High-pressure partial melting and melt loss in felsic granulites in the Kutna Hora complex, Bohemian Massif (Czech Republic)

被引:38
|
作者
Nahodilova, Radmila [1 ,2 ]
Faryad, Shah Wali [1 ]
Dolejs, David [1 ,3 ]
Tropper, Peter [4 ]
Konzett, Juergen [4 ]
机构
[1] Charles Univ Prague, Inst Petrol & Struct Geol, Prague 12843 2, Czech Republic
[2] Czech Geol Survey, Prague 11821 1, Czech Republic
[3] Univ Bayreuth, Bayer Geoinst, D-95440 Bayreuth, Germany
[4] Univ Innsbruck, Inst Mineral & Petrog, A-6020 Innsbruck, Austria
关键词
Felsic granulite; High-pressure metamorphism; Partial melting; Bohemian Massif; Variscan orogeny; MINIMUM WATER CONTENTS; OROGENIC LOWER CRUST; U-PB ZIRCON; MOLDANUBIAN ZONE; EXPERIMENTAL CONSTRAINTS; PLATE-TECTONICS; GRANITIC MELTS; VARISCAN BELT; METAMORPHIC HISTORIES; PHYSICAL-PROPERTIES;
D O I
10.1016/j.lithos.2011.03.017
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
Felsic granulites from the Kutna Flora complex in the Moldanubian zone of central Europe preserve mineral assemblage that records transition from early eclogite to granulite fades conditions, and exhibits leucocratic banding, which is interpreted as an evidence for melt loss during the decompression path. The granulites are layered and consist of variable proportions of quartz, ternary feldspar, garnet, biotite, kyanite, and rutile. In the mesocratic layers, garnet grains show relatively high Ca contents corresponding to 28-41 mol% grossular end member. They have remarkably flat compositional profiles in their cores but their rims exhibit an increase in pyrope and a decrease in grossular and almandine components. In contrast. garnets from the leucocratic layers have relatively low Ca contents (15-26 mol% grossular) that further decrease towards the rims. In addition to modeling of pressure-temperature pseudosections. compositions of garnet core composition, garnet rim-ternary feldspar-kyanite-quartz equilibrium, ternary feldspar composition, and the garnet-biotite equilibrium provide five constraints that were used to reconstruct the pressure-temperature path from eclogite through the granulite and amphibolite facies. In both layers, garnet cores grew during omphacite breakdown and phengite dehydration melting at 940 degrees C and 2.6 GPa. Subsequent decompression heating to 1020 degrees C and 2.1 GPa produced Ca- and Fe-poor garnet rims due to the formation of Ca-bearing ternary feldspar and partial melt. In both the mesocratic and leucocratic layer, the maximum melt productivity was 26 and 18 vol.%, respectively, at peak temperature constrained by the maximum whole-rock H2O budget, similar to 1.05-0.75 wt.%, prior to the melting. The preservation of prograde garnet-rich assemblages required nearly complete melt loss (15-25 vol.%), interpreted to have occurred at 1000-1020 degrees C and 2.2-2.4 GPa by garnet mode isopleths, followed by crystallization of small amounts of residual melt at 760 degrees C and 1.0 GPa. Phase formation and melt productivity were independently determined by experiments in the piston-cylinder apparatus at 850-1100 degrees C and 1.7-2.1 GPa. Both the thermodynamic calculations and phase equilibrium experiments suggest that the partial melt was produced by the dehydration melting: muscovite + quartz = melt + K-feldspar + kyanite. The presence of partial melt facilitated attainment of mineral equilibria at peak temperature thus eliminating any potential relics of early high-pressure phases such as phengite or omphacite. By contrast, adjacent mafic granulites and eclogites, which apparently share the same metamorphic path but have not undergone partial melting commonly preserve relics or inclusions of eclogite-facies mineral assemblages. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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页码:641 / 658
页数:18
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