Publication | Closed Access
Phase equilibria and mixed parageneses of metabasites in lowgrade metamorphism
261
Citations
25
References
1985
Year
EngineeringPhase EquilibriaChemistryMetamorphic ProcessMetamorphic PetrologyHigh Temperature GeochemistryFacies BoundariesSystem Na 2Materials ScienceContinuous ReactionsIgneous PetrogenesisGeologyTectonicsBiologyNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyMetamorphismGeochemistryAuthigenic Mineral FormationPetrologyMineral Geochemistry
Abstract The system Na 2 O-CaO-MgO Al 2 O 3 -SiO 2 -H 2 O is proposed to model phase equilibria and mineral parageneses for low-temperature metamorphism of basaltic rocks. Univariant reactions marking the transitions between various sub-greenschist facies are identified and some have been experimentally determined. The introduction of Fe 2 O 3 into the model system at fixed FeO/MgO ratio creates continuous reactions for facies boundaries and discontinuous reactions for invariant points of the model system. Both qualitative and quantitative effects on P-T displacement and phase compositions are discussed. The X Fe 3+ isopleths for epidote were plotted to exemplify the transition from the zeolite through prehnite-pumpellyite to prehnite-actinolite facies. T - X Fe 3+ relations were established for continuous and discontinuous reactions relating such facies transitions. Because of the common occurrence of two or three Ca-Al hydrosilicates in low-grade metabasites, an isobaric Al-Ca-Fe 3+ projection from chlorite may be used to illustrate mineral assemblages and compositions of the coexisting Ca-Al silicates in the presence of quartz, albite, and chlorite. Reported occurrences in several classic burial metamorphic terrains and ocean-floor metabasites in ophiolites are described. Only the composition of a mineral from a buffered assemblage can constrain the intensive properties for metamorphism; previously reported compositional trends for pumpellyite and epidote with increasing metamorphic grade are oversimplified.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1