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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Inc
    Journal of metamorphic geology 15 (1997), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1525-1314
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Pressure–temperature conditions for formation of the peak metamorphic mineral assemblages in phengite-bearing eclogites from Dabieshan have been assessed through a consideration of Fe2+–Mg2+ partitioning between garnet–omphacite and garnet–phengite pairs and of the reaction equilibrium celadonite+pyrope+grossular=muscovite+diopside, which incorporates an evaluation of the extent of the strongly pressure-dependent inverse Tschermak's molecule substitution in the phengites. For the latter equilibrium, the calibration and recommended activity–composition models indicated by Waters & Martin (1993) have been employed and importantly yield results consistent with petrographic evidence for the stability at peak conditions of coesite in certain samples and quartz in others.Confirmation that in some phengite-eclogite samples peak silicate mineral assemblages have equilibrated at confining pressures sufficient for the stability of coesite (and in some cases even diamond) rather negates previous suggestions that coesite may have been stabilized in only very localized, possibly just intracrystalline, domains. Inherent difficulties in the evaluation of peak metamorphic temperatures from Fe2+–Mg2+ partitioning between mineral phases, due to uncertainties over Fe3+/Fe2+ ratios in the minerals (especially omphacites), and to re-equilibration during extensive retrograde overprinting in some samples, are also assessed and discussed.Our results indicate the existence in south-central Dabieshan of phengite eclogites with markedly different equilibration conditions within two structurally distinct tectonometamorphic terranes. Thus our data do not support earlier contentions that south-central Dabieshan comprises a structurally coherent continental-crust terrane with a regional P–T  gradient signalling previous deepest-level subduction in the north. Instead, we recognize the Central Dabie ultra-high-pressure (coesite eclogite-bearing) terrane to be structurally overlain by a Southern Dabie high-pressure (quartz eclogite-bearing) terrane at a major southerly dipping shear zone along which late orogenic extensional collapse appears to have eliminated at least 20 km of crustal section.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Science Inc
    Journal of metamorphic geology 20 (2002), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1525-1314
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: High-pressure basic granulites are widely distributed as enclaves and sheet-like blocks in the Huaian TTG gneiss terrane in the Sanggan area of the Central Zone of the North China craton. Four stages of the metamorphic history have been recognised in mineral assemblages based on inclusion, exsolution and reaction textures integrated with garnet zonation patterns as revealed by compositional maps and compositional profiles. The P–T conditions for each metamorphic stage were obtained using thermodynamically and experimentally calibrated geothermobarometers. The low-Ca core of growth-zoned garnet, along with inclusion minerals, defines a prograde assemblage (M1) of garnet + clinopyroxene + plagioclase + quartz, yielding 700 °C and 10 kbar. The peak of metamorphism at about 750–870 °C and 11–14.5 kbar (M2) is defined by high-Ca domains in garnet interiors and inclusion minerals of clinopyroxene, plagioclase and quartz. Kelyphites or coronas of orthopyroxene + plagioclase ± magnetite around garnet porphyroblasts indicate garnet breakdown reactions (M3) at conditions around 770–830 °C and 8.5–10.5 kbar. Garnet exsolution lamellae in clinopyroxene and kelyphites of amphibole + plagioclase around garnet formed during the cooling process at about 500–650 °C and 5.5–8 kbar (M4). These results help define a sequential P–T path containing prograde, near-isothermal decompression (ITD) and near-isobaric cooling (IBC) stages.The clockwise hybrid ITD and IBC P–T paths of the HP granulites in the Sanggan area imply a model of thickening followed by extension in a collisional environment. Furthermore, the relatively high-pressures (6–14.5 kbar) of the four metamorphic stages and the geometry of the P–T paths suggest that the HP granulites, together with their host Huaian TTG gneisses, represent the lower plate in a crust thickened during collision. The corresponding upper-plate might be the tectonically overlying Khondalite series, which was subjected to medium- to low-pressure (MP/LP: 7–4 kbar) granulite facies metamorphism with a clockwise P–T path including an ITD segment. Both the HP and the MP/LP granulite facies events occurred contemporaneously at c. 1.90–1.85 Ga in a collisional environment created by the assembly process of the North China craton.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Inc
