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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Science Inc
    Journal of metamorphic geology 23 (2005), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1525-1314
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Oxide–sulphide–Fe–Mg–silicate and titanite–ilmenite textures as well as their mineral compositions have been studied in felsic and intermediate orthogneisses across an amphibolite (north) to granulite facies (south) traverse of lower Archean crust, Tamil Nadu, south India. Titanite is limited to the amphibolite facies terrane where it rims ilmenite or occurs as independent grains. Pyrite is widespread throughout the traverse increasing in abundance with increasing metamorphic grade. Pyrrhotite is confined to the high-grade granulites. Ilmenite is widespread throughout the traverse increasing in abundance with increasing metamorphic grade and occurring primarily as hemo-ilmenite in the high-grade granulite facies rocks. Magnetite is widespread throughout the traverse and is commonly associated with ilmenite. It decreases in abundance with increasing metamorphic grade. In the granulite facies zone, reaction rims of magnetite + quartz occur along Fe–Mg silicate grain boundaries. Magnetite also commonly rims or is associated with pyrite. Both types of reaction rims represent an oxidation effect resulting from the partial subsolidus reduction of the hematite component in ilmenite to magnetite. This is confirmed by the presence of composite three oxide grains consisting of hematite, magnetite and ilmenite. Magnetite and magnetite–pyrite micro-veins along silicate grain boundaries formed over a wide range of post-peak metamorphic temperatures and pressures ranging from high-grade SO2 to low-grade H2S-dominated conditions. Oxygen fugacities estimated from the orthopyroxene–magnetite–quartz, orthopyroxene–hematite–quartz, and magnetite–hematite buffers average 2.5 log units above QFM. It is proposed that the trends in mineral assemblages, textures and composition are the result of an external, infiltrating concentrated brine containing an oxidizing component such as CaSO4 during high-grade metamorphism later acted upon by prograde and retrograde mineral reactions that do not involve an externally derived fluid phase.
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1525-1314
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: The Shevaroy Hills of northern Tamil Nadu, southern India, expose the highest-grade granulites of a prograde amphibolite facies to granulite facies deep-crustal section of Late Archaean age. These highly oxidized quartzofeldspathic garnet charnockites generally show minor high-TiO2 biotite and amphibole as the only hydrous minerals and are greatly depleted in the incompatible elements Rb and Th. Peak metamorphic temperatures (garnet–orthopyroxene) and pressures (garnet–orthopyroxene–plagioclase–quartz) are near 750 °C and 8 kbar, respectively. Pervasive veinlets of K-feldspar exist throughout dominant plagioclase in each sample and show clean contact with orthopyroxene. They are suggested to have been produced by a low H2O activity, migrating fluid phase under granulite facies conditions, most likely a concentrated chloride/carbonate brine with high alkali mobility accompanied by an immiscible CO2-rich fluid. Silicate, oxide and sulphide mineral assemblages record high oxygen fugacity. Pyroxenes in the felsic rocks have high Mg/(Mg+Fe) (0.5–0.7). The major oxide mineral is ilmenite with up to 60 mole per cent exsolved hematite. Utilizing three independent oxygen barometers (ferrosilite–magnetite–quartz, ferrosilite–hematite–quartz and magnetite–hematite) in conjunction with garnet–orthopyroxene exchange temperatures, samples with XIlmHm〉0.1 yield a consistent oxygen fugacity about two log units above fayalite stability. Less oxidized samples (XIlmHm〈0.1) show some scatter with indications of having equilibrated under more reducing conditions. Temperature-f (O2 ) arrays result in self consistent conditions ranging from 660 °C and 10−16 bar to 820 °C and 10−11.5 bar. These trends are confirmed by calculations based on the assemblage clinopyroxene–orthopyroxene–magnetite–ilmenite using the QUIlF program. In the most oxidized granulite samples (XIlmHm〉0.4) pyrite is the dominant sulphide and pyrrhotite is absent. Pyrite grains in these samples have marginal alteration to magnetite along the rims, signifying a high-temperature oxidation event. Moderately oxidized samples (0.1〈XIlmHm〈0.4) have abundant co-existing pyrrhotite, pyrite and magnetite. The most reduced granulite samples have pyrrhotite as the dominant sulphide with little or no pyrite and no coexisting magnetite. Chalcopyrite is a common accessory mineral of pyrite and pyrrhotite in all the samples. Textures in some samples suggest that it formed as an exsolution product from pyrrhotite. Extensive vein networks of magnetite and pyrite, associated principally with the pyroxene and amphibole, give evidence for a pervasive, highly oxidizing fluid phase. Thermodynamic analysis of the assemblage pyrrhotite, pyrite and magnetite yields consistent high oxidation states at 700–800 °C and 8 kbar. The oxygen fugacity in our most oxidized pyrrhotite-bearing sample is 10−12.65 bar at 770 °C. There are strong indications that the Shevaroy Hills granulites recrystallized in the presence of an alkali-rich, low H2O-activity fluid, probably a concentrated brine. It cannot be demonstrated at present whether the high oxidation states were set by initially oxidized protoliths or effected by the postulated fluids. The high correspondence of maximally Rb-depleted samples with the highest recorded oxidation states suggests that the Rb depletion event coincided with the oxidation event, probably during breakdown of biotite to orthopyroxene+K-feldspar. We speculate that these alterations were effected by exhalations from deep-seated alkali basalts, which provided both heat and high oxygen fugacity, low aH2O fluids. It will be of interest to determine whether greatly Rb-depleted granulites in other Precambrian terranes show similar highly-oxidizing signatures.
