Japan Geoscience Union Meeting 2014

Presentation information

International Session (Oral)

Symbol S (Solid Earth Sciences) » S-CG Complex & General

[S-CG08_29AM2] Collision, Subduction, and Metamorphic processes-II

Tue. Apr 29, 2014 11:00 AM - 12:30 PM 311 (3F)

Convener:*Hafiz Ur Rehman(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), Chair:Kazuaki Okamoto(Faculty of Education, Saitama University), Tadao Nishiyama(Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, School of Science, Graduate School of Science and Technology, Kumamoto University)

11:15 AM - 11:30 AM

[SCG08-07] Ultrahigh-pressure eclogites: paleo-environment indicators

*Hafiz UR REHMAN1 (1.Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Graduate School of Science and Engineering, Kagoshim)

Keywords:Ultrahigh-pressure eclogites, Himalaya, Oxygen isotope, Paleo-environment

Ultrahigh-pressure (UHP) eclogites generally form by the metamorphism of mafic lithologies (gabbros or basalts) at depths greater than 90 km (minimum stability field of coesite) indicating P-T conditions of > 2.7 GPa and 600-800 ○C. At such conditions most minerals reequilibrate their chemical elements (e.g. major and trace and even isotopes) and new minerals crystallize or grow at the expense of other minerals formed during the magmatic crystallization. Some chemical elements, considered as relatively less mobile or immobile (e.g. Sm, Nd, Lu, Hf), are widely used for the extraction of past records the rocks have evolved through. Besides those elements, oxygen, the major component of silicates and oxides, impart important information related to protolith formation of rocks and their metamorphism. In general, most basaltic rocks show a narrow range of δ18O (ca. +5.7 ± 0.3‰ relative VSMOW) and values for altered basalts vary from 0 to +12‰. In this paper, I discuss the origin of low or negative δ18O values; recently we found in the Himalayan UHP eclogites of Kaghan Valley and explain the mechanism how these low values were acquired. These eclogites are formed during Eocene by the India-Asia collision and their protoliths were the Panjal Trap basalts which were emplaced in Permian when Indian Plate was part of Gondwana. The δ18O values are as low as —2.25‰ in the fresh parts of eclogites and increase towards more positive in the retrogressed or amphibolitized parts. The unusually low δ18O values in eclogites are interpreted to have resulted from the hydrothermal alteration of the protoliths by meteoric water interaction when Greater India was still at southern high latitudes (> 65 degrees S) during the Permian indicating glacial paleo-environment. These low δ18O values were frozen-in in the protolith rocks and did not change during subduction-related UHP metamorphism. However retrogressive process, due to infiltration of 18O-rich fluids during exhumation, shifted these values towards more positive range.