anhydrous mineral
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Author(s):  
Yun-Chuan Zeng ◽  
Ji-Feng Xu ◽  
Ming-Jian Li ◽  
Jian-Lin Chen ◽  
Bao-Di Wang ◽  
...  

Abstract Orthopyroxene-bearing granitic rock (e.g., charnockite) is relatively rare but provides an excellent opportunity to probe the thermal and tectonic evolution of deep orogenic crust because of its distinct mineral assemblage. Here we present petrological, mineralogical, elemental, and Sr–Nd–Hf–O isotopic data for late Eocene (ca. 36 Ma; zircon U–Pb ages) volcanic rocks exposed in the Ejiu region in the southern Qiangtang Terrane to investigate how the central Tibetan crust evolved to its modern thickness and thermal state. The Ejiu volcanic rocks (EVRs) are trachydacites with anhydrous mineral assemblages (i.e., two pyroxenes, sanidine, plagioclase, and ilmenite, without amphibole and biotite) and geochemical characteristics (e.g., high P2O5 and TiO2) that resemble those of charnockite-type magmatic rocks. Mineral and whole-rock thermometry and hygrometry suggests that the parent magma crystallized under hot (~1000 °C) and dry (H2O < 2 wt.%) condition. Besides, the EVRs display adakitic affinities according to their high SiO2 and Al2O3 contents, high Sr/Y, La/Yb, and Gd/Yb ratios, and low Y and Yb contents, without marked negative Eu anomalies. The calculated melts in equilibrium with pyroxenes also display adakitic compositions (e.g., high Sr/Y and La/Yb ratios), indicating that the adakitic compositions of the EVRs did not result from late-stage magmatic evolution. In addition, the melts of the EVRs were saturated in TiO2, as inferred from the high TiO2 contents of these rocks and the presence of ilmenite. An integrated analysis of the geochemical, petrological, and mineralogical data suggests that the EVRs were neither evolutional products nor partial melts of hydrous mafic materials at normal crustal pressures, but were formed by fusion of an eclogitized mafic protolith with residue containing garnet and rutile but lacking amphibole and plagioclase. The whole-rock Sr–Nd and zircon Hf isotope compositions of the EVRs [(87Sr/86Sr)i = 0.7053 to 0.7066; εNd(t) = −1.40 to −0.99; zircon εHf(t) = +1.08 to +5.31] indicate that the parental protolith was relatively juvenile in nature, but also contained some supracrustal materials given the high zircon δ18O values [zircon δ18O = +8.21‰ to +11.00‰]. The above arguments lead us to propose that of partial melting of a previously dehydrated—but chemically undepleted—mafic lower continental crust at high pressure (>1.5 GPa) and high temperature (>1000 °C) generated the EVRs. Based on a synthesis of independent geological and geophysical data, we further suggest that the southern Qiangtang Terrane crust of the central Tibetan Plateau was thick, dry, and elevated during the Late Cretaceous to early Eocene time, and that it became abnormally hot owing to the ascending asthenosphere after lithospheric foundering during the middle Eocene.


Author(s):  
Xiao-Fei Xu ◽  
Long-Long Gou ◽  
Xiao-Ping Long ◽  
Yu-Hang Zhao ◽  
Feng Zhou

