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Ti-in-zircon thermometry applied to contrasting Archean metamorphic and igneous systems
Authors:Joe Hiess  Allen P Nutman  Vickie C Bennett  Peter Holden
Institution:1. Department of Earth and Space Sciences, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90077, United States;2. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY 12180, United States;1. Department of Geology, Lund University, SE-223 62 Lund, Sweden;2. Geological Survey of Sweden, Box 670, SE-751 28 Uppsala, Sweden;1. School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Queens College, 6530 Kissena Blvd., Flushing, NY 11367, USA;2. Department of Geological Sciences, University of Texas at Austin, 1 University Station C1100, Austin, TX 78712, USA
Abstract:Ti-in-zircon thermometry with SHRIMP II multi-collector has been applied to two well-documented Archean igneous and metamorphic samples from southern West Greenland. Zircons from 2.71 Ga partial melt segregation G03/38 formed in a small (< 1 m3), closed system within a mafic rock under high pressure granulite facies conditions. Results of 14 Ti analyses present a mean apparent zircon crystallization temperature of 679 ± 11 °C, underestimating independent garnet-clinopyroxene thermometry by 20–50 °C but consistent with reduced aTiO2 in this system. 36 spot analysis on 15 zircons from 3.81 Ga meta-tonalite G97/18, with an estimated magmatic temperature > 1000 °C, yield a low-temperature focused normal distribution with a mean of 683 ± 32 °C, further demonstrated by high resolution Ti mapping of two individual grains. This distribution is interpreted to represent the temperature of the residual magma at zircon saturation, late in the crystallization history of the tonalite. Hypothetically, Ti-in-zircon thermometry on Eoarchaean detrital zircons sourced from such a high temperature tonalite would present a low-temperature biased image of the host magma, which could be misconstrued as being a minimum melt granite. Multiple analyses from individual zircons can yield complex Ti distributions and associated apparent temperature patterns, reflecting cooling history and local chemical environments in large magma chambers. In addition to inclusions and crystal imperfections, which can yield apparent high temperature anomalies, zircon surfaces can also record extreme (> 1000 °C) apparent Ti temperatures. In our studies these were traced to 49Ti (or a molecular isobaric interference) contamination derived from the double sided adhesive tape used in sample preparation, and should not be assigned geological significance.
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