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Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J....

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Modelling the Composition Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic the North Atlantic J. Armitage J. Armitage , T. Henstock, T. , T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper Minshull and J. Hopper
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Page 1: Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper.

Modelling the Composition of Melts Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North AtlanticBreak-up of the North Atlantic

J. ArmitageJ. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and , T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. HopperJ. Hopper

Page 2: Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper.

Motivation

• Recreate the volume of melt generated during the opening of the North Atlantic.

• Understand what the effect would be on the composition of primary melts.

Page 3: Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper.

Outline

• Introduction

• Model set-up and evolution

• Steady state composition

• Constant spreading rates

• Fast spreading upon opening

• Summary

Page 4: Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper.

Composition Parameterisation

• Melting occurs when upwelling mantle crosses the solidus.

• We use the parameterisation of Watson & McKenzie (1991).

• Relates major element composition to instantaneous melt depletion.

• Integrate over the whole melt region

Page 5: Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper.

Model Set-up

• Top is driven to the right at a chosen half spreading rate.

• No flow of material or heat across the boundaries.• Optional hot layer with temperature increases of 100

and 200 ºC.

120

km50

km

Page 6: Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper.

Mantle potential temperature of 1325 ºC. Half spreading rate of 10 mm/yr

Page 7: Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper.
Page 8: Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper.
Page 9: Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper.
Page 10: Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper.

Mantle potential temperature of 1325 ºC. Half spreading rate of 10 mm/yr

Page 11: Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper.
Page 12: Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper.
Page 13: Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper.
Page 14: Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper.
Page 15: Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper.

Steady State Composition

• For models run at mantle potential temperatures of 1300 to 1325ºC and half spreading rates of 10 to 20 mm/yr.

Page 16: Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper.

Southeast Greenland

Page 17: Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper.

Two Scenarios

• Constant spreading– variation in hot layer temperature

• Fast spreading upon opening– Variation in hot layer temperature

Page 18: Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper.

Mantle potential temperature of 1325 ºC. Half spreading rate of 10 mm/yr

Primary melt estimates from Thy et al 1998 and Larsen et al 1999

Page 19: Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper.

Primary melt estimates from Thy et al 1998 and Larsen et al 1999

Igneous thickness from Holbrook et al 2001

Page 20: Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper.

Primary melt estimates from Thy et al 1998 and Larsen et al 1999

Igneous thickness from Holbrook et al 2001

Page 21: Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper.

Second Scenario

• The S.E. Greenland margin opened with a pulse of elevated spreading rates.

• Hopper et al (2003) estimate 33 mm/yr, Larsen and Saunders (1998) give 44 mm/yr abating to 12 mm/yr.

• We include this with a pulse of fast spreading of 40 mm/yr for 4 Myrs that abates to 10 mm/yr.

Page 22: Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper.

Primary melt estimates from Thy et al 1998 and Larsen et al 1999

Igneous thickness from Holbrook et al 2001

Page 23: Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper.

Primary melt estimates from Thy et al 1998 and Larsen et al 1999

Igneous thickness from Holbrook et al 2001

Page 24: Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper.

Primary melt estimates from Thy et al 1998 and Larsen et al 1999

Igneous thickness from Holbrook et al 2001

Page 25: Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper.

Summary

• We can re-create the volume of melt generated.

• The effect is a temporal variation in primary melt composition.

• Is this prediction backed up by geochemical evidence?

Page 26: Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper.

More Evolved Rocks

Peak Production

Steady State

Page 27: Modelling the Composition of Melts Formed During the Continental Break-up of the North Atlantic J. Armitage, T. Henstock, T. Minshull and J. Hopper.

Composition Parameterisation

• Also tested Niu and Batiza (1991) parameterisation.

• Relates melt composition to the incremental melt production.

• Then integrate at over the whole melt region.


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