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Contributions to mineralogy and petrology 140 (2000), S. 212-232 
    ISSN: 1432-0967
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Reaction textures, fluid inclusions, and metasomatic zoning coupled with thermodynamic calculations have allowed us to estimate the conditions under which a biotite–hornblende gneiss from the Kurunegala district, Sri Lanka [hornblende (NMg=38–42) + biotite (NMg=42–44) + plagioclase + quartz + K-feldspar + ilmenite + magnetite] was transformed into patches of charnockite along shear zones and foliation planes. Primary fluid inclusion data suggest that two immiscible fluids, an alkalic supercritical brine and almost pure CO2, coexisted during the charnockitisation event and subsequent post-peak metamorphic evolution of the charnockite. These metasomatic fluids migrated through the amphibolite gneiss along shear zones and into the wallrock under peak metamorphic conditions of 700–750 °C, 5–6 kbar, and afl H2O=0.52–0.59. This resulted in the formation of charnockite patches containing the assemblage orthopyroxene (NMg=45–48) + K-feldspar (Or70–80) + quartz + plagioclase (An28) in addition to K-feldspar microveins along quartz and plagioclase grain boundaries. Remnants of the CO2-rich fluid were trapped as separate fluid inclusions. The charnockite patches show the following metasomatic zonation patterns: – a transition zone with the assemblage biotite (NMg= 49–51) + hornblende (NMg = 47–50) + plagioclase + quartz + K-feldspar + ilmenite + magnetite; – a KPQ (K-feldspar–plagioclase–quartz) zone with the assemblage K-feldspar + plagioclase + orthopyroxene (NMg=45–48) + quartz + ilmenite + magnetite; – a charnockite core with the assemblage K-feldspar + plagioclase + orthopyroxene (NMg = 39–41) + biotite (NMg=48–52) + quartz + ilmenite + magnetite. Systematic changes in the bulk chemistry and mineralogy across the four zones suggest that along with metasomatic transformation, this process may have been complicated by partial melting in the charnockite core. This melting would have been coeval with metasomatic processes on the periphery of the charnockite patch. There is also good evidence in the charnockitic core that a second mineral assemblage, consisting of orthopyroxene (NMg= 36–42) + biotite (NMg=50–51) + K-feldspar (Or70–80) + quartz + plagioclase (An28–26), could have crystallised from a partial melt during cooling from 720 to 660 °C at decreasing afl H2O from 0.67 to 0.5. Post-magmatic evolution of charnockite at T 〈 700 °C resulted in fluids being released during the crystallisation of the charnockitic core. These gave rise to the formation of late stage rim myrmekites along K-feldspar grain boundaries as well as late stage biotite, cummingtonite, and carbonates.