    Journal of metamorphic geology 15 (1997), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1525-1314
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: A large mass of dolomitic marble including many eclogite blocks occurs in orthogneisses of the Rongcheng area of the Su-Lu province, eastern China. The marble consists mainly of dolomite, calcite (formerly aragonite), graphite, forsterite, diopside, talc, tremolite and phlogopite. Aggregates of talc and calcite occur at the boundary between dolomite and diopside. Tremolite is a reaction product between talc and calcite. Eclogite blocks are rimmed by dark green amphibolite. The primary mineral assemblage in the core of eclogite is Na-bearing garnet (up to 0.2 wt% Na2O), omphacitic pyroxene, clintonite and rutile. Secondary minerals are pargasitic/edenitic amphibole, plagioclase, sodic diopside, chlorite, zoisite and titanite. The peak metamorphic conditions, based on stability of the dolomite+forsterite+aragonite (now calcite)+graphite assemblage, under conditions where tremolite is unstable, are estimated at T =610–660 °C and P=2.5–3.5 GPa (for XCO=0.001). A reaction between dolomite and diopside to form talc under tremolite-unstable conditions indicates a temperature decrease under ultra-high-pressure conditions (P 〉2.4 GPa, XCO〈0.0013). The formation of secondary tremolite is consistent with a nearly adiabatic pressure decrease post-dating the ultra-high-pressure metamorphism. The temperature decrease under ultra-high-pressure conditions preceding decompression may reflect the underplating of a cold slab, and the rapid decompression probably corresponds to the upwelling stage promoted by the delamination of a downwelling lithospheric root. The P–T  conditions of the amphibolitization stage are estimated at 〈0.9 GPa and 〈460 °C, and are similar to conditions recorded by the surrounding orthogneisses.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2021-05-19
    Description: Lake Naivasha is a fresh water lake, situated in the Eastern Rift Valley of Kenya (00 45 S' and 360 20 E). The lake has no surface outlet and is perceived to be under anthropogenic stress. The lake being situated at the basin of the rift valley bares the burden of acting as a receptacle of waste from the town and the surrounding horticultural industry. To investigate the level of pollution due to bioavailable metals, benthic fluxes of selected metals were determined at sites near suspected pollution input sources. In situ benthic flux experiments were conducted at two sites, near the municipal outflow and at the papyrus field near the horticultural farms. Sediment samples from the exposed riparian land were collected during the dry season after the Lake had resided and selected metals fluxes determined in the laboratory under simulated conditions. Al in situ benthic flux at station SS (near the sewage input) was quite high it averaged 7 mmoles m2 h-I and was influenced significantly and positively by pH r=0.89. While Al in situ benthic flux at station SH (located in the papyrus field near horticultural farms) was I mmoles m-2 h-I. Copper Manganese and zinc in situ benthic fluxes were predominantly positive at station SS, however this was not the case at station SH (at papyrus field). The papyrus field at station SH plays an important role in the buffering of the lake in reference to the selected metals investigated, due to the precipitation of redox sensitive metals. Among the metals, analyzed manganese was mobilized the most during the rainy season, after the immediate flooding of the exposed riparian land.
    Description: ? draft of paper published as: Kamau, J.N., Gachanja, A, Ngila, J.C., and Kazungu J., Anthropogenic and seasonal influence on the sediment-water fluxes for selected metals at Lake Naivasha, Kenya. Lakes & Reservoirs: Research and Management ; 2008,13:145-154.
    Description: Unpublished
    Keywords: Heavy metals ; Copper ; Manganese ; Zinc ; Aluminium ; Sediments
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Report , Not Known
    Format: 30pp.
