scholarly journals Hydration of the lithospheric mantle in the northern Slave craton (Canada): constraints from combined FTIR and EBSD measurements on peridotite xenoliths

Lithos ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 232 ◽  
pp. 111-123 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jianggu Lu ◽  
Jianping Zheng ◽  
William L. Griffin ◽  
Suzanne Y. O'Reilly ◽  
Norman J. Pearson

2005 ◽  
Vol 42 (4) ◽  
pp. 457-478 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alan G Jones ◽  
Juanjo Ledo ◽  
Ian J Ferguson

Magnetotelluric studies of the Trans-Hudson orogen over the last two decades, prompted by the discovery of a significant conductivity anomaly beneath the North American Central Plains (NACP), from over 300 sites yield an extensive database for interrogation and enable three-dimensional information to be obtained about the geometry of the orogen from southern North Dakota to northern Saskatchewan. The NACP anomaly is remarkable in its continuity along strike, testimony to along-strike similarity of orogenic processes. Where bedrock is exposed, the anomaly can be associated with sulphides that were metamorphosed during subduction and compression and penetratively emplaced deep within the crust of the internides of the orogen to the boundary of the Hearne margin. A new result from this compilation is the discovery of an anomaly within the upper mantle beginning at depths of ~80–100 km. This lithospheric mantle conductor has electrical properties similar to those for the central Slave craton mantle conductor, which lies directly beneath the major diamond-producing Lac de Gras kimberlite field. While the Saskatchewan mantle conductor does not directly underlie the Fort à la Corne kimberlite, which is associated with the Sask craton, the spatial correspondence is close.


2014 ◽  
Vol 80 ◽  
pp. 185-196 ◽  
Author(s):  
Huayun Tang ◽  
Takuya Matsumoto ◽  
Jianping Zheng ◽  
György Czuppon ◽  
Chunmei Yu ◽  
...  

2000 ◽  
Vol 181 (3) ◽  
pp. 359-375 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xavier Lenoir ◽  
Carlos J. Garrido ◽  
Jean-Louis Bodinier ◽  
Jean-Marie Dautria

Lithos ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 117 (1-4) ◽  
pp. 49-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
Magdalena Matusiak-Małek ◽  
Jacek Puziewicz ◽  
Theodoros Ntaflos ◽  
Michel Grégoire ◽  
Hilary Downes

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seth Kruckenberg ◽  
Vasileios Chatzaras

<p>Constraining the seismic structure of the West Antarctic mantle is important for understanding its viscosity structure, and thus for accurately predicting the evolution of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet.  Seismic anisotropy, which is the dependence of seismic velocities on the propagation and polarization direction of seismic waves, is a valuable tool for understanding mantle deformation and flow.  We provide petrological and microstructural data from a suite of 44 spinel peridotite xenoliths entrained in Cenozoic (1.4 Ma) basalts of 7 volcanic centers located in Marie Byrd Land, West Antarctica.  Equilibration temperatures obtained from three different calibrations of the two-pyroxene geothermometer and the olivine-spinel Fe-Mg exchange geothermometer range from 780°C to 1200°C, calculated at a pressure of 1500 MPa.  This range of temperatures corresponds to extraction depths between 39 and 72 km, constraining the source of the xenoliths within the lithospheric mantle above the low velocity zone modelled by seismic studies.</p><p>The Marie Byrd Land xenoliths are fertile with average clinopyroxene mode that ranges between 15 and 24%.  Based on their modal composition, xenoliths are predominantly classified as lherzolites (n=30), with lesser occurrences of harzburgite (n=4), wehrlite (n=3), dunite (n=3), olivine websterite (n=1), websterite (n=1), and clinopyroxenite (n=2).  Petrological data suggest that the xenoliths have been affected by various degrees of partial melting as well as by reaction with silicate melts or fluids.  For example, clinopyroxenes in the more fertile lherzolites and wehrlites show a constant TiO<sub>2</sub> concentration at 0.65 wt% and 0.8 wt% over a range of olivine Mg# values, while TiO<sub>2</sub> decreases rapidly with increasing Mg#, down to 0.01 wt% in the more refractory harzburgites and dunites.  The observed trend is interpreted to indicate a refertilization process.  Microstructures also indicate multiple episodes of reactive melt percolation under either static conditions or during the late stages of deformation.  Pyroxenes may enclose rounded olivine grains in crystallographic continuity with neighbouring grains, cross-cut the subgrain boundaries of olivine grains, or show an interstitial habit, either forming cuspate-shaped grains in olivine triple junctions or films along olivine-olivine grain boundaries.  Olivine shows a range of crystallographic preferred orientation (CPO) patterns, including the A-type, axial-[010], axial-[100], and B-type.  Pyroxenes have weaker but not random CPOs with [001] axes having similar orientation to olivine [100] axes in the majority of the xenoliths.  Calculated P and S waves anisotropy is variable (2–12%) and increases with olivine fraction but decreases with both increasing ortho- or clinopyroxene content.  P-wave anisotropy is correlated with the strength of olivine CPO expressed with the M-index and increases with increasing strength of the orthopyroxene CPO, but seems to be less correlated with the strength of the clinopyroxene CPO.</p>


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