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  • 4
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Mineralogy and petrology 69 (2000), S. 11-33 
    ISSN: 1438-1168
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Description / Table of Contents: Zusammenfassung ¶Druck-Temperatur-Bestimmung in Orthopyroxen-Granat-führenden granulit-faziellen Gesteinen des Bamble-Sektors, Norwegen Auf der Grundlage der Paragenesen Almandin-Grossular-Ferrosilit-Anorthit-Quarz und Pyrop-Grossular-Enstatit-Anorthit-Quarz und des auf den experimentellen Daten von Lee und Ganguly (1988) basierenden Granat-Orthopyroxen-Thermometers (KD Fe2+-Mg) wurden Drücke und Temperaturen für den hochmetamorphen Anteil (Region D) des granulitfaziellen Terrains von Bamble geschätzt. Beide Barometer stützen sich auf denselben thermochemischen Datensatz (Berman, 1988, 1990) und dieselben Mischungsmodelle für Granat (Berman, 1990) und Orthopyroxen (Wood und Banno, 1973; Sack und Ghiorso, 1989), welche sowohl miteinander als auch mit dem Datensatz von Berman (1988, 1990) intern konsistent sind. Somit hängt jegliche Abweichung zwischen den beiden Barometern nur vom gewählten Mischungsmodell ab. Bei Annahme idealer Mischung von Fe2+ und Mg im Orthopyroxen ist die Übereinstimmung der mit den beiden Barometern berechneten Drücke schlecht, wobei PAlm-Fs (Pavg=9,2±1,0 kbar (1σ)) für die einzelnen Proben durchweg um 1,4 bis 2,4 kbar größer ist als PPyr-En (Pavg=7,5±1,2 kbar (1σ)). Bei Anwendung des nichtidealen Mischungsmodells für Orthopyroxen von Sack und Ghiorso (1989) und bei Integration ihres intern konsistenten Mischungsparameters für die Reihe Fe2+-Mg-Granat in das Mischungsmodell für Granat von Berman (1990) sind PAlm-Fs und PPyr-En in guter Übereinstimmung mit den Durchschnittsdrücken für PAlm-Fs und PPyr-En (7,1±0,9 kbar (1σ) bzw. 7,0±1,1 kbar (1σ)). Die für die einzelnen Proben erhalten Drücke variieren im allgemeinen nur um ±1 kbar, d.h. im Fehlerbereich beider Barometer. Für die Durchschnittstemperatur wurden 793±58 °C (1σ) ermittelt. Diese ist sowohl mit der durch Ti-Magnetit/Ilmenit-Thermometrie (Harlov, 1992) bestimmten mittleren Temperatur von 795 °C als auch mit den Stabilitätsfeldern von Sillimanit und Mg-reichem Cordierit in guter bereinstimmung.
    Notes: Summary ¶Pressures and temperatures are estimated for the high grade portion (Region D) of the Bamble granulite facies terrane using barometers based on the assemblages almandine-grossular-ferrosilite-anorthite-quartz and pyrope-grossular-enstatite-anorthite-quartz and a garnet-orthopyroxene Fe2+-Mg KD exchange thermometer based on the experimental data of Lee and Ganguly (1988). Both barometers utilize the same thermochemical data base (Berman, 1988, 1990) and the same garnet (Berman, 1990) and orthopyroxene mixing models (Wood and Banno, 1973; Sack and Ghiorso, 1989) which are internally consistent both with each other and the Berman (1988, 1990) data base. Thus any disagreement between the two barometers is dependent only on the mixing models chosen. When Fe2+-Mg mixing in orthopyroxene and garnet is taken to be ideal, pressures from the two barometers are found to be in poor agreement with PAlm-Fs (Pavg=9.2+/−1.0 kb (1σ)) consistently greater than PPyr-En (Pavg=7.5+/−1.2 kb (1σ)) by 1.4 to 2.4 kb per sample. If the non-ideal orthopyroxene mixing model of Sack and Ghiorso (1989) is used and their internally consistent value for mixing on the Fe2+-Mg join in garnet is incorporated in the Berman (1990) garnet mixing model, PAlm-Fs and PPyr-En are now in good agreement with the mean pressures for PAlm-Fs and PPyr-En at 7.1+/−0.9 kb (1σ) and 7.0+/−1.1 kb (1σ) respectively. Individual pressures per sample are generally within +/−1 kb of each other which is within the error range of either barometer. The mean temperature is found to be 793+/−58 °C (1σ) which is in good agreement with a mean temperature of 795 °C obtained from titaniferous magnetite-ilmenite thermometry (Harlov, 1992) as well as the stability fields of sillimanite and Mg-rich cordierite.
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  • 5
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    Unknown
    Mineralogical Society of America
    In: Elements
    Publication Date: 2015-06-02
    Description: Apatite is a superb mineral by which to investigate the nature of fluids that have passed through and altered a rock (metasomatic processes). Its ubiquity allows it to act as a reservoir for P, F, Cl, OH, CO 2 , and the rare earth elements. It is also a powerful thermochronometer and can be chemically altered by aqueous brines (NaCl–KCl–CaCl 2 –H 2 O), pure H 2 O, and aqueous fluids containing CO 2 , HCl, H 2 SO 4 , and/or F. Thus, apatite is the perfect tracker of metasomatic fluids, providing information on the timing and duration of metasomatism, the temperature of the fluids, and the composition of the fluids, all of which can feed back into the history of the host rock itself.
