Deep Earth’s Oxygen recycling at subduction Zones

The OZ project aims to quantify fluid interactions in subduction zones to understand their role in oxidizing the mantle and generating arc magmatism through innovative experimental and modeling approaches.

Subsidie
€ 2.000.000
2023

Projectdetails

Introduction

In contrast to other known terrestrial planets, the Earth's interior is oxygen-breathing through the sink of oxidised tectonic plates at convergent margins since the late Archean to Paleoproterozoic. Recent estimates suggest that the redox capacity of some key subducting chemical elements is not balanced on geological time scales by global magmatism and volcanism, thus implying a puzzling deep oxygenation of our planet.

Current Models and Findings

Although current models presume that the redox state of subducting slabs is irreversible, my most recent results demonstrate that mixing of fluids from different slab lithologies can dramatically change the redox capacity of such fluids and the deeply subducted residues.

Project Overview

The OZ project will provide an unprecedented quantitative framework to account for such interactions in order to determine the effectiveness of subduction slab fluids to oxidise the mantle wedge and generate the most oxidised magmatism on Earth: arc magmatism.

Specific Goals

To achieve this ambitious goal, OZ will address four specific objectives:

  1. The experimental determination of the effect of oxygen (fO2) and sulphur (fS2) fugacity on the stability of critical mineral assemblages during the prograde metamorphic evolution of serpentinites by using a novel triple capsule buffering technique in high pressure experiments.
  2. The determination of sulphur mobility at high pressure due to gradients in fO2 and fS2 by means of an original experimental capsule design with interconnected reservoirs representative of the heterogeneity of the slab.
  3. The characterization of sulphide-oxide mineral associations in natural samples from exhumed paleo-subduction terranes to demonstrate the scales of fluid mixing in nature.
  4. The upscaling of these processes to subduction zones by using two types of equilibrium reactive transport models at the scale of the slab and the mantle wedge.

Financiële details & Tijdlijn

Financiële details

Subsidiebedrag€ 2.000.000
Totale projectbegroting€ 2.000.000

Tijdlijn

Startdatum1-12-2023
Einddatum30-11-2028
Subsidiejaar2023

Partners & Locaties

Projectpartners

  • AGENCIA ESTATAL CONSEJO SUPERIOR DE INVESTIGACIONES CIENTIFICASpenvoerder

Land(en)

Spain

Vergelijkbare projecten binnen European Research Council

ERC Starting...

Reconstruction of global redox transitions based on an evolving Precambrian biological carbon pump

RETRO-PUMP aims to reconstruct the ancient Biological Carbon Pump to understand its role in Earth's oxygenation and the evolution of complex life through microbial carbon cycling.

€ 1.771.359
ERC Consolid...

Tracing nanoparticle-fuelled co-mobilization of catalyst metals across Earth's deep-sea redox interfaces to pave the way for habitability detection in Ocean Worlds

DeepTrace aims to explore the role of redox metals in Earth's biogeochemical cycles to enhance the detection of life in Ocean Worlds by studying metal catalysis and nanoparticle dynamics in marine environments.

€ 2.399.350
ERC Advanced...

Formation and Evolution of the Earth with Volatile Elements

This project aims to quantify volatile elements in Earth's core and bulk silicate Earth through experiments, enhancing models of planetary evolution and atmospheric development.

€ 2.494.223
ERC Consolid...

Quantifying the formation and evolution of the Archaean lithospheric mantle

LITHO3 aims to uncover the depth of Archean mantle melting and the origins of silica enrichment in cratonic lithosphere through advanced analysis of orthopyroxenes and experimental modeling.

€ 1.944.116
ERC Advanced...

Quantifying and controlling the mechanisms responsible for mineral behaviour: Dissolution, adsorption and crystal growth

The project aims to develop new instruments to understand and control organic molecule interactions with silicate minerals, enhancing CO2 mineralization and addressing climate change challenges.

€ 3.499.625