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      Experimental Petrology Applied to Natural Diamond Growth

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      Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry
      Mineralogical Society of America

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          The composition of the Earth

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            A Review of Hydrogen, Carbon, Nitrogen, Oxygen, Sulphur, and Chlorine Stable Isotope Fractionation Among Gaseous Molecules

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              Reevaluating carbon fluxes in subduction zones, what goes down, mostly comes up.

              Carbon fluxes in subduction zones can be better constrained by including new estimates of carbon concentration in subducting mantle peridotites, consideration of carbonate solubility in aqueous fluid along subduction geotherms, and diapirism of carbon-bearing metasediments. Whereas previous studies concluded that about half the subducting carbon is returned to the convecting mantle, we find that relatively little carbon may be recycled. If so, input from subduction zones into the overlying plate is larger than output from arc volcanoes plus diffuse venting, and substantial quantities of carbon are stored in the mantle lithosphere and crust. Also, if the subduction zone carbon cycle is nearly closed on time scales of 5-10 Ma, then the carbon content of the mantle lithosphere + crust + ocean + atmosphere must be increasing. Such an increase is consistent with inferences from noble gas data. Carbon in diamonds, which may have been recycled into the convecting mantle, is a small fraction of the global carbon inventory.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry
                Mineralogical Society of America
                1529-6466
                July 1 2022
                July 1 2022
                : 88
                : 1
                : 755-808
                Article
                10.2138/rmg.2022.88.14
                8f331f28-01ad-4ef8-83e9-e8285cba5d09
                © 2022
                History

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