    Print ISSN: 1811-5209
    Electronic ISSN: 1811-5217
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2016-08-03
    Description: Fluorapatite-monazite-xenotime-allanite mineralogy, petrology, and textures are described for a suite of Kiruna-type apatite-iron oxide ore bodies from the Grängesberg Mining District in the Bergslagen ore province, south central Sweden. Fluorapatite occurs in three main lithological assemblages. These include: (1) the apatite-iron oxide ore bodies, (2) breccias associated with the ore bodies, which contain fragmented fluorapatite crystals, and (3) the variably altered host rocks, which contain sporadic, isolated fluorapatite grains or aggregates that are occasionally associated with magnetite in the silicate mineral matrix. Fluorapatite associated with the ore bodies is often zoned, with the outer rim enriched in Y+REE compared to the inner core. It contains sparse monazite inclusions. In the breccia, fluorapatite is rich in monazite-(Ce) ± xenotime-(Y) inclusions, especially in its cores, along with reworked, larger monazite grains along fluorapatite and other mineral grain rims. In the host rocks, a small subset of the fluorapatite grains contain monazite ± xenotime inclusions, while the large majority are devoid of inclusions. Overall, these monazites are relatively poor in Th and U. Allanite-(Ce) is found as inclusions and crack fillings in the fluorapatite from all three assemblage types as well as in the form of independent grains in the surrounding silicate mineral matrix in the host rocks. The apatite-iron oxide ore bodies are proposed to have an igneous, subvolcanic origin, potentially accompanied by explosive eruptions, which were responsible for the accompanying fluorapatite-rich breccias. Metasomatic alteration of the ore bodies probably began during the later stages of crystallization from residual, magmatically derived HCl- and H 2 SO 4 -bearing fluids present along grain boundaries. This was most likely followed by fluid exchange between the ore and its host rocks, both immediately after emplacement of the apatite-iron oxide body, and during subsequent phases of regional metamorphism and deformation.
    Print ISSN: 0003-004X
    Electronic ISSN: 1945-3027
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2016-04-02
    Description: Fluids buffered by a plagioclase matrix are experimentally reacted with olivine megacrysts at 800 ºC and 800 MPa (piston-cylinder press, CaF 2 assembly) to form secondary veins of orthopyroxene ± clinopyroxene in the olivine. Fluids utilized were varied in both amount (0–2 wt%) and salinity (0–8 M NaCl). Assuming equilibrium with the plagioclase matrix, they are presumed enriched in Si, Al, Ca, Na, and Cl and are thereby similar in composition to slab-derived fluids. The experiments provide controlled, multi-component analogs of Si-metasomatism in the mantle wedge above subduction zones. The veins are dominated by orthopyroxene with minor clinopyroxene and form complex interconnected networks along fractures in the olivine. The reaction is rate limited by interfacial process of dissolution and precipitation. Porosity is developed throughout the veins and along sub-grain boundaries in the olivine megacrysts. These veins strongly resemble the textures observed in secondary metasomatic orthopyroxene veins widely reported in upper mantle xenoliths within arc magmas. A review of literature data on natural samples and experiments suggests that orthopyroxene ± clinopyroxene veins primarily form between 750–950 ºC and over a large pressure range from 0.8–3.4 GPa. The abundance and composition of these metasomatic veins may vary as a function of pressure, variances in the fluid-rock partition coefficients, and/or by modification of the metasomatic fluid during the reaction.
    Print ISSN: 0003-004X
    Electronic ISSN: 1945-3027
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2012-12-21
    Description: The Varberg–Torpa charnockite–granite association (Varberg, SW Sweden) consists of the magmatic Varberg charnockite (1399 ± 6 Ma) and the Torpa granite (1380 ± 12 Ma). The Torpa granite is both continuous and, based on its whole-rock geochemistry, synmagmatic with the Varberg charnockite. The granite body also contains a number of charnockite inliers. P – T estimation using garnet–clinopyroxene and orthopyroxene–clinopyroxene Fe–Mg exchange thermometry and garnet–orthopyroxene–plagioclase–quartz barometry gives temperatures and pressures (750–850°C; 800–850 MPa) that most probably approximate the P – T conditions during emplacement of the charnockite compared with a lower crystallization temperature (650–700°C) for the granite. The earliest recognized fluid inclusions in both the granite and charnockite consist of H 2 O–CO 2 mixtures (H 2 O volume fraction 0·2–0·7). Fluid inclusions in the charnockite are characterized by high CO 2 densities (up to 1·0 g cm – 3 ; 40–90% bulk CO 2 ), of probable magmatic origin, and are best preserved in garnet, plagioclase, and fluorapatite (in order of decreasing CO 2 densities), and sometimes also in clinopyroxene. Fluid inclusions with the highest CO 2 densities (1·08–1·10 g cm – 3 ) are found in quartz ( T h –31 to –36°C) and may have originated under high P – T conditions during emplacement and cooling of the charnockite. Magmatic fluids in the granite correspond to aqueous–carbonic inclusions with an estimated bulk composition (mol %) of H 2 O 73%, CO 2 25%, NaCl 2%. The salinity of the solutes in the granite (typically 14–20 wt % NaCl-eq.) is generally higher than for the charnockite (0–8 wt % NaCl-eq.). Field, petrographic, mineralogical, geochemical, and fluid inclusion evidence indicates that, compared with the H 2 O-rich granite, the magma responsible for the charnockite had a preponderance of CO 2 over H 2 O, which lowered the H 2 O activity in the melt, stabilizing ortho- and clinopyroxene. This evidence also supports the idea that the granite and charnockite were derived from a common source magma (most probably a fluid-rich basalt at the base of the crust) as a result of fractional crystallization.
