63 research outputs found

    Neoproterozoic Eclogite-to Granulite-Facies Transition in the Ubendian Belt, Tanzania, and the Timescale of Continental Collision

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    In collision-type orogens, where high-pressure and ultrahigh-pressure (HP-UHP) metamorphism usually occurs, deeply subducted continental slabs with eclogitized mafic rocks often undergo recrystallization/overprinting with various geothermal gradients after the peak conditions at lower-to-middle-crustal levels. During the crustal stabilization, the transition from eclogite-to granulite-facies is common. We conducted metamorphic petrology and zircon geochronology on (1) bimineralic and (2) partially granulitized eclogites from the Neoproterozoic Ufipa Terrane (Southwestern Tanzania). Microtextural relationships and mineral chemistry define three metamorphic stages: eclogite metamorphism (M1), HP granulite-facies overprinting (M2), and amphibolite-facies retrogression (M3). The bimineralic eclogite has a basaltic composition and lacks M2 minerals. In contrast, the kyanite eclogite is characterized by a gabbro-dioritic whole-rock composition and contains inherited magmatic zircon. Although the matrix is highly granulitized, garnet and kyanite contain eclogite-facies mineral inclusions. Phase equilibria modeling revealed P-T conditions of 2.1-2.6 GPa and 650-860°C for the M1 stage and 1.4-1.6 GPa and 750-940°C for the M2 stage. Zircon with eclogite-facies mineral inclusions from the bimineralic eclogite lacks Eu anomaly in the REE patterns and yielded the M1 eclogite metamorphic age of 588 ± 3 Ma. Zircon overgrowths surrounding the inherited Paleoproterozoic magmatic cores in kyanite eclogite yielded 562 ± 3 Ma. A weak negative Eu anomaly in the REE patterns and the absence of eclogitic mineral inclusions suggest the zircon growths at the M2 HP granulite-facies metamorphic stage. These new data indicate an eclogite-to granulite-facies transition time of 26 ± 4 million years (Myr), suggesting a rate of HP rock exhumation toward a lower crustal level of 0.7-1.5 mm/year. Furthermore, the density evolution model indicates that buoyant host orthogneiss with low-density gabbro-dioritic eclogite plays an important role in carrying high-density basaltic eclogite. Our 2D thermomechanical modeling also suggests that a slab break-off with a lower angle subduction of <20° triggers the exhumation of the HP slab sliver with 20-30 Myr eclogite-to granulite transition time of large HP-UHP terranes in major collision zones

    Arc magmas sourced from melange diapirs in subduction zones

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    Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2012. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Nature Publishing Group for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Nature Geoscience 5 (2012): 862-867, doi:10.1038/ngeo1634.At subduction zones, crustal material is recycled back into the mantle. A certain proportion, however, is returned to the overriding plate via magmatism. The magmas show a characteristic range of compositions that have been explained by three-component mixing in their source regions: hydrous fluids derived from subducted altered oceanic crust and components derived from the thin sedimentary veneer are added to the depleted peridotite in the mantle beneath the volcanoes. However, currently no uniformly accepted model exists for the physical mechanism that mixes the three components and transports them from the slab to the magma source. Here we present an integrated physico-chemical model of subduction zones that emerges from a review of the combined findings of petrology, modelling, geophysics, and geochemistry: Intensely mixed metamorphic rock formations, so-called mélanges, form along the slab-mantle interface and comprise the characteristic trace-element patterns of subduction-zone magmatic rocks. We consider mélange formation the physical mixing process that is responsible for the geochemical three-component pattern of the magmas. Blobs of low-density mélange material, so-called diapirs, rise buoyantly from the surface of the subducting slab and provide a means of transport for well-mixed materials into the mantle beneath the volcanoes, where they produce melt. Our model provides a consistent framework for the interpretation of geophysical, petrological and geochemical data of subduction zones.H.M. was funded by the J. LamarWorzel Assistant Scientist Fund and the Penzance Endowed Fund in Support of Assistant Scientists. Funding from NSF grant #1119403 (G. Harlow) is acknowledged.2013-05-1

    Early Paleozoic jadeitites in Japan: An overview

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    X-ray single-crystal and optical spectroscopic study of chromian pumpellyite from Sarany, Urals, Russia

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