TRACKING STAGES OF MAGMATIC EVOLUTION BY COMPARISON OF TRACE ELEMENTS AND ISOTOPES IN DIFFERENT MINERAL POPULATIONS IN THE TUOLUMNE INTRUSIVE COMPLEX

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vali Memeti ◽  
◽  
Louis Oppenheim ◽  
Kevin Werts ◽  
Dustin Williams ◽  
...  
2015 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 837-857 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Cernuschi ◽  
J.H. Dilles ◽  
A.J.R. Kent ◽  
G. Schroer ◽  
A.K. Raab ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susanne Seitz ◽  
Guilherme Gualda ◽  
Luca Caricchi

<p>Zoned minerals preserve information about their growth conditions, by changing their composition as function of temperature, pressure and melt composition. By carefully looking at a zoned minerals we can determine characteristics of the main stages of the evolution of magmatic systems.</p><p>We study alkali feldspar megacrysts from the Tuolumne Intrusive Complex in California, with the aim of deciphering chemical signatures of rejuvenation events. We characterize the chemical zoning of alkali feldspar using X-ray tomography, BSE imaging, EDS-SEM analysis and LA-ICPMS analysis along profiles. We use hierarchical clustering based on major and trace elements to objectively identify compositional groups for each chemical profile. By reducing the complexity of chemical zoning to one dimension (i.e. cluster number) we can trace the evolution of the conditions of growth and identify rejuvenation events.</p><p>Alkali feldspar megacrysts (up to 20 cm in size) from the Cathedral Peak unit of the Tuolumne Intrusive Complex occur predominantly disperse and only make between 8 - 12 % of the total crystal population. They are mostly homogeneous in major element, and markedly oscillatory zoned in trace elements such as Ba, Sr, and Rb. Using hierarchical clustering we identify four different chemical groups within the alkali feldspar crystals. Each chemical group is repeated multiple times in a single crystal. Overall the crystals show a decreasing trend of Ba towards the rim. Extended alkali feldspar crystallization would lead to a depletion of Ba in the melt and consequently to the growth of low Ba-zones of alkali feldspar. In some crystals the sequence of decreasing Ba is repeated twice. We propose that this reflects melt recharge in a melt-rich magmatic system.</p>


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jin-Gen Dai ◽  
et al.

Detailed analytical methods in Text S1, major- and trace-element compositions of clinopyroxene, orthopyroxene, and amphibole, whole-rock major and trace elements, Sr-Nd isotopic data, and zircon U-Pb and Lu-Hf data in Tables S1–S7; Figures S1–S5.


1997 ◽  
Vol 34 (4) ◽  
pp. 549-561 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert E. Zartman ◽  
Suzanne W. Nicholson ◽  
William F. Cannon ◽  
G. B. Morey

New single-crystal zircon U–Th–Pb ages for plutonic and rhyolitic Keweenawan Supergroup rocks from the south shore of Lake Superior provide geochronological constraints on magmatic evolution associated with the 1.1 Ga Midcontinent rift. Analyses of a granophyric phase of the Mineral Lake intrusion and the Mellen granite, both parts of the Mellen Intrusive Complex, and a laterally extensive rhyolite from the top of the Kallander Creek Volcanics have weighted average 207Pb/206Pb ages of 1102.0 ± 2.8 Ma (N = 2), 1100.9 ± 1.4 Ma (N = 5), and 1098.8 ± 1.9 Ma (N = 4), respectively. Analyses of a pyroclastic rhyolite flow at the top of the Porcupine Volcanics result in variable 207Pb/206Pb ages that range from 1080 to 1137 Ma. This rhyolite exhibits a continuum between morphologically complex and simpler prismatic zircon crystals, the latter yielding concordant analyses having a weighted average 207Pb/206Pb age of 1093.6 ± 1.8 Ma (N = 2). Four prismatic zircons from an aphyric rhyolite of the Chengwatana Volcanics in the Ashland syncline form a linear array intersecting concordia at 1094.6 ± 2.1 Ma (MSWD = 1.3). Another presumed Chengwatana rhyolite recovered from drill core intersecting the Hudson–Afton horst in southeast Minnesota yielded only ~20 morphologically indistinguishable zircons. Six analyses give 207Pb/206Pb ages ranging from 1112 to 1136 Ma, including one analysis with a virtually concordant age of 1130 Ma. This age, however, is considerably older than that obtained for the Chengwatana Volcanics in the Ashland syncline or any other precisely dated rock from the Midcontinent rift.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jin-Gen Dai ◽  
et al.