Abstract Phase equilibria and trace-element modeling using two previously reported basaltic bulk-rock compositions (samples D11 and 104-16), were carried out in this study, in order to better understand mechanism of low-pressure (LP) partial melting of mafic rocks and associated melt compositions. The T–MH2O pseudosections for both samples at three pressures (i.e. 0.5, 1.0 and 2.0 kbar) display that the H2O-stability field gradually increased with decreasing pressure within the T–MH2O range of 600–1100 °C and 0–12 mol.%. The H2O contents of 10, 5.0, and 0.5 mol.% were selected on the basis of the T–MH2O pseudosections to calculate P–T pseudosections over a P–T window of 0.1–3 kbar and 600–1100 °C, so that the reactions of both the H2O-fluxed and -absent meltings at LP conditions can be investigated. The solidus displays a negative or near-vertical P–T slope, and occurs between 710 and 900 °C at pressure between 0.1 and 3.0 kbar. LP melting of metabasites is attributed to the reactions of the hydrous mineral (hornblende and/or biotite) melting and anhydrous mineral (plagioclase, orthopyroxene, and augite) melting. The hydrous mineral melting is gradually replaced by anhydrous mineral melting as pressure decreasing, as the stability of hornblende decreases with falling pressure. With increasing temperature at a given pressure, the modeled melt compositions are expressed as progressions of the granite-granodiorite-gabbroic diorite fields for sample D11and granite-quartz monzonite-monzonite-gabbroic diorite fields for sample 104-16 on the total alkali–silica diagram. The modeled melts produced through the H2O-fluxed melting display higher Al2O3, CaO, MgO, and lower SiO2 and K2O than those formed by H2O-absent melting at the same P–T conditions. Furthermore, the modeled melts formed by H2O-absent melting, become richer in Al2O3, CaO, MgO, FeO, Na2O, but poorer in SiO2 and K2O as increasing water content. The results of trace-element modeling suggests that the nearly flat REE patterns of modeled bulk-rock composition are inherited by all the modeled melts, and the negative Eu anomalies and Sr depletion of the modeled melts gradually decrease as melting degree increases. Combined with the geochemical characteristics of natural oceanic plagiogranites, which have low K2O contents and flat or slightly LREE-depleted REE patterns, our results imply that a bulk-rock composition with low K2O (<0.17 wt.%) and slightly LREEs depletion is the most likely protolith composition (e.g. basalt D11) for plagiogranites, and the compositions of modeled melts formed by LP H2O-absent partial melting of the basalt D11 at relatively high temperatures (1000–1025 °C) are coincident with those of 1256D tonalites.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Naoki Hirakawa ◽  
Yoko Kebukawa ◽  
Yoshihiro Furukawa ◽  
Masashi Kondo ◽  
Kensei Kobayashi

Abstract Early evolution of Solar System small bodies proceeded through interactions of mineral and water. Melting of water ice accreted with mineral particles to the parent body results in the formation of secondary minerals, the so-called aqueous alteration. Formation of phyllosilicates from anhydrous silicates is a typical alteration effect recorded in primitive meteorites. In addition to mineral and water, organic matter could have been also a significant component in meteorite parent bodies. However, the role of organic matter in the alteration of silicates is not well understood. Here we show the in-situ formation of hydrated silicates through a mineral–organic interaction without the initial presence of water. Proto-phyllosilicates were experimentally confirmed on the anhydrous mineral (olivine) surface after being heated with molecular cloud organic matter analog at 300 °C for 10 days in this study. It could be due to H 2 O generated through pyrolysis of the organic compounds with hydroxy groups. Our results indicated that formation of phyllosilicates on the olivine surface in contact with organic matter can occur in meteorite parent bodies which formed inside the H 2 O snow line but accreted with organic matter, initially without water. Water formed through decomposition of organic matter could be one candidate for hydrous silicate formation in ordinary chondrites from S-type asteroids inside the H 2 O snow line. Although the origin of water in ordinary chondrites is under debate, water generation from organic matter may also explain the D-rich water in ordinary chondrites because primordial organic matter is known to be D-rich.


2020 ◽  
Vol 66 (3) ◽  
pp. 173-183 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abimbola Chris Ogunyele ◽  
Oladotun Afolabi Oluwajana ◽  
Iyanuoluwa Queen Ehinola ◽  
Blessing Ene Ameh ◽  
Toheeb Akande Salaudeen

AbstractField, mineralogical and petrochemical studies of the Precambrian Basement Complex rocks around Akungba-Akoko were carried out with the aim of determining their petrology, petrochemical characteristics and petrogenesis. The petrology of Akungba-Akoko area comprises migmatite, granite gneiss and biotite gneiss intruded by biotite granite, charnockite and minor felsic and basic rocks. Seventeen representative samples of the granite gneiss, biotite gneiss, biotite granite and charnockite were collected during field geological mapping of the area for petrographic and geochemical analyses. Modal mineralogy revealed that the granite gneiss, biotite gneiss and granite have assemblages of quartz + feldspar + mica + hornblende + opaques and are granitic in composition. The charnockite is characterized by anhydrous mineral assemblage of quartz + feldspar + biotite + hornblende + pyroxene + opaques. Petrochemical data of the rocks revealed that they are moderately to highly enrich in SiO2, sub-alkaline, peraluminous, magnesian to ferroan and calcic and have K/Rb < 283. The geochemical characteristics and discrimination of the rocks indicated that the granite gneiss and biotite gneiss are orthogneisses formed by metamorphism of igneous protoliths of granitic composition and the biotite granite and charnockite are of igneous/magmatic origin. The biotite granite, charnockite and the igneous protoliths of the biotite gneiss are I-type granitoids formed from crustal igneous-sourced melt(s), while the igneous protoliths of the granite gneiss is a S-type granitoid probably derived from shallow crustal or sedimentary-sourced melt(s). Tectonic discrimination of the rocks indicated that they were formed during a phase of magmatic activity related to collision and subduction.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ben Ellis ◽  
Julia Neukampf ◽  
Oscar Laurent ◽  
Lena Steinmann ◽  
Stefan Weyer ◽  
...  

