High-precision Mg isotope measurements of terrestrial and extraterrestrial material by HR-MC-ICPMS—implications for the relative and absolute Mg isotope composition of the bulk silicate Earth

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High-precision Mg isotope measurements of terrestrial and extraterrestrial material by HR-MC-ICPMS—implications for the relative and absolute Mg isotope composition of the bulk silicate Earth. / Bizzarro, Martin; Paton, Chad; Larsen, Kirsten Kolbjørn; Schiller, Martin; Trinquier, Anne Marie-Pierre Emilie; Ulfbeck, David Garf.

In: Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry, Vol. 26, No. 3, 2011, p. 565-577.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Bizzarro, M, Paton, C, Larsen, KK, Schiller, M, Trinquier, AM-PE & Ulfbeck, DG 2011, 'High-precision Mg isotope measurements of terrestrial and extraterrestrial material by HR-MC-ICPMS—implications for the relative and absolute Mg isotope composition of the bulk silicate Earth', Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry, vol. 26, no. 3, pp. 565-577. https://doi.org/10.1039/c0ja00190b

APA

Bizzarro, M., Paton, C., Larsen, K. K., Schiller, M., Trinquier, A. M-P. E., & Ulfbeck, D. G. (2011). High-precision Mg isotope measurements of terrestrial and extraterrestrial material by HR-MC-ICPMS—implications for the relative and absolute Mg isotope composition of the bulk silicate Earth. Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry, 26(3), 565-577. https://doi.org/10.1039/c0ja00190b

Vancouver

Bizzarro M, Paton C, Larsen KK, Schiller M, Trinquier AM-PE, Ulfbeck DG. High-precision Mg isotope measurements of terrestrial and extraterrestrial material by HR-MC-ICPMS—implications for the relative and absolute Mg isotope composition of the bulk silicate Earth. Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry. 2011;26(3):565-577. https://doi.org/10.1039/c0ja00190b

Author

Bizzarro, Martin ; Paton, Chad ; Larsen, Kirsten Kolbjørn ; Schiller, Martin ; Trinquier, Anne Marie-Pierre Emilie ; Ulfbeck, David Garf. / High-precision Mg isotope measurements of terrestrial and extraterrestrial material by HR-MC-ICPMS—implications for the relative and absolute Mg isotope composition of the bulk silicate Earth. In: Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry. 2011 ; Vol. 26, No. 3. pp. 565-577.

Bibtex

@article{4816dc891e5542d09caaa54b8df02ac2,
title = "High-precision Mg isotope measurements of terrestrial and extraterrestrial material by HR-MC-ICPMS—implications for the relative and absolute Mg isotope composition of the bulk silicate Earth",
abstract = "We report novel methods for the chemical purification of Mg from silicate rocks by ion-exchange chromatography, and high-precision analysis of Mg-isotopes by high-resolution multiple collector inductively coupled plasma source mass spectrometry (HR-MC-ICPMS). Using these methods, we have measured the relative and absolute Mg-isotope composition of a number of terrestrial and extraterrestrial materials, including international reference rock standards as well as pure Mg standards, olivine crystals separated from a mantle-derived spinel lherzolite (J12 olivine), one enstatite chondrite, a martian shergottite and sea water samples. Repeated analyses of terrestrial and extraterrestrial samples demonstrate that it is possible to routinely measure the relative Mg-isotope composition of silicate materials with an external reproducibility of 2.5 and 20 ppm for the m26Mg* and m25Mg values, respectively (m notation is the per 106 deviation from a reference material). Analyses of bulk mantle-derived rocks as well as a martian shergottite and an enstatite chondrite define a restricted range in m25Mg of ¿120 ¿ 28 ppm (2sd) relative to the DSM-3 reference standard (m25,26Mg 1/4 0), suggesting that the Mg-isotope composition of inner solar system bulk planetary materials is uniform within the resolution of our analyses. We have determined the absolute Mg-isotope composition of the J12 olivine, two CI chondrites as well as the DSM-3 and Cambridge-1 reference standards usinga mixed 26Mg-24Mg double-spike. The differences between the absolute 25Mg/24Mg ratios of the various materials analyzed relative to the DSM-3 standard are in excellent agreement with results obtained by the sample-standard bracketing method. Based on the averages obtained for the J12 olivine separates, we estimate the absolute Mg-isotope composition for Earth{\textquoteright}s mantle – and hence that of the bulk silicate Earth – to be 25Mg/24Mg 1/4 0.126896 ¿ 0.000025 and 26Mg/24Mg 1/4 0.139652 ¿ 0.000033. Given the restricted range of m25Mg obtained for bulk planetary material by the sample-standard bracketing technique and the excellent agreement between the data obtained by the relative and absolute methods, we propose that these new values represent the absolute Mg-isotope composition of the bulk inner solar system. Using the absolute Mg-isotope composition of the J12 olivine, we calculate the isotopic abundances of Mg as 24Mg 1/4 0.789548 ¿ 0.000026, 25Mg 1/4 0.100190 ¿ 0.000018, and 26Mg 1/4 0.110261 ¿ 0.000023. Based on this result, we have calculated an atomic weight for Mg of 24.305565 ¿ 0.000045,which is marginally heavier than previous estimates but a factor of 10 more precise.",
author = "Martin Bizzarro and Chad Paton and Larsen, {Kirsten Kolbj{\o}rn} and Martin Schiller and Trinquier, {Anne Marie-Pierre Emilie} and Ulfbeck, {David Garf}",
year = "2011",
doi = "10.1039/c0ja00190b",
language = "English",
volume = "26",
pages = "565--577",
journal = "Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry",
issn = "0267-9477",
publisher = "Royal Society of Chemistry",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - High-precision Mg isotope measurements of terrestrial and extraterrestrial material by HR-MC-ICPMS—implications for the relative and absolute Mg isotope composition of the bulk silicate Earth