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2024-04-22
    Description: Metamorphosed banded iron formation (BIF) in granulite-amphibolite facies, tonalitic orthogneisses from a series of locations in the Kolli Massif of southern India are described and analysed with regard to their lithologies, whole rock chemistry, mineral reaction textures, and mineral chemistry. On the basis of their mineral reaction textures along magnetite-quartz grain boundaries these BIFs are grouped according to their predominant silicate mineralogy: 1) amphibole; 2) orthopyroxene; 3) orthopyroxene–clinopyroxene; 4) orthopyroxene-clinopyroxene-garnet; 5) clinopyroxene-garnet-plagioclase; and 6) Fe-Mg silicates are absent. Two-pyroxene and garnet-pyroxene Fe-Mg exchange thermometry, coupled with thermodynamic pseudo-section modelling of whole rock data from one of the magnetite-quartz-orthopyroxene-clinopyroxene-bearing lithologies, indicates that the magnetite-quartz-orthopyroxene-clinopyroxene-garnet assemblages formed at ~900 to 1200 MPa and 750 to 900 °C under relatively low H2O activities. Magnetite-quartz-orthopyroxene reaction textures were experimentally replicated at 800 and 900 °C and 1000 MPa in a synthetic BIF using isolated magnetite grains in a quartz matrix to which was added a hypersaline Mg- and Al-bearing fluid (approximately 1% by mass), which permeated along all the grain boundaries. The fact that Fe-Mg silicate reaction textures did not form in one of the BIF samples, which had experienced the same P-T conditions as the other BIF samples, suggests that, unless a BIF initially incorporated Mg, Al, and Ca during formation with or was infiltrated from the surrounding rocks by Mg-, Al-, and Ca-bearing saline fluids, these silicate minerals could not and would not have formed from the inherent magnetite and quartz during granulite-facies and amphibolite-facies metamorphism.
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2007-11-19
    Description: The Jiaodong Peninsula or eastern Shandong Province, the most important gold producing in region China, is located in the southeastern margin of the North China Craton. The gold deposits in the Jiaodong Peninsula are divided into three gold belts, from west to east, the ZhaoyuanLaizhou, PenglaiQixia and MupingRushan belts. The deposits occur as gold-bearing quartz veins and disseminated- and stockwork-style ores adjacent to fault zones. Most of the gold deposits can be classified in four stages: stage I, quartz(minor) pyrite; stage II, pyritequartzgold; stage III, quartzbase metal sulphide minerals; stage IV, quartzcarbonate. ArAr ages, RbSr isochrons, and hydrothermal zircon sensitive high-resolution ion microprobe UPb ages obtained from these deposits suggest a gold mineralization time of 120{+/-}10 Ma. The SrNd isotopic compositions of pyrites and the associated rocks suggest that the ore-forming materials were probably derived from a mixed source. Fluid inclusion studies show that ore-forming fluids of gold deposits are consistent throughout the Jiaodong Peninsula, with similar mineralizing temperature and pressure conditions. Ore-forming fluids are characterized by H2OCO2NaCl{+/-}CH4. The optimal mineralizing temperature and pressure ranges are 170335 {degrees}C and 0.72.5 kbar. Oxygen and hydrogen isotope data show that ore fluids are of magmatic origin. Gold deposits in the Jiaodong Peninsula formed in the same mineralizinggeodynamic conditions, and are related to the Mesozoic tectonic transition in the eastern North China Craton. Gold metallogeny is only one expression of the Mesozoic tectonic transition.
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2007-11-19
    Description: Two models have been proposed to explain lithospheric thinning of North Chinese cratonic lithosphere: (1) thermal erosion or/and chemical metasomatism, causing the lower part of the lithospheric mantle to be transformed into asthenosphere, a mechanism that implies thinning of relatively buoyant lithosphere; (2) the delamination of lithospheric mantle, in whole or part, along with the lowermost crust, as an effect of their increased densities relative to the underlying asthenosphere. This paper explores possible mechanisms whereby buoyant cratonic lithosphere might be transformed into a denser equivalent susceptible to delamination by the convecting asthenosphere. The Yanshan mobile belt in Eastern China developed in response to a combination of subduction and collision. Its apparent counterclockwise' PTt metamorphic evolution suggests that underplated basaltic magma may have heated and, in turn, weakened the cool, rigid crust, allowing for compressional deformation and crustal thickening. Based on three independent lines of evidence (compressional deformation, the record of igneous activity, and lower crustal xenoliths) the thickness of continental crust is estimated to be about 5065 km. Along with petrological and geochemical studies, thermal modelling shows that large-scale input of asthenospheric basaltic magma leads to granitoid partial melts in the lower crust, and the dominance of high-pressure eclogitic products following orogenic thickening may be necessary for eventual delamination to occur.
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  • 8
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    In:  Geological Society Special Publication 280: 331-343.