    Print ISSN: 0022-3530
    Electronic ISSN: 1460-2415
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2012-11-01
    Description: The REE enrichment process in fluorapatite and the REE redistribution among fluorapatite, monazite, and allanite were studied in a series of three sets of experimental runs at P-T conditions of 0.5 to 4 GPa and 650 to 900 °C. The first two sets of experimental runs utilized fluorapatite as a P-source, synthetic monazite or allanite as the REE sources, albite, quartz, and NaF-H 2 O or NaCl-H 2 O. The third set of runs was carried out with powdered Ca 3 (PO 4 ) 2 , allanite, quartz, (±Al 2 O 3 ), and a NaF-H 2 O solution. In all runs REE-bearing fluorapatite with up to 28 wt% REE 2 O 3 formed at the expense of monazite or allanite; either as narrow zones at the margin of synthetic fluorapatite in runs 1 and 2 or as discrete grains in run 3. The REE-enrichment of fluorapatite in melt-bearing runs is explained in terms of the high solubility of monazite in the presence of alkali-rich melts together with the high partitioning values for REEs among fluorapatite and alkali-rich melts. The formation of REE-enriched fluorapatite in melt-absent runs implies that the solubility of monazite and the REE-uptake of fluorapatite are similarly high in both alkali-rich melts and fluids and depends foremost on the activity of alkalis in fluids or melts. The results from this study show the importance of fluorapatite as a REE-carrier in rocks whose petrogenesis involved alkali-bearing fluids/melts. In metamorphic rocks, alkali-enriched fluids or melts will likely form under higher-grade conditions, explaining the preferential occurrence of REE-enriched fluorapatite in granulite and eclogite-facies rocks.
    Print ISSN: 0003-004X
    Electronic ISSN: 1945-3027
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2016-11-18
    Description: The Kiruna-type Pea Ridge iron oxide-apatite (IOA) deposit is hosted by a sequence of 1.47 Ga rhyolite tuffs of the St. Francois Mountains, southeast Missouri, USA. It consists of a series of altered zones composed mainly of amphibole, magnetite, hematite, and quartz, together with the presence of several rare earth element (Y + REE)-rich breccia pipes. In many cases, the fluorapatite within these zones is rich in inclusions of monazite, iron oxide, and quartz inclusions, plus minor xenotime. Monazite and minor xenotime are also found intergrown as inclusions in the fluorapatite, as well as in surrounding recrystallized magnetite and hematite in the magnetite ore. Monazite and xenotime typically occur as inclusions within both oxides. Monazite-(Ce) and xenotime-(Y) are both relatively poor (〈2 wt %) in ThO 2 and UO 2 . No significant compositional differences exist in the (Y + REE) chemistry between monazite and xenotime inclusions in fluorapatite compared to grains intergrown with magnetite and hematite, suggesting that these two REE-rich minerals are cogenetic. Monazite-xenotime geothermometry and geochronology of monazite inclusions in fluorapatite provide evidence that formation/remobilization of the (Y + REE) phosphates took place at ca. 50° to 400°C, approximately 5 to 10 m.y. after emplacement of the main iron oxide-phosphate orebody. Evidence from field relationships and fluid inclusion chemistry, together with the massive recrystallization and remobilization of fluorapatite, monazite, xenotime, and iron oxides at Pea Ridge, suggest a subvolcanic origin coupled with a strong metasomatic reworking of the IOA deposit.
    Print ISSN: 0361-0128
    Topics: Geosciences
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