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  • 1
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Shau, Yen-Hong; Peacor, Donald R (1992): Phyllosilieates in hydrothermally altered basalts from DSDP Hole 504B, Leg 83- a TEM and AEM study. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology, 112, 119-133, https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00310959
    Publication Date: 2023-06-27
    Description: Phyllosilicates occurring as replacements of olivine, clinopyroxene and interstitial materials and as veins or fracture-fillings in hydrothermally altered basalts from DSDP Hole 504B, Leg 83 have been studied using transmission and analytical electron microscopy. The parageneses of phyllosilicates generally change systematically with depth and with the degree of alteration, which in turn is related to permeability of basalts. Saponite and some mixed-layer chlorite/smectite are the dominant phyllosilicates at the top of the transition zone. Chlorite, corrensite, and mixed-layer chlorite/corrensite occur mainly in the lower transition zone and upper levels of the sheeted dike zone. Chlorite, talc, and mixed-layer talc/chlorite are the major phyllosilicates in the sheeted dike zone, although replacement of talc or olivine by saponite is observed. The phyllosilicates consist of parallel or subparallel discrete packets of coherent layers with packet thicknesses generally ranging from 〈 100 A to a few hundred A. The packets of saponite layers are much smaller or less well defined than those of chlorite, corrensite and talc, indicating poorer crystallinity of saponite. By contrast, chlorite and talc from the lower transition zone and the sheeted dike zone occur in packets up to thousands of A thick. The Si/(Si + A1) ratio of these trioctahedral phyllosilicates increases and Fe/(Fe + Mg) decreases in the order chlorite, corrensite, saponite, and talc. These relations reflect optimal solid solution consistent with minimum misfit of articulated octahedral and tetrahedral sheets. Variations in composition of hydrothermal fluids and precursor minerals, especially in Si/(Si+A1) and Fe/(Fe+Mg) ratios, are thus important factors in controlling the parageneses of phyllosilicates. The phyllosilicates are generally well crystallized discrete phases, rather than mixed-layered phases, where they have been affected by relatively high fluid/rock ratios as in high-permeability basalts, in veins, or areas adjacent to veins. Intense alteration in basalts with high permeability (indicating high fluid/rock ratios) is characterized by pervasive albitization and zeolitization. Minimal alteration in the basalts without significant albitization and zeolitization is characterized by the occurrence of saponite ± mixed-layer chlorite/smectite in the low-temperature alteration zone, and mixed-layer chlorite/corrensite or mixed-layer talc/chlorite in the high-temperature alteration zone. Textural non-equilibrium for phyllosilicates is represented by mixed layering and poorly defined packets of partially incoherent layers. The approach to textural equilibrium was controlled largely by the availability of fluid or permeability.
    Keywords: 83-504B; Deep Sea Drilling Project; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DSDP; Glomar Challenger; Leg83
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2023-06-27
    Keywords: 83-504B; Aluminium (IV); Aluminium (VI); Aluminium oxide; Analytical electron microscopy (AEM); Calcium; Calcium oxide; Deep Sea Drilling Project; DEPTH, sediment/rock; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DSDP; DSDP/ODP/IODP sample designation; Glomar Challenger; Iron 2+; Iron number; Iron oxide, FeO; Leg83; Magnesium (VI); Magnesium oxide; Manganese; Manganese oxide; Sample code/label; Sample comment; Silicon; Silicon dioxide; Silicon number
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 136 data points
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2023-06-27
    Keywords: 83-504B; Aluminium (IV); Aluminium (VI); Aluminium oxide; Calcium; Calcium oxide; Deep Sea Drilling Project; DEPTH, sediment/rock; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DSDP; DSDP/ODP/IODP sample designation; Glomar Challenger; Iron 2+; Iron number; Iron oxide, FeO; Leg83; Magnesium; Magnesium (VI); Magnesium oxide; Manganese; Manganese oxide; Number; Potassium; Potassium oxide; Sample code/label; Sample comment; Sample method; Silicon; Silicon dioxide; Silicon number; Sodium; Sodium oxide
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 191 data points
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2023-06-27
    Keywords: 83-504B; Aluminium (IV); Aluminium (VI); Aluminium oxide; Analytical electron microscopy (AEM); Calcium; Calcium oxide; Comment; Deep Sea Drilling Project; DEPTH, sediment/rock; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DSDP; DSDP/ODP/IODP sample designation; Glomar Challenger; Iron 2+; Iron number; Iron oxide, FeO; Leg83; Magnesium; Magnesium (VI); Magnesium oxide; Mineral name; Potassium; Potassium oxide; Sample code/label; Sample comment; Silicon; Silicon dioxide; Silicon number; Sodium; Sodium oxide
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 181 data points
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2023-06-27
