majoritic garnet
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2020 ◽  
Vol 105 (7) ◽  
pp. 984-991
Author(s):  
Iuliia Koemets ◽  
Niccolò Satta ◽  
Hauke Marquardt ◽  
Ekaterina S. Kiseeva ◽  
Alexander Kurnosov ◽  
...  

Abstract Majoritic garnet has been predicted to be a major component of peridotite and eclogite in Earth's deep upper mantle (>250 km) and transition zone. The investigation of mineral inclusions in diamond confirms this prediction, but there is reported evidence of other majorite-bearing lithologies, intermediate between peridotitic and eclogitic, present in the mantle transition zone. If these lithologies are derived from olivine-free pyroxenites, then at mantle transition zone pressures majorite may form monomineralic or almost monomineralic garnetite layers. Since majoritic garnet is presumably the seismically fastest major phase in the lowermost upper mantle, the existence of such majorite layers might produce a detectable seismic signature. However, a test of this hypothesis is hampered by the absence of sound wave velocity measurements of majoritic garnets with relevant chemical compositions, since previous measurements have been mostly limited to synthetic majorite samples with relatively simple compositions. In an attempt to evaluate the seismic signature of a pyroxenitic garnet layer, we measured the sound wave velocities of three natural majoritic garnet inclusions in diamond by Brillouin spectroscopy at ambient conditions. The chosen natural garnets derive from depths between 220 and 470 km and are plausible candidates to have formed at the interface between peridotite and carbonated eclogite. They contain elevated amounts (12–30%) of ferric iron, possibly produced during redox reactions that form diamond from carbonate. Based on our data, we model the velocity and seismic impedance contrasts between a possible pyroxenitic garnet layer and the surrounding peridotitic mantle. For a mineral assemblage that would be stable at a depth of 350 km, the median formation depth of our samples, we found velocities in pyroxenite at ambient conditions to be higher by 1.9(6)% for shear waves and 3.3(5)% for compressional waves compared to peridotite (numbers in parentheses refer to uncertainties in the last given digit), and by 1.3(13)% for shear waves and 2.4(10)% for compressional waves compared to eclogite. As a result of increased density in the pyroxenitic layer, expected seismic impedance contrasts across the interface between the monomineralic majorite layer and the adjacent rocks are about 5–6% at the majorite-eclogite-interface and 10–12% at the majoriteperidotite-boundary. Given a large enough thickness of the garnetite layer, velocity and impedance differences of this magnitude could become seismologically detectable.



2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (11) ◽  
pp. eaay5178
Author(s):  
D. S. Keller ◽  
J. J. Ague

Diamond and coesite are classic indicators of ultrahigh-pressure (UHP; ≥100-kilometer depth) metamorphism, but they readily recrystallize during exhumation. Crystallographically oriented pyroxene and amphibole exsolution lamellae in garnet document decomposed supersilicic UHP majoritic garnet originally stable at diamond-grade conditions, but majoritic precursors have only been quantitatively demonstrated in mafic and ultramafic rocks. Moreover, controversy persists regarding which silicates majoritic garnet breakdown produces. We present a method for reconstructing precursor majoritic garnet chemistry in metasedimentary Appalachian gneisses containing garnets preserving concentric zones of crystallographically oriented lamellae including quartz, amphibole, and sodium phlogopite. We link this to novel quartz-garnet crystallographic orientation data. The results reveal majoritic precursors stable at ≥175-kilometer depth and that quartz and mica may exsolve from garnet. Large UHP terranes in the European Caledonides formed during collision of the paleocontinents Baltica and Laurentia; we demonstrate UHP metamorphism from the microcontinent-continent convergence characterizing the contiguous and coeval Appalachian orogen.



2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Walter ◽  
◽  
Andrew R. Thomson ◽  
Anirudh Prabhu ◽  
Simon C. Kohn


2018 ◽  
Vol 225 ◽  
pp. 1-16 ◽  
Author(s):  
Renbiao Tao ◽  
Yingwei Fei ◽  
Emma S. Bullock ◽  
Cheng Xu ◽  
Lifei Zhang




2015 ◽  
Vol 100 (5-6) ◽  
pp. 1084-1092 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sylvia-Monique Thomas ◽  
Kathryn Wilson ◽  
Monika Koch-Müller ◽  
Erik H. Hauri ◽  
Catherine McCammon ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  


Lithos ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 189 ◽  
pp. 159-166 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrey V. Bobrov ◽  
Yuriy A. Litvin ◽  
Anastasia V. Kuzyura ◽  
Anna M. Dymshits ◽  
Teresa Jeffries ◽  
...  


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