Detailed analytical methods in Text S1, major- and trace-element compositions of clinopyroxene, orthopyroxene, and amphibole, whole-rock major and trace elements, Sr-Nd isotopic data, and zircon U-Pb and Lu-Hf data in Tables S1–S7.


2020 ◽  
Vol 105 (1) ◽  
pp. 77-91 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin Werts ◽  
Calvin G. Barnes ◽  
Valbone Memeti ◽  
Barbara Ratschbacher ◽  
Dustin Williams ◽  
...  

Abstract Bulk-rock compositions are commonly used as proxies for melt compositions, particularly in silicic plutonic systems. However, crystal accumulation and/or melt loss may play an important role in bulk-rock compositional variability (McCarthy and Hasty 1976; McCarthy and Groves 1979; Wiebe 1993; Wiebe et al. 2002; Collins et al. 2006; Deering and Bachmann 2010; Miller et al. 2011; Vernon and Collins 2011; Lee and Morton 2015; Lee et al. 2015; Barnes et al. 2016a; Schaen et al. 2018). Recognizing and quantifying the effects of crystal accumulation and melt loss in these silicic systems is challenging. Hornblende-melt Fe/Mg partitioning relationships and hornblende (Hbl) chemometry are used here to test for equilibrium with encompassing bulk-rock and/or glass compositions from several plutonic and volcanic systems. Furthermore, we assess the extent to which these tests can be appropriately applied to Hbl from plutonic systems by investigating whether Hbl from the long-lived (~10 Ma) Tuolumne Intrusive Complex preserves magmatic crystallization histories. On the basis of regular zoning patterns, co-variation of both fast- and slow-diffusing trace elements, Hbl thermometry, and compositional overlap with volcanic Hbl we conclude that Hbl from plutons largely preserve records supporting the preservation of a magmatic crystallization history, although many compositional analyses yield calculated temperatures <750 °C, which is unusual in volcanic Hbl. Hornblende is only rarely in equilibrium with host plutonic bulk-rock compositions over a wide range of SiO2 contents (42–78 wt%). Hornblende chemometry indicates that the majority of Hbl from the plutonic systems investigated here is in equilibrium with melts that are typically more silicic (dacitic to rhyolitic in composition) than bulk-rock compositions. These results are consistent with crystal accumulation and/or loss of silicic melts within middle- to upper-crustal plutons. Although the processes by which melts are removed from these plutonic systems is uncertain, it is evident that these melts are either redistributed in the crust (e.g., leucogranite dikes, plutonic roofs, etc.) or are instead erupted. In contrast, Hbl from volcanic rocks is more commonly in equilibrium with bulk-rock and glass compositions. In most cases, where Hbl is out of equilibrium with its host glass, the glasses are more evolved than the calculated melts indicating crystallization from a less fractionated melt and/or mixed crystal populations. Where Hbl is not in equilibrium with volcanic bulk-rocks, the bulk-rock compositions are typically more mafic than the calculated melts. In some intermediate volcanic samples, the occurrence of wide-ranges of calculated melt compositions is indicative of magma mixing. The general absence of Hbl with temperatures <750 °C from volcanic systems suggests that magmatic mushes below this temperature are unlikely to erupt. Our results indicate that bulk-rock compositions of granitic plutonic rocks only rarely approximate melt compositions and that the possibility of crystal accumulation and/or melt loss cannot be ignored. We suggest that detailed assessments of crystal accumulation and melt loss processes in magmatic systems are crucial to evaluating magma differentiation processes and discerning petrogenetic links between plutonic and volcanic systems.


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