Garnet crystallization does not drive oxidation at arcs.
Megan HolycrossElizabeth CottrellPublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2023)
Arc magmas, the building blocks of continental crust, are depleted in total iron (Fe), have higher ratios of oxidized Fe to total Fe (Fe 3+ /∑Fe), and record higher oxygen fugacities ( f O 2 's) compared with magmas erupted at mid-ocean ridges. Garnet crystallization could explain these observations if garnet removes substantial amounts of Fe 2+ , but not Fe 3+ , from magma, yet this model for continental crust generation has never been tested experimentally. Analysis of garnets and melts in laboratory experiments show that the compatibilities of Fe 2+ and Fe 3+ in garnet are of similar magnitudes. Our results indicate that fractional crystallization of garnet-bearing cumulates will remove 20% of total Fe from primary arc basalts but negligibly alter the Fe 3+ /∑Fe ratio and f O 2 of the melt. Garnet crystallization is unlikely to be responsible for the relatively oxidized nature of basaltic arc magmas or the Fe-depletion trend observed in continental crust.