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Petrology of a mantle-derived rhyolite, Hokkaido, Japan
Authors:Tetsuichi Takagi  Yuji Orihashi  Kazuki Naito  Yasushi Watanabe
Institution:

a Mineral and Fuel Resources Department, Geological Survey of Japan, 1-1-3 Higashi, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, 305-8567, Japan

b Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Ookayama, Tokyo, 152-8551, Japan

Abstract:The Miocene Kitami rhyolite, consisting of orthopyroxene and plagioclase-phyric lavas and dikes, occurs on the back-arc side of the Kuril arc with coeval basalts and Fe-rich andesites. Temperatures estimated from orthopyroxene–ilmenite pairs exceed 900°C. Although the whole rock compositions of the Kitami rhyolite correspond to S-type granites (i.e., high K, Al, large ion lithophile elements, and low Ca and Sr), Sr–Nd isotope compositions are remarkably primitive, and similar to those of the coeval basalts and andesites. They are distinct from those of lower crustal metamorphic rocks exposed in the area. Comparison of chondrite-normalized rare earth element (REE) patterns between the rhyolite and the basalts and andesites show that the rhyolite is more light REE enriched, but has similar heavy REE contents than the basalts. All rhyolites show negative Eu anomalies. The geochemical data suggest that did not formed by simple dehydration melting of basaltic rocks or fractional crystallization of basaltic magmas. The features of slab-derived fluids expected from recent high pressure experimental studies indicates that mantle wedge is partly metasomatized with “rhyolitic” materials from subducted slabs; it is more likely that very low degree partial melting of the metasomatized mantle wedge formed the rhyolite magma.
Keywords:Rhyolite  Sr isotope ratio  Nd isotope ratio  Rare earth element  Upper mantle  Metasomatism
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