    Keywords: 83-504B; Aluminium (IV); Aluminium (VI); Aluminium oxide; Calcium; Calcium oxide; Deep Sea Drilling Project; DEPTH, sediment/rock; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DSDP; DSDP/ODP/IODP sample designation; Glomar Challenger; Iron 2+; Iron number; Iron oxide, FeO; Leg83; Magnesium (VI); Magnesium oxide; Manganese; Manganese oxide; Potassium; Potassium oxide; Sample code/label; Sample comment; Sample method; Silicon; Silicon dioxide; Silicon number; Sodium; Sodium oxide
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 176 data points
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  • 6
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Shau, Yen-Hong; Torii, Masayuki; Horng, Chorng-Shern; Liang, Wen-Tzong (2004): Magnetic properties of mid-ocean-ridge basalts from Ocean Drilling Program Leg 187. In: Pedersen, RB; Christie, DM; Miller, DJ (eds.) Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 187, 1-25, https://doi.org/10.2973/odp.proc.sr.187.204.2004
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: The core samples of mid-ocean-ridge basalts (including Indian and Pacific type) recovered from the Southeast Indian Ridge (SEIR) area near the Australian Antarctic Discordance during Ocean Drilling Program Leg 187 were studied using rock magnetism, mineralogy, and petrography methods. On the basis of thermomagnetic analyses and low-temperature magnetometry, the dominant magnetic carrier in most of the basalt samples (pillow basalts) is characterized as titanomaghemite, which presumably formed by low-temperature oxidation of primary titanomagnetite. Some samples from unaltered massive basalts contain nearly unoxidized titanomagnetite as the main magnetic mineral. A metadiabase sample showing greenschist facies metamorphism contains magnetic minerals dominated by magnetite. The pillow basalts contain titanomaghemite ranging from stable single-domain to pseudosingle-domain (PSD) grains, and the majority are characterized by a single stable component of remanence. The massive basalts show hysteresis features of larger PSD grains and contain a very low coercivity remanence. The values of natural remanent magnetization (NRM) of the samples in this SEIR area are on the same order as those of other oceanic ridge basalts. They show a general decreasing trend of NRM with increasing crust age. However, the values of NRM show no correlation either with the tectonic zonations (Zone A vs. Zone B) or with the mantle provinces (Pacific vs. Indian types).
    Keywords: 187-1152A; 187-1152B; 187-1153A; 187-1154A; 187-1155A; 187-1155B; 187-1156A; 187-1156B; 187-1157A; 187-1157B; 187-1158A; 187-1158B; 187-1158C; 187-1159A; 187-1160A; 187-1160B; 187-1161A; 187-1161B; 187-1162A; 187-1162B; 187-1163A; 187-1164A; 187-1164B; Bartington MS2 magnetic susceptibility meter; Coercive force; Coercivity of remanence; Coercivity of remanence/coercive force; Curie temperature; Depth, relative; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DSDP/ODP/IODP sample designation; Event label; Hysteresis, saturation magnetization, per unit volume; Hysteresis, saturation magnetization/ saturation remanence; Hysteresis, saturation remanence, per unit volume; Indian Ocean; Joides Resolution; Leg187; MAG; Magnetic susceptibility, volume; Magnetometer; Magnetometer, spinner (SMD-88); NRM, Intensity; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP; Sample code/label; Sample comment; Sample ID
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 1411 data points
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  • 7
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Contributions to mineralogy and petrology 105 (1990), S. 123-142 
    ISSN: 1432-0967
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Many chloritic minerals in low-grade metamorphic or hydrothermally altered mafic rocks exhibit abnormal optical properties, expand slightly upon glycolation (“expandable chlorite”) and/or have excess AlVI relative to AlIV, as well as significant Ca, K and Na contents. Chloritic minerals with these properties fill vesicles and interstitial void space in low-grade metabasalt from northern Taiwan and have been studied with a combination of TEM/AEM, EMPA, XRD, and optical microscopy. The chloritic minerals include corrensite, which is an ordered 1:1 mixed-layer chlorite/smectite, and “expandable chlorite”, which is shown to be a mixed-layer chlorite/corrensite. Corrensite and some mixed-layer chlorite/corrensite occur as rims of vesicles and other cavities, while later-formed mixed-layer chlorite/corrensite occupies the vesicle cores. The TEM observations show that the mixed-layer chlorite/corrensite has ca. 20%, and the corrensite has ca. 50% expandable smectite-like layers, consistent with XRD observations and with their abnormal optical properties. The AEM analyses show that high Si and Ca contents, high AlVI/AlIV and low FeVI/(Fe+Mg)VI ratios of “chlorites” are correlated with interstratification of corrensite (or smectite-like) layers in chlorite. The AEM analyses obtained from 200–500 Å thick packets of nearly pure corrensite or chlorite layers always show that corrensite has low AlIV/SiIV and low FeVI/(Fe+Mg)VI, while chlorite has high AlIV/SiIV and high FeVI/(Fe+Mg)VI. This implies that the trioctahedral smectite-like component of corrensite has significantly lower AlIV/SiIV and FeVI/(Fe+Mg)VI. The ratios of FeVI/(Fe+Mg)VI and AlIV/SiIV thus decrease in the order chlorite, corrensite, smectite. The proportions of corrensite (or smectite-like) layers relative to chlorite layers in low-grade rocks are inferred to be controlled principally by Fe/Mg ratio in the fluid or the bulk rock and by temperature. Compositional variations of “chlorites” in low-grade rocks, which appear to correlate with temperature or metamorphic grade, more likely reflect variable proportions of mixed-layered components. The assemblages of trioctahedral phyllosilicates tend to occur as intergrown discrete phases, such as chlorite-corrensite, corrensite-smectite, or chlorite-corrensite-smectite. A model for the corrensite crystal structure suggests that corrensite should be treated as a unique phase rather than as a 1:1 ordered mixed-layer chlorite/smectite.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 8