    Publication Date: 2007-11-19
    Description: The North China Craton (NCC) is the only place currently recognized where an Archaean craton developed a continental root in the Archaean, and subsequently lost half of that root in younger tectonism. In this volume, various authors have advanced different models of root loss, and provided geological, geophysical and geochemical data that help constrain the geometry and timing of root loss. Understanding why and how roots are lost may help us understand how often this process may have occurred in the geological past, and how much lithospheric material has been recycled to the convecting mantle through this mechanism, potentially drastically changing our current understanding of crustal growth rates and processes. With current data, there are several equally plausible possibilities that require further data collection for testing. There are several possible tectonic triggers that may have caused half the root to be lost, acting either separately or together. These include collisional, extensional, plume-related, fluid-weakening, spontaneous, and more complex hybrid mechanisms. We also do not know why only the eastern half of the root was lost, and not the root from beneath the whole craton. One tantalizing idea is that the root grew independently, by tectonic underplating of subducted buoyant oceanic lithosphere, beneath the previously separate eastern and western halves of the craton by 2.5 Ga, with modification at 1.8 Ga. If so, perhaps only the eastern half of the root was lost in younger tectonism because there was some physical or geometric difference between the two halves. Alternatively, collisional or subduction-related tectonic processes acting only on the Eastern Block may have caused the disruption of the tectosphere there in the Mesozoic. The timing of and mechanism for loss of the root is not uniquely resolvable with current data, but a solution to the problem is in reach. Possible triggering mechanisms include, but are not limited to, collision of the South China (Yangtze) and North China Cratons in the Triassic, the IndiaAsia collision, closure of the Solonker and MongolOkhotsk oceans, Mesozoic subduction of the Pacific plate beneath Eastern China, impingement of mantle plumes, mantle hydration from long-term subduction, and several rifting events. In this concluding review, we link studies of crustal tectonics with investigations aimed at determining the nature and timing of the formation and loss of the root, to better understand mechanisms of continental root formation, evolution and recyclingremoval.
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  • 9
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    In:  Geological Society Special Publication 280: 293-302.
    Publication Date: 2007-11-19
    Description: We have collected seismic data, performed high-resolution seismic tomography in the North China Craton and analysed the relationships between crustal seismic velocity distributions and regional tectonics and metallogenesis. In the upper and middle crust velocity anomalies are distributed along eastwest- and NNESSW-trending structures. Most belts of Cenozoic mineral deposits including gold in the North China Craton coincide with high-velocity anomalies, and the North China basin coincides with a low-velocity zone. Compared with the upper crust, the low-velocity anomalies in the lower crust are diffuse and extensive, which suggests that high-temperature material has upwelled from the mantle. High-temperature material in the lower crust provided buoyant, hot, mineralizing fluids that uplifted and formed the Cretaceous mineral deposits in the upper crust.
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  • 10
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    In:  Geological Society Special Publication 280: 1-34.
    Publication Date: 2007-11-19
    Description: The North China Craton contains one of the longest, most complex records of magmatism, sedimentation, and deformation on Earth, with deformation spanning the interval from the Early Archaean (3.8 Ga) to the present. The Early to Middle Archaean record preserves remnants of generally gneissic meta-igneous and metasedimentary rock terranes bounded by anastomosing shear zones. The Late Archaean record is marked by a collision between a passive margin sequence developed on an amalgamated Eastern Block, and an oceanic arcophiolitic assemblage preserved in the 1600 km long Central Orogenic Belt, an ArchaeanPalaeoproterozoic orogen that preserves remnants of oceanic basin(s) that closed between the Eastern and Western Blocks. Foreland basin sediments related to this collision are overlain by 2.4 Ga flood basalts and shallow marinecontinental sediments, all strongly deformed and metamorphosed in a 1.85 Ga Himalayan-style collision along the northern margin of the craton. The North China Craton saw relative quiescence until 700 Ma when subduction under the present southern margin formed the QinglingDabie ShanSulu orogen (700250 Ma), the northern margin experienced orogenesis during closure of the Solonker Ocean (500250 Ma), and subduction beneath the palaeo-Pacific margin affected easternmost China (200100 Ma). Vast amounts of subduction beneath the North China Craton may have hydrated and weakened the subcontinental lithospheric mantle, which detached in the Mesozoic, probably triggered by collisions in the Dabie Shan and along the Solonker suture. This loss of the lithospheric mantle brought young asthenosphere close to the surface beneath the eastern half of the craton, which has been experiencing deformation and magmatism since, and is no longer a craton in the original sense of the word. Six of the 10 deadliest earthquakes in recorded history have occurred in the Eastern Block of the North China Craton, highlighting the importance of understanding decratonization and the orogencratonorogen cycle in Earth history.
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