日本地球惑星科学連合2014年大会

講演情報

インターナショナルセッション(口頭発表)

セッション記号 S (固体地球科学) » S-CG 固体地球科学複合領域・一般

[S-CG08_29AM1] Collision, Subduction, and Metamorphic processes-II

2014年4月29日(火) 09:00 〜 10:45 311 (3F)

コンビーナ:*Ur Rehman Hafiz(Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Graduate School of Science and Engineering, Kagoshima University)、Tatsuki Tsujimori(Institute for Study of the Earth's Interior, Okayama University)、Kazuaki Okamoto(Faculty of Education, Saitama University)、座長:Ur Rehman Hafiz(Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Graduate School of Science and Engineering, Kagoshima University)、Wei Chunjing(School of Earth and Space Sciences, Peking University)

10:20 〜 10:45

[SCG08-05] Modelling of the Phase Relations in High- and Ultrahigh-pressure Metabasic Rocks

*WEI Chunjing1 (1.School of Earth and Space Sciences, Peking University)

キーワード:HP-UHP eclogites, pseudosection, geothermobarometer, basic rock

Pseudosections calculated with THERMOCALC predict that for glaucophane- lawsonite eclogite facies conditions (500-600 ℃ and 18-28 kbar), MORB compositions in the NCKMnFMASHO system will contain glaucophane, garnet, omphacite, lawsonite, phengite and quartz, with chlorite at lower temperature and talc at higher temperature. In these assemblages, the pyrope contents (Xpy) in garnet is mostly controlled by variations in temperature, grossular content (Xgr) is strongly controlled by pressure, and the silica content (Si-) in phengite increases linearly with pressure. As the P-T conditions for these given isopleths are only subtly affected by common variations in bulk-rock compositions, the P-T pseudosections potentially present a robust geothermobarometric method for natural glaucophane-bearing eclogites. The maximum Xpy content may define the temperature peak (Tmax) and the minimum Xgr content constrains the pressure peak (Pmax) conditions. An isothermal decompression of these lawsonite-bearing assemblages would result in epidote- bearing assemblages through dehydration reactions such as lawsonite + omphacite = glaucophane + epidote + H2O, releasing a large amount of bound fluid. Thus, most natural HP epidote eclogites may have experienced a metamorphic stage of lawsonite stability. Under low-T UHP conditions (> 28 kb, 550-650 ℃), basic rocks are predicted to contain garnet, omphacite, lawsonite, phengite, coesite and talc. In this assemblage, the Xpy contents steadily increase as temperature rises and the Si-in phengite increases linearly with pressure. However, the Xgr content is very sensitive as pressure changes, showing slowly decrease as pressure rises. The peak P-T conditions for low-T UHP eclogites can be determined using the isopleths of maximum Xpy and Si-in phengite in P-T pseudosections. An isothermal decompression of these low-T UHP eclogites at temperature i.e. 600 ℃ would result in disappearance of lawsonite and talc in the peak stage, but appearance of glaucophane, epidote and kyanite, forming the mineral assemblages involving garnet + omphacite + glaucophane + epidote ? kyanite + quartz/coesite + phengite commonly observed. Moreover, garnet in the low-T UHP eclogites is characteristic of growth zoning with its rims containing lower Xgr and higher Xpy contents.Under Medium-T UHP conditions (>28 kb and >650 ℃), basic rocks are predicted commonly to contain garnet + omphacite + lawsonite + phengite + coesite. In this assemblage, the Xpy in garnet mostly depends on bulk compositions, whereas the Xgr in garnet and the Si-contents in phengite regularly increase, respectively, as temperature and as pressure rise, and thus, can provide robust thermobarometric constraints. Decompression of the eclogites with lawsonite in the peak stage is inferred to be dominated by lawsonite dehydration, resulting in increase in the mode of anhydrous minerals, or further eclogitization, and formation of epidote porphyroblasts and kyanite-bearing quartz veins in eclogite. As lawsonite dehydration can facilitate evolution of assemblages under fluid-present conditions, the UHP eclogites with lawsonite are hard to memorize their real peak P-T conditions.