&lt;p&gt;Lithium (Li) is one of the fastest diffusing elements in most geological media and so has the potential to provide information about processes occurring on timescales too short to be captured by other proxies. &amp;#160;These processes may be of fundamental importance both in terms of understanding what happens during explosive volcanism and for defining where lithium, an element of increasing economic importance, ends up. &amp;#160;To investigate the fate of Li, we studied in detail the 1.30 Ma Mesa Falls Tuff (MFT) from the Yellowstone volcanic field (USA). &amp;#160;MFT is a typical rhyolite of the Yellowstone system containing an anhydrous mineral assemblage of sanidine, quartz, plagioclase, clinopyroxene, fayalite, orthopyroxene and accessory phases. &amp;#160;We focussed on plagioclase crystals that have a strong gradient in Li contents from cores at ~25 ppm to rims with ~ 5 ppm. &amp;#160;This notable decrease in Li abundance is decoupled from changes in other major and trace elements. &amp;#160;&amp;#948;&lt;sup&gt;7&lt;/sup&gt;Li values measured by fs-LA-MC-ICPMS in the plagioclase crystals reveal that cores are about 5 &amp;#8240; lower than rims. &amp;#160;Taken together, the Li abundance and isotopic data make a compelling case for the plagioclase attempting to react to a sudden change in Li abundance in the surrounding melt. &amp;#160;Diffusion modelling of these gradients indicates that this sudden Li drop in the melt occurred over timescales of tens of minutes prior to quenching. &amp;#160;The volatile behaviour of Li implied by this result finds support in Li concentrations measured in quartz-hosted melt inclusions that reach 400 ppm while groundmass glass Li contents are much lower (36-55 ppm). &amp;#160;While equilibrium fractionation of stable isotopes is minimised at high temperatures, the large-magnitude, rapid loss of lithium from the melt phase may allow kinetic isotopic fractionation to occur, as recorded in the plagioclase crystals. &amp;#160;With glass / groundmass both volumetrically dominant and the main repository of Li in virtually all volcanic deposits, further consideration of how syn-eruptive processes may affect the bulk Li identity of a sample is warranted. &amp;#160; &amp;#160; &amp;#160; &amp;#160;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&amp;#160;&lt;/p&gt;


2007 ◽  
Vol 71 (06) ◽  
pp. 671-682 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. D. Gatta ◽  
N. Rotiroti ◽  
F. Bellatreccia ◽  
G. Della Ventura

Abstract A multi-methodological study, based on electron microprobe analysis (in wavelength dispersive mode), single-crystal X-ray diffraction (XRD), transmission electron microscopy and single-crystal Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy was performed in order to describe the crystal chemistry of four leucite samples from different localities of the Roman Comagmatic Province (central Italy). All the crystals examined were found to be tetragonal (space group I41/a with a = 13.076–13.103 Å and c = 13.744–13.784 Å) and characterized by a complex twinning (merohedric twins: on the tetragonal planes (110) and (1̄10) with the two individuals having parallel crystallographic axes with a and b interchanged; pseudo-merohedric twins: on the tetragonal planes (101), (011), (1̄01), (01̄ 1), with the two individuals having parallel a (or b) axes and the remaining two axes not parallel). The chemical analyses show that all the samples contain minor Na and Fe. Infrared spectroscopy shows that all samples contain structurally bound water molecules, up to unexpectedly large amounts (~0.4 wt.%) for a nominally anhydrous mineral, suggesting that ‘analcime-like’ substitution (K to Na + H2O) occurs in the leucite samples investigated here. The detection limits of the ‘analcime-like’ substitution by singlecrystal XRD are also discussed.


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