Diamond preservation in the lithospheric mantle recorded by olivine in kimberlites


Date

2023-11-02

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

Citations

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Data

Abstract

The diamond potential of kimberlites is difficult to assess due to several mantle and magmatic processes affecting diamond content. Traditionally, initial evaluations are based on the compositions of mantle-derived minerals (garnet, chromite, clinopyroxene), which allow an assessment of pressure-temperature conditions and lithologies suitable for diamond formation. Here we explore a complementary approach that considers the conditions of diamonds destruction by interaction with melts/fluids (metasomatism). We test the hypothesis that carbonate-rich metasomatism related to kimberlite melt infiltration into the deep lithosphere is detrimental to diamond preservation. Our results show that high diamond grades in kimberlites worldwide are exclusively associated with high-Mg/Fe olivine, which corresponds to mantle lithosphere minimally affected by kimberlite-related metasomatism. Diamond dissolution in strongly metasomatised lithosphere containing low-Mg/Fe olivine provides a causal link to the empirical associations between low diamond grades, abundant Ti-Zr-rich garnets and kimberlites with high Ti and low Mg contents. This finding show-cases olivine geochemistry as a viable tool in diamond exploration.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Volume

14 (1)

Pages / Article No.

6999

Publisher

Nature

Event

Edition / version

Methods

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Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

Organisational unit

03592 - Schmidt, Max / Schmidt, Max check_circle

Notes

Funding

180126 - A new understanding of kimberlite magmas from deep Earth to diamond mines (SNF)

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