T44C-04
Geochemical evidence for pre- and syn-rifting lithospheric foundering in the East African Rift System

Thursday, 17 December 2015: 16:45
304 (Moscone South)
Wendy R Nelson, Towson University, Towson, MD, United States, Tanya Furman, Pennsylvania State University Main Campus, University Park, PA, United States and Lindy T. Elkins-Tanton, Arizona State University, School of Earth and Space Exploration, Tempe, AZ, United States
Abstract:
The East African Rift System (EARS) is the archetypal active continental rift. The rift branches cut through the elevated Ethiopian and Kenyan domes and are accompanied by a >40 Myr volcanic record. This record is often used to understand changing mantle dynamics, but this approach is complicated by the diversity of spatio-temporally constrained, geochemically unique volcanic provinces. Various sources have been invoked to explain the geochemical variability across the EARS (e.g. mantle plume(s), both enriched and depleted mantle, metasomatized or pyroxenitic lithosphere, continental crust). Mantle contributions are often assessed assuming adiabatic melting of mostly peridotitic material due to extension or an upwelling thermal plume. However, metasomatized lithospheric mantle does not behave like fertile or depleted peridotite mantle, so this model must be modified. Metasomatic lithologies (e.g. pyroxenite) are unstable compared to neighboring peridotite and can founder into the underlying asthenosphere via ductile dripping. As such a drip descends, the easily fusible metasomatized lithospheric mantle heats conductively and melts at increasing T and P; the subsequent volcanic products in turn record this drip magmatism. We re-evaluated existing data of major mafic volcanic episodes throughout the EARS to investigate potential evidence for lithospheric drip foundering that may be an essential part of the rifting process. The data demonstrate clearly that lithospheric drip melting played an important role in pre-flood basalt volcanism in Turkana (>35 Ma), high-Ti “mantle plume-derived” flood basalts and picrites (HT2) from NW Ethiopia (~30 Ma), Miocene shield volcanism on the E Ethiopian Plateau and in Turkana (22-26 Ma), and Quaternary volcanism in Virunga (Western Rift) and Chyulu Hills (Eastern Rift). In contrast, there is no evidence for drip melting in “lithosphere-derived” flood basalts (LT) from NW Ethiopia, Miocene volcanism in S Ethiopia, or Quaternary within-rift lavas in Ethiopia, Turkana or Kivu. The evidence for widespread lithospheric removal across eastern Africa coincides with the timing of dome uplift (e.g. Gani et al., 2007; Wichura et al., 2015) and further demonstrates the controls of lithospheric mantle on volcano-tectonic processes throughout the evolving EARS.