Journal of Petrology Pages 859-880 © 1998 Oxford University Press

Geochemistry of Jurassic Oceanic Crust beneath Gran Canaria (Canary Islands): Implications for Crustal Recycling and Assimilation
Introduction
General Geology
Sample Description
Analytical Methods
Trace Element And Isotope Data
Discussion
   Effect of post-exhumation alteration on U and Pb concentrations
   Effect of seafloor alteration-metamorphism and aging on trace element and isotopic compositions of oceanic crust
   Constraints on the age of recycled ocean crust and the HIMU component in ocean islands
   Composition of oceanic crust: implications for OIB sources
   Crustal contamination of Neogene plume melts forming Gran Canaria
Conclusions
Acknowledgements
References

Footnote Table

Geochemistry of Jurassic Oceanic Crust beneath Gran Canaria (Canary Islands): Implications for Crustal Recycling and Assimilation

KAJ HOERNLE*

DEPARTMENT OF VOLCANOLOGY AND PETROLOGY, GEOMAR, WISCHHOFSTR. 1-3, D24148 KIEL, GERMANY

RECEIVED MAY 2, 1997; REVISED TYPESCRIPT ACCEPTED JANUARY 9, 1998

Trace elements and Sr-Nd-Pb isotopes have been analyzed on sedimentary and igneous (metabasalt, metadiorite and metagabbro) samples from the Jurassic oceanic crust beneath Gran Canaria (Canary Islands). The igneous crust exhibits extreme heterogeneity in 87Sr/86Sr (0·7029-0·7052), 206Pb/204Pb (18·2-20·8) and 208Pb/204Pb (38·1-41·3). Leaching experiments indicate that seawater alteration has elevated the 87Sr/86Sr ratio but has not appreciably affected 143Nd/144Nd (0·51295-0·51306). An Sm-Nd isochron gives an age of 178 ± 17 Ma, which agrees with the age predicted from paleomagnetic data. Hydrothermal alteration near the ridge axis has increased 207Pb/204Pb (15·59-15·73), 208Pb/204Pb (as well as [Delta]7/4Pb and [Delta]8/4Pb), 238U/204Pb (µ) and Ce/Pb but has not appreciably changed 206Pb/204Pb. The large range in 206Pb/204Pb and 208Pb/204Pb reflects radiogenic ingrowth with µ being as high as 107. Portions of the Jurassic ocean crust have trace element and isotope characteristics within the range found at St Helena, the Atlantic type locality for the HIMU (high µ) mantle end-member. Evaluation of