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Deep carbon and the life cycle of large igneous provinces

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Black, BA 
Gibson, SA 

Abstract

jats:pCarbon is central to the formation and environmental impact of large igneous provinces (LIPs). These vast magmatic events occur over geologically short timescales and include voluminous flood basalts, along with silicic and low-volume alkaline magmas. Surface outgassing of CO2 from flood basalts may average up to 3,000 Mt per year during LIP emplacement and is subsidized by fractionating magmas deep in the crust. The large quantities of carbon mobilized in LIPs may be sourced from the convecting mantle, lithospheric mantle and crust. The relative significance of each potential carbon source is poorly known and probably varies between LIPs. Because LIPs draw on mantle reservoirs typically untapped during plate boundary magmatism, they are integral to Earth's long-term carbon cycle.</jats:p>

Description

Keywords

LIP, carbon, volcanism, environmental impact, atmosphere, degassing

Journal Title

Elements

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1811-5209
1811-5217

Volume Title

15

Publisher

Mineralogical Society of America
Sponsorship
Natural Environment Research Council (NE/H01053X/1)