Metamorphic pressure-temperature conditions of the Lützow-Holm Complex of East Antarctica deduced from Zr-in-rutile geothermometer and Al2SiO5 minerals enclosed in garnet

Author(s):  
Kota Suzuki ◽  
Tetsuo Kawakami

<p>The Zr content of rutile coexisting with zircon and quartz is mainly a function of the temperature condition and is calibrated as Zr-in-rutile geothermometers. Because of their robustness under high-temperature conditions, they have been applied to granulite facies rocks instead of the conventional Fe-Mg exchange type geothermometers to estimate more reliable temperature conditions. However, it is recently pointed out that in order for rutile to retain the primary Zr content, rutile must be chemically isolated from zircon and quartz during cooling. In this context, inclusion rutile separately enclosed in garnet can be considered to retain the primary Zr content at the time of entrapment, only if rutile, zircon, and quartz are all enclosed in a contemporaneous domain of the garnet.</p><p>In this study, we re-examined the pressure-temperature (<em>P-T</em>) conditions of high-grade pelitic gneisses from selected regions (Akarui Point, Skarvsnes, Skallen, and Rundvågshetta) of the Lützow-Holm Complex (LHC), East Antarctica. The LHC has been divided into the upper-amphibolite facies zone, the transitional zone, and the granulite facies zone, based on matrix mineral assemblages of mafic- to intermediate gneisses. Akarui Point is located in the transitional zone and others in the granulite facies zone.</p><p>While previous studies commonly applied the conventional Fe-Mg exchange type geothermometers, we applied the Zr-in-rutile geothermometer of Tomkins et al. (2007) to rutile grains enclosed in garnet that also encloses zircon, quartz, and Al<sub>2</sub>SiO<sub>5</sub> minerals. By utilizing the phosphorus zoning in garnet, we defined contemporaneous domains of the garnet and identified coexisting inclusion minerals in each domain. In this way, coexisting Al<sub>2</sub>SiO<sub>5</sub> minerals and rutile grains were utilized to constrain the <em>P-T</em> condition of each domain of the garnet.</p><p>As a result, samples from Akarui Point, Skarvsnes, and Skallen were shown to have experienced almost the same <em>P-T</em> conditions around the kyanite/sillimanite transition boundary (~ 830-850 °C/~ 11 kbar). This is significantly higher than the previously estimated peak condition of 770-790 °C/7.7-9.8 kbar based on the conventional garnet-biotite geothermometer in the case of Akarui Point. From Rundvågshetta, where ultrahigh-<em>T</em> metamorphism is reported by previous studies, higher-<em>T</em> condition (850 ± 15 °C/0.1 kbar to 927 ± 16 °C/12.5 kbar) than those of other three regions was confirmed from inclusion rutile in garnet enclosing sillimanite. Therefore, the traditional metamorphic zone mapping, which classified Akarui Point as belonging to the transitional zone, does not reflect the highest metamorphic grade attained. It should be noted that the regional <em>P-T</em> conditions estimated from inclusion minerals in this study is that of earlier higher-<em>P</em> metamorphic stage than the regional <em>P-T</em> conditions determined by the metamorphic zone mapping utilizing matrix mineral assemblages. This result indicates that the Zr-in-rutile geothermometer is a powerful tool to reveal the <em>P-T</em> evolution of high-grade metamorphic terrains, when combined with detailed microstructural observations focusing on the relationship between rutile, zircon, and quartz.</p>

2012 ◽  
Vol 49 (10) ◽  
pp. 1117-1153 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chris G. Couëslan ◽  
David R.M. Pattison

