Carbonate droplets containing mafic silicate glass +/- CO2 occur within mineral inclusions and late microveins in spinel-bearing ultramafic xenoliths (dunite, dunite-werhlite and pyroxenite) from La Gomera, Canary Islands. Primary carbonates are Mg-calcite (X-Ca 6.89-0.93) and dolomite (X-Ca 0.46-0.54), with low Na2O (less than or equal to 0.1 wt.%) and variable MnO (0.2-8 wt.%). The mafic glass has high MgO (24-35 wt.%), FeO (1-18 wt.%) and SiO2 (40-55 wt.%), with low Al2O3, TiO2, CaO and alkalis. Mafic glass contains high amounts (> 10 wt %) of volatiles (i.e., H2O). The composite carbonate droplets represent a quenched liquid, resulting from unmixing within the inclusions of a carbonate-rich melt into separate carbonate- and silicate-rich phases. Modelling of initial bulk compositions suggests dolomitic melts, with high silica (approximate to 10 wt.%) and H2O, but low alkali contents. If not protected within inclusions, these melts are ephemeral, unstable in the P-T field of spinel peridotites (10-18 kbar; 900-1000degreesC). Mafic glass remnants in microveins represent a residual degassed hydrous mafic silicate fraction after decarbonation

Frezzotti, M., Touret, J., Neumann, E. (2002). Ephemeral carbonate melts in the upper mantle: carbonate-silicate immiscibility in microveins and inclusions within spinel peridotite xenoliths, La Gomera, Canary Islands. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF MINERALOGY, 14(5), 891-904 [10.1127/0935-1221/2002/0014-0891].

Ephemeral carbonate melts in the upper mantle: carbonate-silicate immiscibility in microveins and inclusions within spinel peridotite xenoliths, La Gomera, Canary Islands

Frezzotti, M;
2002

Abstract

Carbonate droplets containing mafic silicate glass +/- CO2 occur within mineral inclusions and late microveins in spinel-bearing ultramafic xenoliths (dunite, dunite-werhlite and pyroxenite) from La Gomera, Canary Islands. Primary carbonates are Mg-calcite (X-Ca 6.89-0.93) and dolomite (X-Ca 0.46-0.54), with low Na2O (less than or equal to 0.1 wt.%) and variable MnO (0.2-8 wt.%). The mafic glass has high MgO (24-35 wt.%), FeO (1-18 wt.%) and SiO2 (40-55 wt.%), with low Al2O3, TiO2, CaO and alkalis. Mafic glass contains high amounts (> 10 wt %) of volatiles (i.e., H2O). The composite carbonate droplets represent a quenched liquid, resulting from unmixing within the inclusions of a carbonate-rich melt into separate carbonate- and silicate-rich phases. Modelling of initial bulk compositions suggests dolomitic melts, with high silica (approximate to 10 wt.%) and H2O, but low alkali contents. If not protected within inclusions, these melts are ephemeral, unstable in the P-T field of spinel peridotites (10-18 kbar; 900-1000degreesC). Mafic glass remnants in microveins represent a residual degassed hydrous mafic silicate fraction after decarbonation
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Mantle Metassomatism, Canary Islands, Carbonate melt, CO2
English
2002
14
5
891
904
reserved
Frezzotti, M., Touret, J., Neumann, E. (2002). Ephemeral carbonate melts in the upper mantle: carbonate-silicate immiscibility in microveins and inclusions within spinel peridotite xenoliths, La Gomera, Canary Islands. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF MINERALOGY, 14(5), 891-904 [10.1127/0935-1221/2002/0014-0891].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/174610
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