A primary magmatic source of nitrogen to Earth’s crust

Boocock, T. J., Mikhail, S., Boyce, A. J. , Prytulak, J., Savage, P. S. and Stüeken, E. E. (2023) A primary magmatic source of nitrogen to Earth’s crust. Nature Geoscience, 16(6), pp. 521-526. (doi: 10.1038/s41561-023-01194-3)

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Abstract

The igneous portion of Earth’s continental crust represents a long-term sink of terrestrial nitrogen, but the origin of the nitrogen in this reservoir remains ambiguous. Possible sources include magmatic differentiation of mantle-derived melts (that is, magmatic nitrogen) and/or the burial of biomass (that is, fixed atmospheric nitrogen). Identifying the sources of crustal nitrogen is required to accurately reconstruct the evolution of Earth’s atmospheric pressure, and therefore habitability, over geologic timescales. Here we present analyses of the nitrogen geochemistry of extrusive igneous rocks from Hekla volcano, Iceland, which has been previously used as a natural laboratory to study the effects of magmatic differentiation on stable isotope systems. We find that bulk rock nitrogen abundance increases as rocks become more evolved, with up to 23 μg g−1 of nitrogen in felsic igneous samples and non-systematic and negligible nitrogen isotopic fractionation across the suite. Our findings indicate that this nitrogen is magmatic in origin and provides evidence that nitrogen behaves as an incompatible trace element during magmatic differentiation. Assuming Hekla is representative of differentiating systems more broadly, the observed nitrogen enrichment would satisfy 31–52% of Earth’s felsic crust-hosted nitrogen. We suggest that continental crust formation can act as nitrogen trap between the mantle and the atmosphere. Therefore, nitrogen degassing from Earth’s interior to the atmosphere over geological time may have been previously overestimated.

Item Type:Articles
Additional Information:Funding was provided by a Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) studentship (grant NE/R012253/1) to T.J.B. and a National Environmental Isotope Facility access in-kind grant (NEIF–2313.0920) to E.E.S., S.M. and T.J.B. S.M. acknowledges support from NERC standard grant NE/PO12167/1. E.E.S. is financially supported by a NERC Frontiers grant (NE/V010824/1).
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Boyce, Professor Adrian
Authors: Boocock, T. J., Mikhail, S., Boyce, A. J., Prytulak, J., Savage, P. S., and Stüeken, E. E.
College/School:College of Science and Engineering > Scottish Universities Environmental Research Centre
Journal Name:Nature Geoscience
Publisher:Nature Research
ISSN:1752-0894
ISSN (Online):1752-0908
Published Online:01 June 2023

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