Abstract Details
(2020) Tracing Mantle Heterogeneity by Potassium Isotope Geochemistry
Teng F-Z, Hu Y, Wang Z-Z & Tian H-C
https://doi.org/10.46427/gold2020.2579
05h: Room 2, Saturday 27th June 05:57 - 06:00
Fang-Zhen Teng
View all 7 abstracts at Goldschmidt2020
Yan Hu View all 3 abstracts at Goldschmidt2020 View abstracts at 8 conferences in series
Ze-Zhou Wang View all 2 abstracts at Goldschmidt2020 View abstracts at 6 conferences in series
Heng-Ci Tian View abstracts at 2 conferences in series
Yan Hu View all 3 abstracts at Goldschmidt2020 View abstracts at 8 conferences in series
Ze-Zhou Wang View all 2 abstracts at Goldschmidt2020 View abstracts at 6 conferences in series
Heng-Ci Tian View abstracts at 2 conferences in series
Listed below are questions that have been submitted by the community that the author will try and cover in their presentation. To submit a question, ensure you are signed in to the website. Authors or session conveners approve questions before they are displayed here.
Submitted by Keith Putirka on Wednesday 24th June 21:01
Hi Fang-Zhen - Neat stuff. You likely know that Be isotopes and B/Be ratios are thought to indicate rapid inputs of subducted materials into erupted arc magmas. Could K isotopes lead to an entirely new story about whether sediments or AOC is the source of arc enrichments, since K isotopes seem to separate these so well? Perhaps that key is to measure K isotopes for arc rocks with B-Be-related enrichments? -Keith
Hi Fang-Zhen - Neat stuff. You likely know that Be isotopes and B/Be ratios are thought to indicate rapid inputs of subducted materials into erupted arc magmas. Could K isotopes lead to an entirely new story about whether sediments or AOC is the source of arc enrichments, since K isotopes seem to separate these so well? Perhaps that key is to measure K isotopes for arc rocks with B-Be-related enrichments? -Keith
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