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Contributions to mineralogy and petrology 112 (1992), S. 119-133 
    ISSN: 1432-0967
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Phyllosilicates occurring as replacements of olivine, clinopyroxene and interstitial materials and as veins or fracture-fillings in hydrothermally altered basalts from DSDP Hole 504B, Leg 83 have been studied using transmission and analytical electron microscopy. The parageneses of phyllosilicates generally change systematically with depth and with the degree of alteration, which in turn is related to permeability of basalts. Saponite and some mixed-layer chlorite/smectite are the dominant phyllosilicates at the top of the transition zone. Chlorite, corrensite, and mixed-layer chlorite/corrensite occur mainly in the lower transition zone and upper levels of the sheeted dike zone. Chlorite, talc, and mixed-layer talc/chlorite are the major phyllosilicates in the sheeted dike zone, although replacement of talc or ohvine by saponite is observed. The phyllosilicates consist of parallel or subparallel discrete packets of coherent layers with packet thicknesses generally ranging from〈 100 Å to a few hundred Å. The packets of saponite layers are much smaller or less well defined than those of chlorite, corrensite and talc, indicating poorer crystal-linity of saponite. by contrast, chlorite and talc from the lower transition zone and the sheeted dike zone occur in packets up to thousands of Å thick. The Si/(Si+Al) ratio of these trioctahedral phyllosilicates increases and Fe/(Fe+Mg) decreases in the order chlorite, corrensite, saponite, and talc. These relations reflect optimal solid solution consistent with minimum misfit of articulated octahedral and tetrahedral sheets. Variations in composition of hydrothermal fluids and precursor minerals, especially in Si/(Si+Al) and Fe/(Fe+Mg) ratios, are thus important factors in controlling the parageneses of phyllosilicates. The phyllosilicates are generally well crystallized discrete phases, rather than mixed-layered phases, where they have been affected by relatively high fluid/rock ratios as in high-permeability basalts, in veins, or areas adjacent to veins. Intense alteration in basalts with high permeability (indicating high fluid/rock ratios) is characterized by pervasive albitization and zeolitization. Minimal alteration in the basalts without significant albitization and zeolitization is characterized by the occurrence of saponite±mixed-layer chlorite/smectite in the low-temperature alteration zone, and mixed-layer chlorite/corrensite or mixed-layer talc/chlorite in the high-temperature alteration zone. Textural non-equilibrium for phyllosilicates is represented by mixed layering and poorly defined packets of partially incoherent layers. The approach to textural equilibrium was controlled largely by the availability of fluid or permeability.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 9
    ISSN: 1432-0967
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Electron microbeam techniques have been used to examine submicroscopically intergrown paragonite, phengite and chlorite from the South Fork Mountain Schist of the Franciscan Terrane of northern California, which was subjected to blueschist facies metamorphism. The sample also contains quartz, albite, lawsonite, and rutile. The subassemblage albite-lawsonite-rutile requires metamorphic conditions on the low-temperature side of the equilibrium albite+lawsonite+rutile=paragonite+sphene+quartz+H2O (T〈200° C and P〈7.4 kbars based on thermodynamic data of Holland and Powell 1990). The white micas appear to be optically homogeneous, but back-scattered electron images can distinguish two different micas by their slight difference in contrast. Electron microprobe analyses (EMPA) of micas show Na/(Na+K) ranging from 0.2 to 0.8. The two micas are resolved by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) as packets of phengite and paragonite that range from 20 to several hundred nm in thickness. The compositions, determined by analytical electron microscopy (AEM), constrain the limbs of the phengite-paragonite solvus to values of Na/(Na+K)=〈0.02 and 0.97, representing less mutual solid solution than ever reported by EMPA. The textural relations imply that the sheet silicates were derived from reactions between fluids and detrital clays and that they are in an intermediate stage of textural development. We caution that microprobe analyses of apparently homogeneous sheet silicates may yield erroneous data and lead to faulty conclusions using phengite barometry and paragonite-muscovite thermometry, especially in fine-grained rocks that formed at relatively low temperatures.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 10
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