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Geochemistry of high-grade eclogites and metarodingites from the Central Alps
Authors:Bernard W Evans  Volkmar Trommsdorff  Gordon G Goles
Institution:(1) Department of Geological Sciences AJ-20, University of Washington, 98195 Seattle, WA, USA;(2) Institut für Kristallographie und Petrographie, E.T.H. Zentrum, CH-8092 Zürich, Switzerland;(3) Departments of Chemistry and Geology, University of Oregon, 97403 Eugene, OR, USA
Abstract:Analyses for major, minor, and trace element contents of metamorphosed, variably rodingitized mafic rocks demonstrate substantial removal of Na and as much as three-fold gains in Ca as a consequence of rodingitization. Modest declines in Si and Fe can be explained in terms of dilution effects. Losses in K and Ba do not correlate with Ca% and may have been caused by an alteration process not related to the rodingitization. The Ca-metasomatism was not accompanied by a gain in Sr. The relative contents of Ti, Zr, Hf, Y, Co, Sc, and heavy REE show no readily detectable changes, despite the rodingitization (±other alteration) and subsequent metamorphisms, namely, eclogite facies (TgE800° C, PgE 20kbar) followed by amphibolite facies, sillimanite zone. Protoliths were tholeiitic basalt or diabase, and gabbro, with trace element contents indicative of a spreading center origin. Trace element and REE patterns indicate low-pressure fractionation of this magma, with plagioclase stable. This petrogenesis is consistent with prior conclusions on the shallow crustal origin of the protolith of the eclogite-metarodingite-garnet lherzolite suite in the Cima Lunga-Adula nappe, Central Alps. Based on their bulk chemical composition, the mafic rocks in this suite could be the equivalent of Mesozoic ophiolitic rocks in the more external parts of the Alps.
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