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Titel Occurrence of silicate melt, carbonate-rich melt and fluid during medium pressure anatexis of metapelitic gneisses (Oberpfalz, Bavaria) revealed by melt and fluid inclusions study
VerfasserIn Silvio Ferrero, Patrick O'Brien, Lutz Hecht, Bernd Wunder
Konferenz EGU General Assembly 2014
Medientyp Artikel
Sprache Englisch
Digitales Dokument PDF
Erschienen In: GRA - Volume 16 (2014)
Datensatznummer 250090133
Publikation (Nr.) Volltext-Dokument vorhandenEGU/EGU2014-4349.pdf
 
Zusammenfassung
In the last decades our understanding of partial melting processes in the lower crust profited from the investigation of fluid inclusions (Touret et al., 2009) and more recently of anatectic melt inclusions (Cesare et al., 2011) within enclaves and high-grade terranes. The latter finding allowed us to directly analyse the original anatectic melt (Ferrero et al., 2012; Bartoli et al., 2013) preserved within peritectic phases, i.e. mainly garnet, but also ilmenite and spinel, before fractionation, mixing and contamination processes took place. Furthermore, the occurrence of primary fluid inclusions (FI) and anatectic melt inclusions (MI) within enclaves allowed the characterization of the COH fluid present during anatexis under fluid+melt immiscibility conditions (Ferrero et al., 2014). Primary crystallized MI, or “nanogranites”, and FI have been identified to occur as clusters in garnet from stromatic migmatites (Zeilengneise) from Oberpfalz, Eastern Bavaria (Moldanubian Zone). During the late Carboniferous, these Grt+Bt+Sill+Crd+Spl metapelitic gneisses underwent HT/MP metamorphism, followed by a HT/LP event (Tanner & Behrmann, 1995). Nanogranites, ≤20 µm in size, consist of Qtz+Bt+Wm+Ab±Ap, and show abundant nanoporosity, localized in the quartz. Fluid inclusions are smaller, generally ≤10 µm, and contain CO2+N2+CH4 plus siderite, pyrophillite and cristobalite, mineral phases not observed in the surrounding rock or as mineral inclusion in garnet. Polycrystalline inclusions containing Cc+Wm+Opx±Qz, commonly ≤10 µm in diameter, occur in the same cluster with MI and FI. Microstructural features, negative-crystal shape and the well-developed crystalline faces of calcite within inclusions suggest that they may result from the crystallization of a carbonate-rich melt. The lack of arrays of carbonate-bearing MI, verified by cathodoluminiscence investigation, supports their primary nature, i.e. they formed during garnet growth. This would suggest the occurrence of a silicate melt and a carbonate-rich melt during anatexis at relatively shallow crustal levels, but this hypothesis needs to be further tested through re-homogenization experiments by piston cylinder means. References Bartoli, O., Cesare, B., Poli, S., Bodnar, R.J., Acosta-Vigil, A., Frezzotti, M.L. & Meli, S., 2013. Recovering the composition of melt and the fluid regime at the onset of crustal anatexis and S-type granite formation. Geology, 41, 115–118. Cesare, B., Ferrero, S., Salvioli–Mariani, E., Pedron, D. & Cavallo, A., 2009. Nanogranite and glassy inclusions: the anatectic melt in migmatites and granulites. Geology, 37, 627–630. Ferrero, S., Bartoli, O., Cesare, B., Salvioli Mariani, E., Acosta-Vigil, A., Cavallo, A., Groppo, C. & Battiston, S., 2012. Microstructures of melt inclusions in anatectic metasedimentary rocks. Journal of Metamorphic Geology, 30, 303–322. Ferrero, S., Braga, R., Berkesi, M., Cesare, B. & Laridhi Ouazaa, N., 2014. Production of Metaluminous melt during fluid-present anatexis: an example from the Maghrebian basement, La Galite Archipelago, central Mediterranean. Journal of Metamorphic Geology, DOI:10.1111/jmg.12068. Tanner, D.C. & Behrmann, J.H., 1995. The Variscan tectonics of the Moldanubian gneisses, Oberpfalzer Wald: a compressional history. Neues Jahrbuch fur Geologie und Palaontologie. Abhandlungen, 197, 331–355. Touret, J.L.R., 2009. Mantle to lower-crust fluid/melt transfer through granulite metamorphism. Russian Geology and Geophysics, 50, 1052–1062.