Volatiles beneath mid-ocean ridges: deep melting, channelised transport, focusing, and metasomatism
Tobias Keller, Richard F Katz, Marc M Hirschmann

TL;DR
This study uses numerical simulations to analyze how volatiles are transported and extracted beneath mid-ocean ridges, revealing limited extraction and metasomatism effects that influence mantle and lithosphere properties.
Contribution
It introduces a coupled magma/mantle dynamics model to estimate volatile fluxes and melt focusing, providing new insights into deep volatile cycling at mid-ocean ridges.
Findings
Global MOR crust production: 66-73 Gt/yr
Volatile output: 52-110 Mt/yr
Deep volatile-rich melts deposit along LAB
Abstract
Deep-Earth volatile cycles couple the mantle with near-surface reservoirs. Volatiles are emitted by volcanism and, in particular, from mid-ocean ridges, which are the most prolific source of basaltic volcanism. Estimates of volatile extraction from the asthenosphere beneath ridges typically rely on measurements of undegassed lavas combined with simple petrogenetic models of the mean degree of melting. Estimated volatile fluxes have large uncertainties; this is partly due to a poor understanding of how volatiles are transported by magma in the asthenosphere. Here, we assess the fate of mantle volatiles through numerical simulations of melting and melt transport at mid-ocean ridges. Our simulations are based on two-phase, magma/mantle dynamics theory coupled to idealised thermodynamic model of mantle melting in the presence of water and carbon dioxide. We combine simulation results with…
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