Occurrence and Origin of Scapolite in the Neoproterozoic Lufilian–Zambezi Belt, Zambia: Evidence/Role of Brine-Rich Fluid Infiltration During Regional Metamorphism

2010 ◽  
pp. 449-473 ◽  
Author(s):  
Crispin Katongo ◽  
Friedrich Koller ◽  
Theodoros Ntaflos ◽  
Christian Koeberl ◽  
Francis Tembo
2016 ◽  
Vol 380 ◽  
pp. 231-244 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gerhard Bartzke ◽  
Lina Podszun ◽  
Katrin Huhn

2019 ◽  
Vol 89 ◽  
pp. 03002
Author(s):  
M.A Velazco ◽  
A. Bruce ◽  
M. Ferris ◽  
J. Reed ◽  
R. Kandasamy

Clean sandstone, with minimal clay content, is expected to be strongly water wet once the rock has been through an effective cleaning process. Even samples containing significant clay minerals are usually expected to be water wet after appropriate cleaning. However, tests carried out on core samples from Fields in three different global locations show mixed indices, even for clean state samples where no aging with crude oil has taken place. A few hypotheses for this behaviour considered herein are: whether the cleaning method was adequate, whether wettability was altered by an external factor, or if wettability was due to mineral composition. This paper presents the results obtained from wettability studies on fresh, clean and restored state core plug samples from three different Fields. Wettability indices were obtained by using the combined Amott-USBM method. Petrography was performed on sample end-trims to investigate the possible presence of halite or barite in the clean state samples, thought to be from drilling fluid infiltration, which should have been removed by the methanol cleaning cycle. This showed no organic material or salt (halite), negating wetting change from inefficient cleaning. From a reactive clays [1] model perspective, these rock samples are considered clean-sand (i.e. illite/ smectites- as total clay content), determined by XRD analysis, are lower than 10%. SEM and XRD results showed the presence of grain-coating chlorite in one sample set and glauconite grains in the others. Only once the unusual wettability indices were obtained was the grain-coating chlorite identified as chamosite by SEM/EDX, which is an iron-rich form of chlorite. The presence of chamosite or glauconite appears to influence the wetting tendency. In summary, USBM vs Amott wettability indices of the analysed samples are consistent between both methods, showing a mixed to oil-wet tendency for all samples where chamosite was identified, regardless of the initial test condition. Samples with glauconite appeared to be more mixed wet after wettability restoration. The results suggest that iron rich clay/mineral content is the main contributor to the oil wet tendency of the evaluated rocks.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bjørn Jamtveit ◽  
Kristina G. Dunkel ◽  
Arianne Petley-Ragan ◽  
Fernando Corfu ◽  
Dani W. Schmid

<p>Caledonian eclogite- and amphibolite-facies metamorphism of initially dry Proterozoic granulites in the Lindås Nappe of the Bergen Arcs, Western Norway, is driven by fluid infiltration along faults and shear zones. The granulites are also cut by numerous dykes and pegmatites that are spatially associated with metamorphosed host rocks. U-Pb geochronology was performed to constrain the age of fluid infiltration and metamorphism. The ages obtained demonstrate that eclogite- and amphibolite-facies metamorphism were synchronous within the uncertainties of our results and occurred within a maximum time interval of 5 Myr, with a mean age of ca. 426 Ma.  Caledonian dykes and pegmatites are granitic rocks characterised by a high Na/K-ration, low REE-abundance and positive anomalies of Eu, Ba, Pb, and Sr. The most REE-poor compositions show HREE-enrichment. Melt compositions are consistent with wet melting of plagioclase- and garnet-bearing source rocks. The most likely fluid source is dehydration of Paleozoic metapelites, located immediately below the Lindås part of the Jotun-Lindås microcontinent, during eastward thrusting over the extended margin of Baltica. Melt compositions and thermal modelling suggest that short-lived fluid-driven metamorphism of the Lindås Nappe granulites was related to shear heating at lithostatic pressures in the range 1.0-1.5 GPa. High-P (≈2 GPa) metamorphism within the Nappe was related to weakening-induced pressure perturbations, not to deep burial. Our results emphasize that both prograde and retrograde metamorphism may proceed rapidly during regional metamorphism and that their time-scales may be coupled through local production and consumption of fluids.</p>


Author(s):  
C. E. Tilley

The metamorphism surrounding the granite of Carn Chuinneag in eastern Ross-shire provides the classical example of polymetamorphism in which a regional metamorphism is superimposed on a normal thermal metamorphism.Prior to the regional alteration a pelitic facies of the Moine sediments suffered metamorphism of a purely thermal type in the vicinity of the granite. At a subsequent date the whole region was involved in fold movements with the production of crystalline schists. In this deformation the belt of rocks surrounding the granite yielded in such a way that belts of the hornfels zone moved en masse and are preserved amidst rocks which are now typical crystalline schists, and all stages of transition between genuine hornfelses and typical micaschists can be traced in the field.


1983 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 205-226 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. A. ETHERIDGE ◽  
V. J. WALL ◽  
R. H. VERNON

1975 ◽  
Vol 12 (9) ◽  
pp. 1516-1523 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jayanta Guha ◽  
Jahak Koo

The Henderson Cu-Au deposit occurs in discordant structures within the anorthosite zone of the Doré Lake Complex. The Doré Lake Complex is intruded into volcanic rocks of the Chibougamau greenstone belt on the southeastern side of the Superior Province. Massive to disseminated sulfide ores are associated with sericite, carbonate, chlorite and/or chloritoid schists within a large 'shear zone'. These ores show structural and textural evidence of intense deformation, recrystallization, and metamorphic mobilization.The deposit comprises not only sulfide schist ore with alternating sulfide and schist layers, but also 'hydrothermal' vein-type segregation ore. The latter is characterized by sulfide-bearing quartz-calcite veins that occur in the 'shear zone' and in the subsidiary fractures adjacent to it.The sulfide schist and vein types of ores can be attributed to partly solid state mobilization combined with fluid state mobilization from a pre-existing ore, and is an excellent example of extensive fluid state mobilization of sulfides under relatively low-grade regional metamorphism. It is suggested that fluid state mobilization can play an important role during the metamorphism of a pre-existing sulfide body, especially in the presence of differential stress accompanied with rupture. The deformational features of the ore are the important indication for syn- and/or pre-metamorphic origin of the ore.


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