 1978).
3. Saito, K., Basu, A. R. & Alexander, E. C. Earth Pl.anet. Sci. Lett. 39, 274 (1978).
4. Kaneoka, I., Takaoka, N. & Aoki, K. in A.E.P.S. 3, Terrestrial Rare Gases, (eds Alexander, E. C. Jr. & Ozima, M.) (Cent. Acad. Publ. Japan, Tokyo, 1978).
5. Thompson, D. P., Basu, A. R., Hennecke, E. W. & Manuel, O. K. Phys. Earth Planet. Int. 17, 19 (1978).
6. Boschsler, P., Settler, A., Bird, J. M. & Weathers, M. S. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 39, 67 (1978).
7. Downing, R. G., Hennecke, E. W. & Manuel, O. K. Geochem. J. 11, 219 (1977).
8. Dymond, J. & Hogan, L. G. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 28, 117 (1978).
9. Schwartzman, D. W. Geochim. cosmochim. Acta 37, 2479 (1973).
10. Saito, K. in A.E.P.S. 3, Terrestrial Rare Gases, 145 (eds Alexander, E. C. Jr. Ozima, M.) (Cent. Acad. Publ. Japan, Tokyo, 1978).
11. Takaoka, N. & Ozima, M. in A.E.P.S. 3, Terrestrial Rare Gases, 65 (eds Alexander, E. C. Jr & Ozima, M.) (Cent. Acad. Publ. Japan, Tokyo, 1978).
12. Brown, J. F., Harper, C. T. & Odom, A. L. Nature 250, 130 (1974).
13. Hennecke, E. W. & Manuel, O. K. Nature 257, 778 (1975).
14. Kaneoka, I. & Takaoka, M. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 39, 389 (1978).
15. Fisher, D. E. Nature 256, 113 (1975).
16. Takaoka, N. & Nagao, K. Int. Rep. DSDP Leg 51 (US Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C., in the press).
17. Dalrymple, G. B. & Moore, J. G. Science 161, 1132 (1968).



© 1979 Nature Publishing Group
Privacy Policy