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Quantifying the Tetrad Effect, Shape Components, and Ce–Eu–Gd Anomalies in Rare Earth Element Patterns

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Authors

Anenburg, Michael
Williams, Morgan

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Publisher

Springer

Abstract

Plots of chondrite-normalised rare earth element (REE) patterns often appear as smooth curves. These curves can be decomposed into orthogonal polynomial functions (shape components), each of which captures a feature of the total pattern. The coefficients of these components (known as the lambda coefficients—λ) can be derived using least-squares fitting, allowing quantitative description of REE patterns and dimension reduction of parameters required for this. The tetrad effect is similarly quantified using least-squares fitting of shape components to data, resulting in the tetrad coefficients (τ ). Our method allows fitting of all four tetrad coefficients together with tetrad-independent λ curvature. We describe the mathematical derivation of the method and two tools to apply the method: the online interactive application BLambdaR, and the Python package pyrolite.We show several case studies that explore aspects of the method, its treatment of redox-anomalous REE, and possible pitfalls and considerations in its use.

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Citation

Anenburg, M., Williams, M.J. Quantifying the Tetrad Effect, Shape Components, and Ce–Eu–Gd Anomalies in Rare Earth Element Patterns. Math Geosci (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11004-021-09959-5

Source

Mathematical Geosciences

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Access Statement

Open Access

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Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

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