Petrogenesis of Tertiary Mafic Alkaline Magmas in the Hocheifel, Germany

Authors: JUNG, CAROLINE; JUNG, STEFAN; HOFFER, EDGAR; BERNDT, JASPER

Source: Journal of Petrology, Volume 47, Number 8, August 2006 , pp. 1637-1671(35)

Publisher: Oxford University Press

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Abstract:

Primitive nephelinites and basanites from the Tertiary Hocheifel area of Germany (part of the Central European Volcanic Province; CEVP) have high Mg-number (>0·64), high Cr and Ni contents and strong light rare earth element enrichment but systematic depletion in Rb, K and Ba relative to trace elements of similar compatibility in anhydrous mantle. Alkali basalts and more differentiated magmatic rocks have lower Mg-number and lower abundances of Ni and Cr, and have undergone fractionation of mainly olivine, clinopyroxene, Fe-Ti oxide, amphibole and plagioclase. Some nephelinites and basanites approach the Sr-Nd-Pb isotope compositions inferred for the EAR (European Asthenospheric Reservoir) component. The Nd-Sr-Pb isotope composition of the differentiated rocks indicates that assimilation of lower crustal material has modified the composition of the primary mantle-derived magmas. Rare earth element melting models can explain the petrogenesis of the most primitive mafic magmatic rocks in terms of mixing of melt fractions from an amphibole-bearing garnet peridotite source with melt fractions from an amphibole-bearing spinel peridotite source, both sources containing residual amphibole. It is inferred that amphibole was precipitated in the asthenospheric mantle beneath the Hocheifel, close to the garnet peridotite-spinel peridotite boundary, by metasomatic fluids or melts from a rising mantle diapir or plume. Melt generation with amphibole present suggests relatively low mantle potential temperatures (<1200°C); thus the mantle plume is not thermally anomalous. A comparison of recently published Ar/Ar ages for Hocheifel basanites with the geochemical and isotopic composition of samples from this study collected at the same sample sites indicates that eruption of earlier lavas with an EM signature was followed by the eruption of later lavas derived from a source with EAR or HIMU characteristics, suggesting a contribution from the advancing plume. Thus, the Hocheifel area represents an analogue for magmatism during continental rift initiation, during which interaction of a mantle plume with the overlying lithosphere may have led to the generation of partial melts from both the lower lithosphere and the asthenosphere.

Keywords: alkali basalts; continental volcanism; crustal contamination; partial melting; Eifel, Germany

Document Type: Research article

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/petrology/egl023

Publication date: 2006-08-01

More about this publication?
  • The Journal of Petrology provides an international forum for the publication of high quality research in the broad field of igneous and metamorphic petrology and petrogenesis. Papers published cover a vast range of topics in areas such as major element, trace element and isotope geochemistry and geochronology applied to petrogenesis; experimental petrology; processes of magma generation, differentiation and emplacement; quantitative studies of rock-forming minerals and their paragenesis; regional studies of igneous and meta morphic rocks which contribute to the solution of fundamental petrological problems; theoretical modelling of petrogenetic processes.
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