AU - Bizzarro, Martin

AU - Paton, Chad

AU - Larsen, Kirsten Kolbjørn

AU - Schiller, Martin

AU - Trinquier, Anne Marie-Pierre Emilie

AU - Ulfbeck, David Garf

PY - 2011

Y1 - 2011

N2 - We report novel methods for the chemical purification of Mg from silicate rocks by ion-exchange chromatography, and high-precision analysis of Mg-isotopes by high-resolution multiple collector inductively coupled plasma source mass spectrometry (HR-MC-ICPMS). Using these methods, we have measured the relative and absolute Mg-isotope composition of a number of terrestrial and extraterrestrial materials, including international reference rock standards as well as pure Mg standards, olivine crystals separated from a mantle-derived spinel lherzolite (J12 olivine), one enstatite chondrite, a martian shergottite and sea water samples. Repeated analyses of terrestrial and extraterrestrial samples demonstrate that it is possible to routinely measure the relative Mg-isotope composition of silicate materials with an external reproducibility of 2.5 and 20 ppm for the m26Mg* and m25Mg values, respectively (m notation is the per 106 deviation from a reference material). Analyses of bulk mantle-derived rocks as well as a martian shergottite and an enstatite chondrite define a restricted range in m25Mg of ¿120 ¿ 28 ppm (2sd) relative to the DSM-3 reference standard (m25,26Mg 1/4 0), suggesting that the Mg-isotope composition of inner solar system bulk planetary materials is uniform within the resolution of our analyses. We have determined the absolute Mg-isotope composition of the J12 olivine, two CI chondrites as well as the DSM-3 and Cambridge-1 reference standards usinga mixed 26Mg-24Mg double-spike. The differences between the absolute 25Mg/24Mg ratios of the various materials analyzed relative to the DSM-3 standard are in excellent agreement with results obtained by the sample-standard bracketing method. Based on the averages obtained for the J12 olivine separates, we estimate the absolute Mg-isotope composition for Earth’s mantle – and hence that of the bulk silicate Earth – to be 25Mg/24Mg 1/4 0.126896 ¿ 0.000025 and 26Mg/24Mg 1/4 0.139652 ¿ 0.000033. Given the restricted range of m25Mg obtained for bulk planetary material by the sample-standard bracketing technique and the excellent agreement between the data obtained by the relative and absolute methods, we propose that these new values represent the absolute Mg-isotope composition of the bulk inner solar system. Using the absolute Mg-isotope composition of the J12 olivine, we calculate the isotopic abundances of Mg as 24Mg 1/4 0.789548 ¿ 0.000026, 25Mg 1/4 0.100190 ¿ 0.000018, and 26Mg 1/4 0.110261 ¿ 0.000023. Based on this result, we have calculated an atomic weight for Mg of 24.305565 ¿ 0.000045,which is marginally heavier than previous estimates but a factor of 10 more precise.

AB - We report novel methods for the chemical purification of Mg from silicate rocks by ion-exchange chromatography, and high-precision analysis of Mg-isotopes by high-resolution multiple collector inductively coupled plasma source mass spectrometry (HR-MC-ICPMS). Using these methods, we have measured the relative and absolute Mg-isotope composition of a number of terrestrial and extraterrestrial materials, including international reference rock standards as well as pure Mg standards, olivine crystals separated from a mantle-derived spinel lherzolite (J12 olivine), one enstatite chondrite, a martian shergottite and sea water samples. Repeated analyses of terrestrial and extraterrestrial samples demonstrate that it is possible to routinely measure the relative Mg-isotope composition of silicate materials with an external reproducibility of 2.5 and 20 ppm for the m26Mg* and m25Mg values, respectively (m notation is the per 106 deviation from a reference material). Analyses of bulk mantle-derived rocks as well as a martian shergottite and an enstatite chondrite define a restricted range in m25Mg of ¿120 ¿ 28 ppm (2sd) relative to the DSM-3 reference standard (m25,26Mg 1/4 0), suggesting that the Mg-isotope composition of inner solar system bulk planetary materials is uniform within the resolution of our analyses. We have determined the absolute Mg-isotope composition of the J12 olivine, two CI chondrites as well as the DSM-3 and Cambridge-1 reference standards usinga mixed 26Mg-24Mg double-spike. The differences between the absolute 25Mg/24Mg ratios of the various materials analyzed relative to the DSM-3 standard are in excellent agreement with results obtained by the sample-standard bracketing method. Based on the averages obtained for the J12 olivine separates, we estimate the absolute Mg-isotope composition for Earth’s mantle – and hence that of the bulk silicate Earth – to be 25Mg/24Mg 1/4 0.126896 ¿ 0.000025 and 26Mg/24Mg 1/4 0.139652 ¿ 0.000033. Given the restricted range of m25Mg obtained for bulk planetary material by the sample-standard bracketing technique and the excellent agreement between the data obtained by the relative and absolute methods, we propose that these new values represent the absolute Mg-isotope composition of the bulk inner solar system. Using the absolute Mg-isotope composition of the J12 olivine, we calculate the isotopic abundances of Mg as 24Mg 1/4 0.789548 ¿ 0.000026, 25Mg 1/4 0.100190 ¿ 0.000018, and 26Mg 1/4 0.110261 ¿ 0.000023. Based on this result, we have calculated an atomic weight for Mg of 24.305565 ¿ 0.000045,which is marginally heavier than previous estimates but a factor of 10 more precise.

U2 - 10.1039/c0ja00190b

DO - 10.1039/c0ja00190b

M3 - Journal article

VL - 26

SP - 565

EP - 577

JO - Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry

JF - Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry

SN - 0267-9477

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 33806689