Abstract
Most previous efforts to characterize the size and composition of the
upper mantle, the source of mid-ocean ridge basalts (MORBs), have
assumed that this MORB source is the residue of continental crust
extraction. The use of Nd isotopes to model this process led to the
near-consensus that the “depleted MORB reservoir” is more-or-less
confined to the upper mantle (above 670 km, ~30% of the
mantle), with a severe degree of depletion of incompatible elements,
leaving the lower mantle in a more primitive state. Here, we reassess
the mass and composition of the mantle reservoir depleted by continental
crust extraction. We initially apply simple mass balance considerations,
using alternatively ε(Nd) and “canonical” (Nb,Ta)/U tracers, to a
conventional three-reservoir silicate Earth consisting of primitive
mantle, continental crust, and depleted mantle. The (Nb,Ta)/U tracer
yields a ‘depleted reservoir’ exceeding 60% by mass of the total mantle
(X(DM) > 0.6) with average ε(Nd) ≤ 3, whereas the
ε(Nd)-based mass balance, using ε(Nd) = 8.5, yields a “depleted
reservoir” of X(DM) ≤ 0.3. This discrepancy requires additional
processes/reservoirs that impact the fractionation of Sm/Nd in the
depleted mantle. Simple segregation of enriched OIB sources is shown to
be insufficient. Permanent sequestration of a fourth, early-enriched,
mafic reservoir (EER), leaving behind an early-depleted reservoir (EDR)
can resolve the dilemma. Segregation of the present-day continental
crust from EDR generates a moderately depleted, “residual-mantle”
reservoir (RM), which occupies 80-98% of the total mantle (X(RM) =
0.8-0.98). This leads to concordant results for the two crust-mantle
mass balances.