The Thompson Nickel Belt is a ca. 35 km × 400 km northeast-trending segment of the northwest margin of the Archean Superior craton in Manitoba, bounded to the west by the Paleoproterozoic Reindeer Zone. The belt was metamorphosed and deformed during the Trans-Hudson orogeny (ca. 1.9–1.7 Ga). Mineral assemblages in metamorphosed pelite, aluminous greywacke, mafic igneous rock, iron formation, and ferruginous wacke define regional metamorphic domains, separated by mineral isograds, that are subparallel to the strike of the belt and to regional-scale D3 structures. An elongate, ca. 5 km × 73 km, central zone of middle amphibolite-facies rocks is characterized by the following: muscovite-bearing mineral assemblages in pelites containing combinations of staurolite, andalusite, and sillimanite; muscovite-free, staurolite + cordierite + garnet-bearing mineral assemblages in greywackes; hornblende-bearing mineral assemblages in mafic metaigneous rocks; and grunerite-bearing mineral assemblages in iron formation. Pressure–temperature (P–T) conditions of the middle amphibolite-facies zone are ca. 550–620 °C and 3.0–5.0 kbar (1 kbar = 100 MPa), with pressure increasing to the northeast. The middle amphibolite-facies zone is bordered to the east and west by an upper amphibolite-facies zone, ca. 5 km wide on the east and ca. 3–5 km on the west. The upper amphibolite-facies zone is characterized by variably migmatitic K-feldspar + sillimanite-bearing mineral assemblages in pelites; migmatitic, garnet + cordierite + sillimanite-bearing mineral assemblages in greywackes; orthopyroxene-free, hornblende-bearing mineral assemblages in mafic rocks; and orthopyroxene-bearing mineral assemblages in iron formations. Pressure–temperature conditions of the upper amphibolite-facies zone are ca. 640–710 °C and 3.0–5.5 kbar in the southeast, and 675–755 °C and 4.5–6.0 kbar in the northwest. The outermost metamorphic zone is of the granulite facies, characterized by migmatitic garnet + cordierite + K-feldspar-bearing assemblages in pelites and greywackes, orthopyroxene + clinopyroxene ± garnet-bearing mineral assemblages in mafic rocks, and orthopyroxene + K-feldspar-bearing mineral assemblages in iron formation in which biotite is unstable. Pressure–temperature conditions of the granulite-facies zone are ca. 775–830 °C and 5.0–7.0 kbar. The P–T paths in the Thompson Nickel Belt appear to be broadly clockwise, except for some domains where they are close to isobaric. The peak P–T conditions, combined with local but widespread development of andalusite, imply relatively steep geothermal gradients of ca. 33–51 °C/km during metamorphism. Regional bathozones (domains of uniform peak-metamorphic pressure) correspond in general but not in detail with the metamorphic-facies zones. They reveal an increase in pressure towards the northeast, suggesting greater degrees of postmetamorphic exhumation in that region. Microstructural analysis suggests that peak metamorphism coincided with, and possibly outlasted, the D2 deformation event. Metamorphic isograds were deformed by D3–D4 structures. These features are consistent with a tectonic model in which the Superior craton moved in a northwest or west-northwest direction relative to the Reindeer Zone, with greatest convergence and tectonic burial occurring at the Thompson promontory.


1983 ◽  
Vol 20 (12) ◽  
pp. 1791-1804 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Rivers

Aphebian metapelites and quartzofeldspathic rocks from the Grenville Province south of the Labrador Trough display progressive changes in mineral assemblages as a result of Grenvillian metamorphism, consistent with variation in grade from greenschist to upper amphibolite facies. The following metamorphic zones have been delineated: (i) chlorite–muscovite; (ii) chlorite–muscovite–biotite; (iii) chlorite–muscovite–biotite–garnet; (iv) muscovite–staurolite–kyanite; (v) muscovite–garnet–biotite–kyanite; (vi) muscovite–garnet–biotite–kyanite–granitic veins; (vii) K–feldspar–kyanite – granitic veins; (viii) K-feldspar–sillimanite–granitic veins. Reactions linking the lower grade metamorphic zones are interpreted to be dehydration phenomena, whilst anatectic reactions occur at higher grades. At lower metamorphic grades aH2O was high [Formula: see text] but it declined progressively as water entered the melt phase during higher grade anatectic reactions. With the onset of vapour-absent anatexis, the restite assemblage became essentially "dry" [Formula: see text], and biotite breakdown occurred in granulite-facies rocks east of the study area. Consideration of available experimental data suggests that metamorphic temperatures ranged from approximately 450 to 750 °C across the study area. Lithostatic pressure during metamorphism reached about 8 kbar (800 MPa) in the high-grade zones, with estimates at lower grades being poorly constrained; however, a steep pressure gradient across the map area is postulated.This is the first reported occurrence of bathozone 6 assemblages from a progressive metamorphic sequence, and it indicates the presence of an unusually great thickness of supracrustal rocks during the Grenvillian Orogeny. This was achieved by imbricate stacking of thrust slices, perhaps doubling the thickness of the crust in the Grenville Front Tectonic Zone, creating a huge gravity anomaly of which a remnant still persists today.


