2006 Philadelphia Annual Meeting (22–25 October 2006)
Paper No. 41-3
Presentation Time: 2:00 PM-2:15 PM

REACTION TEXTURES IN RETROGRADE ECLOGITES: MECHANISMS AND MASS BALANCE AS A FUNCTION OF DECOMPRESSION AND COOLING RATES

ANDERSON, Eric D., Lexington, KY 40506-0053, edande0@uky.edu and MOECHER, D.P., Earth and Env. Sci, Univ. Kentucky, Lexington, KY 40506-0053, moker@uky.edu

The presence of eclogites in convergent orogens is a key criterion for inferring the former presence of a subduction zone. ‘Retrograde eclogites' are equally important in Archean, Proterozoic, and early Phanerozoic orogens; intergrowths of Cpx (Di-Hd ss) and sodic Pl are usually inferred to have formed by ‘exsolution' of an originally omphacitic Cpx (Omp) during decompression and cooling. High resolution BSE imaging and X-ray mapping of eclogites from the Appalachian Blue Ridge (ABR; low-P eclogite and transitional amphibolite-eclogite [14-18 kbar] assemblages) and UHP Norwegian Caledonides (~30 kbar) indicate the net breakdown reaction is broadly similar in each setting (Omp + H2O => Di-Hd + Pl + Hbl ± Qtz), although the reaction mechanism differs. Low-Na Omp in the ABR breaks down via an ‘exsolution-like' process yielding crystallographically-controlled Pl + Hbl + Qtz lamellae within Cpx or grain boundary nucleation. Chemical zoning is well developed in Omp interiors adjacent to Pl+Hbl lamellae and at grain boundaries in slowly decompressed and cooled Omp (0.1 kb/ and 5-10 oC/m.y.). Nucleation of lamellae and diffusion-controlled coarsening is consistent with low degrees of overstepping of the breakdown reaction. UHP Caledonide Omp (I) breaks down to complex, fine-grained, grain boundary symplectic intergrowths of Omp II + Pl + Hbl; Omp I is unzoned. Lack of chemical zoning in Omp I adjacent to symplectite, and symplectite-forming reactions in UHP settings, are associated with rapid uplift rates (cm a-1), steep (3-6.5 kb/ and 50oC/m.y.) decompression paths, and disequilibrium on a micron scale. The textures develop during significant pressure overstepping of the breakdown reaction, but only modest cooling. In both cases the reaction is not isochemical and not simply a combination of Jd + Qtz = Ab and CaTs + Qtz = An reactions. Area scans via EPMA indicate the breakdown assemblage is enriched in Al (and in Na in ABR) and depleted in Ca, Fe, and Mg, relative to the original Omp; the degree of open system behavior is greatest in ABR Cpx. Al can be accounted for by breakdown of garnet rims and loss of Di-Hd components. Reintegration of breakdown assemblages in ABR (and other occurrences worldwide) to obtain an original peak high-P Cpx composition will yield erroneous compositions, and erroneously high peak P.

2006 Philadelphia Annual Meeting (22–25 October 2006)
General Information for this Meeting
Session No. 41
Petrologic Mineralogy—The Study of Minerals in Context II: In Honor of Charles V. Guidotti
Pennsylvania Convention Center: 204 A
1:30 PM-5:30 PM, Sunday, 22 October 2006

Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs, Vol. 38, No. 7, p. 112

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