Abstract
Lithospheric mantle duplex beneath the central Mojave Desert revealed by xenoliths from Dish Hill, California
Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California, USA
Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California, USA
Department of Earth Science, Rice University, Houston, Texas, USA
Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, USA
Low-angle subduction of oceanic lithosphere may be an important process in modifying continental lithosphere. A classic example
is the underthrusting of the Farallon plate beneath North America during the Laramide orogeny. To assess the relevance of
this process to the evolution and composition of continental lithosphere, the mantle stratigraphy beneath the Mojave Desert
was constrained using ultramafic xenoliths hosted in Plio-Pleistocene cinder cones. Whole-rock chemistry, clinopyroxene trace
element and Nd isotope data, in combination with geothermometry and surface heat flow, indicate kilometer-scale compositional
layering. The shallow parts are depleted in radiogenic Nd (
Nd = −13 to −6.4) and are interpreted to be ancient continental mantle that escaped tectonic erosion by low-angle subduction.
The deeper samples are enriched in radiogenic Nd (
Nd = +5.7 to +16.1) and reveal two superposed mantle slices of recent origin. Within each slice, compositions range from fertile
lherzolites at the top to harzburgites at the bottom: the latter formed by 25–28% low-pressure melt depletion and the former
formed by refertilization of harzburgites by mid-ocean-ridge-basalt-like liquids. The superposition and internal compositional
zonation of the slices preclude recent fertilization by Cenozoic extension-related magmas. The above observations imply that
the lower Mojavian lithosphere represents tectonically subcreted and imbricated lithosphere having an oceanic protolith. If
so, the lherzolitic domains may be related to melting and refertilization beneath mid-ocean ridges. The present Mojavian lithosphere
is thus a composite of a shallow section of the original North American lithosphere underlain by Farallon oceanic lithosphere
accreted during low-angle subduction.
Received 30 June 2008; accepted 12 December 2008; published 5 March 2009.
Citation: (2009), Lithospheric mantle duplex beneath the central Mojave Desert revealed by xenoliths from Dish Hill, California, J. Geophys. Res., 114, B03202, doi:10.1029/2008JB005906.
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