1988 ◽  
Vol 25 (11) ◽  
pp. 1895-1905 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. F. Gower ◽  
P. Erdmer

A regional metamorphic gradient from upper greenschist to granulite facies is identified south of the Grenville front in the Double Mer – Lake Melville area of eastern Labrador. Mineral assemblages in politic–granitic gneiss, amphibole-bearing quartzo-feldspathic gneiss, and coronitic metagabbro allow three major metamorphic domains to be established. These are collectively divisible into 11 subdomains. Geothermobarometry applied to the higher grade domains suggests that each is characterized by specific P–T conditions, which achieved 1000–1100 MPa and 700–800 °C in the deepest level rocks.The problem of reconciling geochronological data (which record a major orogenic event at 1650 Ma) with the occurrence of high-grade mineral assemblages in 1426 Ma metagabbro (which suggests a pervasive Grenvillian event) is discussed in terms of three models. The preferred model envisages crustal stabilization at 1650–1600 Ma to give high-grade mineral assemblages seen in the host rocks and with which mineral assemblages in coronitic metagabbro equilibrated after their emplacement at 1426 Ma. During Grenvillian orogenesis (1080–920 Ma) the present structural configuration was achieved by thrust stacking. This imparted a sporadic metamorphic and structural overprint and Grenvillian ages in selected accessory minerals.


Author(s):  
S. W. Morel

SummaryThe mineral assemblages developed in a variety of high-grade metamorphic rocks from southern Nyasaland are compared with standard metamorphic facies mineral assemblages proposed by some authors.


2000 ◽  
Vol 64 (4) ◽  
pp. 711-724 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. V. Owen ◽  
J. D. Greenough

AbstractCordierite+orthoamphibole (Crd+Oam)-bearing gneisses in the Cormacks Lake complex are regionally associated with metapelites containing prismatic sillimanite and K-feldspar, metabasites that locally contain metamorphic orthopyroxene, and other high-grade rocks in the Central Gneiss (Dashwoods) subzone, in the southwestern Newfoundland Appalachians. Retrograde features formed at the expense of the granulite-facies assemblages are ubiquitous. For example, in some migmatitic rocks, garnet is resorbed by Crd+Oam, and in metapelites, cordierite separates corroded garnet and sillimanite. Mineral thermobarometry suggests that, following granulite-facies metamorphism (T<785°C, P<7.5 kbar), retrogression occurred as the Cormacks Lake gneisses cooled through Mg-Fe diffusional blocking temperatures as they decompressed to a pressure of ∼3–4 kbar. Given the absence of Barrovian (or higher pressure) mineral assemblages in the metapelites, regional tectonic reconstructions involving the thrusting of a neighbouring terrane (Notre Dame subzone) over the Central Gneiss subzone appear to be supported only by the moderate pressure determined for the granulite facies event. Although scarcely discernible given re-equilibration effects and the imprecision of thermobarometers, subsequent decompression nonetheless had a marked impact on the mineralogy of the gneisses.


Author(s):  
Steven K. Spreitzer ◽  
Jesse B. Walters ◽  
Alicia Cruz‐Uribe ◽  
Michael L. Williams ◽  
Martin G. Yates ◽  
...  

1993 ◽  
Vol 113 (4) ◽  
pp. 557-571 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ian S. Buick ◽  
Simon L. Harley ◽  
Ian C. Cartwright

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