scholarly journals Feldspar recycling across magma mush bodies during the voluminous Half Dome and Cathedral Peak stages of the Tuolumne intrusive complex, Yosemite National Park, California, USA

Geosphere ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Louis F. Oppenheim ◽  
Valbone Memeti ◽  
Calvin G. Barnes ◽  
Melissa Chambers ◽  
Joachim Krause ◽  
...  

Incremental pluton growth can produce sheeted complexes with no magma-magma interaction or large, dynamic magma bodies communicating via crystal and melt exchanges, depending on pulse size and frequency of intrusions. Determining the degree and spatial extent of crystal-melt exchange along and away from plutonic contacts at or near the emplacement level, such as in the large, long-lived Tuolumne intrusive complex (TIC) in California, sheds light onto the process and evolution of incremental growth. This study used field mapping and petrographic and geochemical analysis of plagioclase and K-feldspar populations in the equigranular Half Dome (eHD), porphyritic Half Dome (pHD), and Cathedral Peak (CP) Granodiorites of the southeastern section of the TIC to determine the presence and/or extent of feldspar recycling at interunit contacts. Our results suggest that contacts between major units are predominantly ~400-m- to 3-km-thick gradational zones. K-feldspar is compositionally distinct in eHD and neighboring gradational zones and shows no evidence of mixing. K-feldspar in a gradational zone between pHD and CP shows evidence of mixing between the two. Plagioclase in eHD and CP display distinct ranges of anorthite content, Sr, and light rare earth element abundances; both populations are observed in pHD. Major oxide and trace element calculations of melts in equilibrium with plagioclase cores indicate that the melts were more silicic, less calcic, and lower in Sr and Rb than corresponding analyzed whole-rock samples. These results suggest that the magmas also underwent plagioclase and biotite accumulation. The presence of two plagioclase populations in pHD is consistent with eHD and CP hybridizing to form pHD in an increasingly maturing and exchanging TIC magmatic system during the eHD-pHD-CP stages but before groundmass and small K-feldspar phenocrysts crystallized.

1986 ◽  
Vol 50 (358) ◽  
pp. 559-565 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Hutchison ◽  
C. T. Williams ◽  
P. Henderson ◽  
S. J. B. Reed

AbstractSpinel lherzolite xenoliths from two localities in the Massif Central are undepleted in Al2O3, CaO, and Na2O. One suite from Tarreyres, is K2O depleted and amphibole-bearing whereas the other, from Monistrol d'Allier some 18 km away, is amphibole-free and has a higher mean K2O content of 0.035 wt.%. We present bulk major and minor element abundances in a harzburgite and a lherzolite from each locality and microprobe analyses of their constituent phases. Amphibole-bearing lherzolite and its pyroxenes are light-rare earth element (LREE) depleted, whereas amphibole-free lherzolite and its pyroxenes are LREE enriched. Both harzburgites and their pyroxenes are LREE enriched and one rock contains LREE enriched glass. The harzburgites are like harzburgite xenoliths from elsewhere but each lherzolite represents a previously unrecognized type of mantle in terms of the mineralogy and REE content. The implication for basalt genesis are briefly discussed.


1993 ◽  
Vol 130 (3) ◽  
pp. 345-352 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. A. Floyd ◽  
R. E. Holdsworth ◽  
S. A. Steele

AbstractThe meta-igneous greenschists of the Start Complex, SouthDevon, are composed of a mineralogically uniform, but texturally variable, actinolite-epidote-albite assemblage with retrogressed variants containing chlorite, muscovite, sphene, carbonate and oxidized opaque minerals. Geochemically they represent a suite of relatively primitive tholeiites, exhibiting mild differentiation, depleted incompatible element abundances, and variable light rare-earth-element-depletion patterns comparable to modern basalts from normal spreading ridge segments (N-MORB). As the Start greenschistsexhibit a number of chemical similarities to the nearby Upper Palaeozoic Lizard ophiolite, and MORB-type clasts within the Rhenohercynian Zone generally, they may also represent local Variscan ocean crust, which floored smalloceanic basins that separated the Old Red Sandstone continent from the Armorican microplate to the south. The Start Complex could thus represent a previously unrecognized oceanic component to the Variscan orogenic belt (Rhenohercynian Zone) of Northwest Europe.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document