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If you use PetDB in your research or have published an article that cites PetDB, please send a brief summary of how you applied the dataset to info@petdb.org.

Since its inception in 2000, PetDB has supported a wide array of scientific endeavors, providing easy access to a comprehensive global dataset of geochemical data for mid-ocean ridge basalts and abyssal peridotites. PetDB has been cited in more than 200 peer-reviewed scientific articles as the source of data used to develop and test new hypotheses ranging from the chemical and mineralogical composition of Earth's mantle, to the generation and evolution of continental and oceanic crust, melt transport phenomena, to global geochemical seawater budgets.

View a list of peer-reviewed articles that cite PetDB (updated 11/5/08)



Recent Articles citing PetDB

Carpentier, M., C. Chauvel, et al. (2008). "Pb-Nd isotopic constraints on sedimentary input into the Lesser Antilles Arc system." Earth and Planetary Science Letters In Press, Accepted Manuscript. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2008.04.036

Iwamori, H. and F. Albarede (2008). "Decoupled isotopic record of ridge and subduction zone processes in oceanic basalts by independent component analysis." G-CUBED 9(Q04033). doi:10.1029/2007GC001753

Grenada

Featured Article

M. Carpentier, C. Chauvel, and N. Mattielli (2008). "Pb-Nd isotopic constraints on sedimentary input into the Lesser Antilles Arc system." EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS 272:199-211. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2008.04.036

"Lesser Antilles lavas exhibit a large range of Pb-Nd isotopic compositions, which includes the most radiogenic Pb isotopic compositions known for intra-oceanic arcs. They are also characterized by a strong chemical zoning from north to south along the arc, with the highest Pb isotope ratios being found in the southern islands. We studied the geochemical characteristics of subducting sediments at different latitudes, in order to constrain a potential north-south chemical gradient in the sediments. We show that mixing of local depleted mantle with sediments subducting under the northern part of the arc could explain the northern island lava Pb-Nd isotopic compositions. In the south, subducting sediments display higher Pb isotopes, and mixing of local depleted mantle with these sediments satisfactory explains the very radiogenic Pb isotopic composition of lavas from the southern part of the Lesser Antilles arc. Using PetDB, we compiled data for Atlantic MORB to determine the Pb and Nd isotopic compositions of the local depleted mantle. When combined with our measurements on the subducting sediments, these data helped us to evaluate the sedimentary contribution in the Lesser Antilles magma genesis." - M. Carpentier


Previously Featured Articles


map showing Kane Megamullion

C. Johan Lissenberg and Henry J. B. Dick (2008). "Melt-rock reaction in the lower oceanic crust and its implications for the genesis of mid-ocean ridge basalt." EARTH AND PLANET SCI LETT 271(1-4): 311-325 doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2008.04.023

"Transport of melt through the lower oceanic crust is a poorly understood phenomenon. However, it may have a large effect on the compositions of both lower crustal cumulates and the most abundant magma on Earth, mid-ocean ridge basalts (MORB). We studied gabbroic rocks from the Kane Megamullion, on the Mid-Atlantic ridge, and found evidence that melt was transported in diffuse cm-wide channels. Mineral compositions and textures indicate that melt flow in these channels is reactive. We modeled this reaction to constrain its effect on melt composition, and compared the results with MORB data. Using PetDB allowed a rigorous comparison of our model melt composition with the full spectrum of melts erupted along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. Results suggests that MORB may owe part of their compositional variation, previously attributed to fractional crystallization at elevated pressures in the mantle, to reactive transport in the lower crust." - C. J. Lissenberg



J. Blichert-Toft and F. Albarede (2007). "Hafnium isotopes in Jack Hills zircons and the formation of the Hadean crust." EARTH AND PLANET SCI LETT 265(3-4): 686-702. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2007.10.054
photo credit: NASA Earth Observatory

"One of the fundamental issues of Earth evolution is to understand when growth of continental crust began. Constraining this question will help us date the timing of onset of plate tectonics and thus ultimately the origin of life. We have addressed this problem by dating single Hadean zircons from Jack Hills in Western Australia and comparing their inferred geochemical properties with a variety of modern rock types (MORB, OIB, plateau basalts, subduction zone lavas etc.) in order to deduce the nature of the source rock of the Jack Hills granites. This approach, which was based on using real data of worldwide distribution from PetDB and which could not have been undertaken in such an efficient manner without access to this data base source, helped us exclude all modern candidates as the protolith of the Jack Hills granites and come up with a unique alternative explanation involving a ~4.35 Ga TTG-like (tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite) crust which itself may have been produced by melting of the last remains of the magma ocean." - J. Blichert-Toft


Rubin, K. H. and J. Sinton (2007). "Inferences on mid-ocean ridge thermal and magmatic structure from MORB compositions." EARTH AND PLANET SCI LETT 260(1-2): 257-276. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2007.05.035

"Interplays among magma accumulation, differentiation, heat loss, and eruption as functions of space and time at mid ocean ridges are key for understanding the creation and structure of oceanic crust. Using new observations of systematic, regional compositional variations in a global MORB dataset (>11000 samples compiled from PetDB), we propose a new ocean ridge magma chamber model in which the number, size and depth of shallowest melt segregations vary smoothly with spreading rate and magma supply. Magma reservoir depth in this model is dynamically controlled by the long-term melt flux to the crust. Highest melt supplies promote shallower and thermally more variable magmatic differentiation conditions, accompanied by a dramatic reduction in chemical variance for parameters related to parental melt compositions (i.e., those obtained in Earth's mantle). In contrast, low melt supply promotes the eruption of less differentiated magma from deeper magma chambers of more uniform differentiation degree but more variable mantle parentage. This new perspective on crustal magma bodies provides a framework for understanding structural, geophysical, hydrothermal and volcanological attributes of ridges. The major element, trace element, and radiogenic isotope data within PetDB made this research possible." - K. Rubin


Herzberg, C., P. D. Asimow, N. Arndt Y. Niu, C. M. Lesher, J. G. Fitton, M. J. Cheadle, A. D. Saunders (2007). "Temperatures in ambient mantle and plumes: Constraints from basalts, picrites, and komatiites." Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems 8: Q02006. doi:10.1029/2006GC001390

The temperature of ambient mantle and the existence of any possible thermal anomalies are fundamental properties of the Earth. Although they cannot be directly measured, they can be inferred from their effects on both seismic wave velocities and the compositions of magmas that are produced at oceanic ridges, islands, and plateaus; hot mantle slows down seismic waves and increases the MgO contents of primary magmas. MORB production from ambient mantle is critical in this discussion because it provides the background reference frame for understanding all thermal anomalies. However, the extraction of reliable temperature information requires that a petrological analysis be conducted on a large number of glass samples. This would not have been possible without PetDB.

"Results of primary magma compositions we obtain for MORB and various oceanic islands and plateaus generally favor ... ambient mantle potential temperatures in the range 1280-1400ºC and thermal anomalies that can be 200-300ºC above this background. Our results are consistent with the plume model."