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Pelites. Chapter 14 and 18. Mudstones and shales Accumulate in wedge of sed. Off continental shelf Boring muds: interesting metamorphosed Clays sensitive to P&T changes. High Al 2 O 3 and K 2 O Low CaO. Barrow’s Area. Seen in regional met.
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Pelites Chapter 14 and 18
Mudstones and shales • Accumulate in wedge of sed. Off continental shelf • Boring muds: interesting metamorphosed • Clays sensitive to P&T changes
High Al2O3 and K2O • Low CaO
Barrow’s Area • Seen in regional met. • Famous locale in Scotland studied by George Barrow(1912)
Sandstone, limestone, basalt, shales • Shales show best systematic change • Mapped metamorphic zones (index minerals)
Sequence of min. with increasing met. grade • Chlorite • Biotite • Garnet • Staurolite • Kyanite • Sillimanite • Known as Barrovian sequence
Near Aberdeen in Buchan district: • chlorite • biotite • cordierite • andalusite • sillimanite • Buchan sequence
An isograd (in this classical sense) represents the first appearance of a particular metamorphic index mineral in the field as one progresses up metamorphic grade • When one crosses an isograd, such as the biotite isograd, one enters the biotite zone • Zones have the same name as the isograd that forms the low-grade boundary of that zone • Since classic isograds are based on the first appearance of a mineral, and not its disappearance, an index mineral may still be stable in higher grade zones
AKF and AFM diagrams • Chlorite zone, lower greenschist facies • 350-450°C
Greenschist facies ~430°Ca: below the biotite isogradb: above the biotite isograd • Reaction?Continuous or discontinuous? • Affects most pelites?
Note Ms-Bt-Chl triangle migration as muscovite solid solution drops • A: less Al-rich • C: more Al-rich
AFM diagrams of biotite and upper biotite zones, greenschist facies
Garnet zone, early amphibolite facies, ~530°C • What rxn?
Sillimanite isogradupper amphibolite facies 690°C • Degenerative rxn • St = sillimanite + biotite + garnet
Second sillimanite isograd >750°C early granulite facies • Muscovite + quartz = Kspar + Al2SiO5 + water
Second sillimanite isograd >750°C early granulite facies • Does this reaction happen often in pelites?
Granulite faces ~790°C • Sillimanite + Bt = Garnet + cordierite
2. Getting P-T constraints chl gar bio Example: Over what P-T range is the assemblage Gar+Chl+Bio stable?
H I J Step 1: find AFM range for assemblage Where in P-T space does this assemblage occur?
H to J kya sill Al2SiO5 in nearby rx could further restrict P&T and Step 2: use AFM labels to find P-T field This is the only part of P-T space where gar+chl+bio can coexist
eclogite blueschist epid amphib greenschist amphibolite granulite 3. Correlation with mafic rocks What is the equivalent metamorphic facies? epidote amphibolite What assemblage would be present in interlayered mafic rocks? epid/czo + hbl+ plag
4. “Too many AFM minerals”: Interpreting complex assemblages staur gar chl bio What are the possible interpretations??
d) Other possibilities… ? …look for textural evidence of rxn …chl replacing Grt, St, or Bt; don’t plot chl …no textural evidence of rxn …observations lead to interpretations a) Reaction frozen in, V=1 b) Extra component, e.g. Mn, Ca in Grt or Zn in St c) Retrograde mineral, e.g. chlorite
P-T-t paths for Barrovian sequence • 6 garnets analyzed for thermobarometry • 6 separate P-T paths recording garnet growth • If curves nested: different crustal depths during crustal thickening
P-T-t paths for Barrovian sequence • Large amplitude folding, variable uplift rates, irregular distribution of T and P
P-T-t path for Buchan sequence • How do you explain the Buchan sequence?
Return flow of country rock around rising plutons • Wall rock heats, wallrock is pushed down, everything cools (no crustal thickening)
Lower crust: what is it doing? (circle in fertile source rock)