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Microgranitoid enclave swarms in granitic plutons, central Sierra Nevada, California
Authors:O.T. Tobisch   B.A. McNulty  R.H. Vernon
Affiliation:

aDepartment of Earth Sciences, A232 Earth and Marine Science Building, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA 95064, USA

bSchool of Earth Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia

Abstract:Microgranitoid enclaves are common in granitic plutons worldwide, occurring individually and in homogeneous or heterogeneous swarms. Three plutons in the central Sierra Nevada batholith contain swarms with mostly heterogeneous suites of enclaves in the intermediate composition range, and occur in a number of two-dimensional shapes, specifically as dikes, small rafts, lenses, pipe/vortices and large massive shapes. Swarms are characterized by various features, including the nature of their boundary with the host, their planar or non-planar character, internal geometry, density of enclave packing, presence or absence of schlieren and crystal aggregates, and axial ratios and degree of preferred alignment of enclaves. We propose that heterogeneous enclave swarms form by one, or some combination of, the following mechanisms: (1) velocity-gradient sorting parallel or normal to the flow, (2) gravitational sorting or (3) break-up of heterogeneous dikes. Common sites where enclave swarms form include pluton margins or internal viscosity walls, within fractures, and near the pluton roof.
Keywords:Granites   Mafic inclusion accumulation   Mechanisms
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