Boninite
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Boninite is an extrusive rock high in both magnesium and silica, thought to be usually formed in fore-arc environments, typically during the early stages of subduction. The rock is named for its occurrence in the Izu-Bonin arc south of Japan. It is characterized by extreme depletion in incompatible trace elements that are not fluid mobile (e.g., the heavy rare-earth elements plus Nb, Ta, Hf) but variable enrichment in the fluid mobile elements (e.g., Rb, Ba, K). They are found almost exclusively in the fore-arc of primitive island arcs (that is, closer to the ocean trench) and in ophiolite complexes thought to represent former fore-arc settings or at least formed above a subduction zone.
Boninite is considered to be a primitive andesite derived from melting of metasomatised mantle.
Similar Archean intrusive rocks, called sanukitoids, have been reported in the rocks of several early cratons. Archean boninite lavas are also reported.
Boninite typically consists of phenocrysts of pyroxenes and olivine in a crystallite-rich glassy matrix.
Geochemistry
Boninite is defined by
- high magnesium content (MgO = >8%)
- low titanium (TiO2 < 0.5%)
- silica content is 52–63%
- high Mg/(Mg + Fe) (0.55–0.83)
- Mantle-normal compatible elements Ni = 70–450 parts per million, Cr = 200–1800 ppm
- Ba, Sr, LREE enrichments compared to tholeiite
- Characteristic Ti/Zr ratios (23–63) and La/Yb ratios (0.6–4.7)