Melt infiltration into quartzite during partial melting in the Little Cottonwood Contact Aureole (UT,USA): implication for xenocryst formation |
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Authors: | A. WOHLERS L. P. BAUMGARTNER |
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Affiliation: | 1. Helmholtz Centre Potsdam, GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences, Section 3.3, Chemistry and Physics of Earth Materials, Telegrafenberg, D 329, 14473 Potsdam, Germany (anke.wohlers@gfz-potsdam.de);2. Faculté des géosciences et de l’environnement, Université de Lausanne (UNIL), Amphip?le, CH‐1015 Lausanne, Switzerland |
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Abstract: | Melt infiltration into quartzite took place due to generation and migration of partial melts within the high‐grade metamorphic rocks of the Big Cottonwood (BC) formation in the Little Cottonwood contact aureole (UT, USA). Melt was produced by muscovite and biotite dehydration melting reactions in the BC formation, which contains pelite and quartzite interlayered on a centimetre to decimetre scale. In the migmatite zone, melt extraction from the pelites resulted in restitic schollen surrounded by K‐feldspar‐enriched quartzite. Melt accumulation occurred in extensional or transpressional domains such as boudin necks, veins and ductile shear zones, during intrusion‐related deformation in the contact aureole. The transition between the quartzofeldspathic segregations and quartzite shows a gradual change in texture. Here, thin K‐feldspar rims surround single, round quartz grains. The textures are interpreted as melt infiltration texture. Pervasive melt infiltration into the quartzite induced widening of the quartz–quartz grain boundaries, and led to progressive isolation of quartz grains. First as clusters of grains, and with increasing infiltration as single quartz grains in the K‐feldspar‐rich matrix of the melt segregation. A 3D–μCT reconstruction showed that melt formed an interconnected network in the quartzites. Despite abundant macroscopic evidence for deformation in the migmatite zone, individual quartz grains found in quartzofeldspathic segregations have a rounded crystal shape and lack quartz crystallographic orientation, as documented with electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD). Water‐rich melts, similar to pegmatitic melts documented in this field study, were able to infiltrate the quartz network and disaggregate grain coherency of the quartzites. The proposed mechanism can serve as a model to explain abundant xenocrysts found in magmatic systems. |
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Keywords: | melt infiltration partial melting xenocryst formation |
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