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  • 1
    Keywords: Metamorphose ; Mineral, Gleichgewicht ; Konferenzschrift ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Metamorphose ; Thermodynamik ; Mineralbildung ; Phase ; Phasengleichgewicht ; Gibbssche Phasenregel ; Metamorphose ; Geothermobarometrie ; Metamorphose ; Fluid ; Fluideinschluss ; Flüssigkeitseinschluss ; Metamorphose ; Mineral ; Lösung ; Isotop ; Isotopenhäufigkeit ; Sauerstoffisotop ; Metamorphose ; Geochemie ; Mineralogie ; Metamorphose ; Mineral ; Gleichgewicht
    Type of Medium: Book
    Pages: XIII, 397 S , graph. Darst
    Edition: 2. printing
    ISBN: 093995012X
    Series Statement: Reviews in mineralogy 10,2
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Note: Literaturangaben
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Palo Alto, Calif. : Annual Reviews
    Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences 26 (1998), S. 255-287 
    ISSN: 0084-6597
    Source: Annual Reviews Electronic Back Volume Collection 1932-2001ff
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract Stable isotopic, mineralogical, and chemical alteration in metamorphic terranes is evidence for reactive fluid flow during metamorphism. In many cases, the amount and spatial distribution of the alteration can be quantitatively interpreted using transport theory in terms of fundamental properties of metamorphic flow systems such as time-integrated flux, flow direction, and Peclet number. Many estimates of time-integrated flux in the upper and middle crust are surprisingly large, 105-106 cm3 fluid/cm2 rock; estimates for the lower crust are much smaller. Rather than pervasive and uniform, reactive fluid flow in all metamorphic environments is channelized on scales of 〈1-104 m. Channelization results from heterogeneous permeability structures controlled by features such as lithologic layering, contacts, folds, fractures, and faults. Consequently flow may be in the direction of either decreasing or increasing temperature or isothermal. Site-specific thermal-hydrologic models of metamorphic terranes that explicitly consider chemical reactions and dynamic permeability structures will help resolve outstanding questions with regard to the driving forces and duration of flow, metamorphic permeability distributions, and how deformation controls fluid flow.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Contributions to mineralogy and petrology 93 (1986), S. 420-428 
    ISSN: 1432-0967
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Hydrothermally-altered mesozonal synmetamorphic granitic rocks from Maine have whole-rock δ 18O (SMOW) values 10.7 to 13.8‰. Constituent quartz, feldspar, and muscovite have δ 18O in the range 12.4 to 15.2‰, 10.0 to 13.2‰, and 11.1 to 12.0‰, respectively. Mean values of Δ Q−F (δ 18Oquartz−δ 18Ofeldspar)=2.4 and Δ Q−M (δ 18Oquartz−δ 18Omuscovite)=3.3 are remarkably uniform (standard deviations of both are 0.2). Measured Δ Q−F and Δ Q−M values demonstrate that the isotopic compositions of the minerals are altered from primary magmatic δ 18O values but that the minerals closely approached oxygen isotope exchange equilibrium at subsolidus temperatures. Analyzed muscovites have δD (SMOW) values in the range −65 to −82‰. Feldspars in the granitic rocks are mineralogically altered to either (a) muscovite+calcite, (b) muscovite+calcite+epidote, (c) muscovite+epidote, or (d) muscovite only. A consistent relation exists between the assemblage of secondary minerals and the oxygen isotope composition of whole rocks, quartz, and feldspar. Rocks with assemblage (a) have whole-rock δ 18O〉12.1‰ and contain quartz and feldspar with δ 18O〉13.8‰ and 〉11.4‰, respectively. Rocks with assemblages (b), (c), and (d) have whole-rock δ 18O〈11.4‰ and contain quartz and feldspar with δ 18O〈 13.1‰ and 〈11.0‰, respectively. The correlation suggests that the mineralogical alteration of the rocks was closely coupled to their isotopic alteration. Three mineral thermometers in altered granite suggest that the hydrothermal event occurred in the temperature range 400°–150° C, ∼100°–150° C below the peak metamorphic temperature inferred for country rocks immediately adjacent to the plutons. Calculations of mineral-fluid equilibria indicate that samples with assemblage (a) coexisted during the event with CO2-H2O fluids of $${\text{X}}_{{\text{CO}}_{\text{2}} } = 0.03 - 0.13$$ and δ 18O=10.8 to 12.2‰ while samples with assemblages (b), (c), or (d) coexisted with fluids of $${\text{X}}_{{\text{CO}}_{\text{2}} } \leqslant 0.03$$ and δ 18O=9.4 to 10.1‰. Compositional variations of the hydrothermal fluids were highly correlated: fluids enriched in CO2 were also enriched in 18O. Because CO2 was added to the granites during hydrothermal alteration and because fluids enriched in CO2 were enriched in δ 18O, some or all of the variation in δ 18O of altered granites may have been caused by addition of 18O to the rocks during the hydrothermal event. The source of both the CO2 and 18O could have been high-18O metasedimentary country rocks. The inferred change in isotopic composition of the granites is consistent with depletion of the metacarbonate rocks in 18O close to the plutons and with large volumes of fluid that were inferred from petrologic data to have infiltrated the metacarbonate rocks during metamorphism. A close approach of minerals to oxygen isotope exchange equilibrium in altered mesozonal rocks from Maine is in marked contrast to hydrothermally-altered epizonal granites whose mineral commonly show large departures from oxygen isotope exchange equilibrium. The difference in oxygen isotope systematics between altered epizonal granites and altered mesozonal granites closely parallels a differences between their mineralogical systematics. Both differences demonstrate the important control that depth exerts on the products of hydrothermal alteration. Deeper hydrothermal events occur at higher temperature and are longer-lived. Minerals and fluid have sufficient time to closely approach both isotope exchange and heterogeneous chemical equilibrium. Shallower hydrothermal events occur at lower temperatures and are shorter-lived. Generally there is insufficient time for fluid to closely approach equilibrium with all minerals.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Contributions to mineralogy and petrology 98 (1988), S. 1-12 
    ISSN: 1432-0967
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract The flow pattern of reactive metamorphic fluid through six outcrops of micaceous, carbonate-bearing sandstones from the Vassalboro Formation was determined by calculating and mapping fluid-rock ratios for numerous samples within each outcrop. The ratio of maximum to minimum measured fluid/rock varied by factors of only 1.3-22.9 in each outcrop. Fluid flow was pervasive at metamorphic grades ranging from the biotite through the sillimanite zones. Average fluid-rock ratio for the outcrops increases with increasing grade of metamorphism from ∼0.4 in the biotite zone to ∼ 1.4 in the sillimanite zone. The flow pattern of reactive fluid through impure sandstones of the Vassalboro Formation was different at low and medium grades from fluid flow through the limestone member of the adjacent Waterville Formation. In the biotite and garnet zones, fluid flow through the Waterville Formation was channelized with channelways corresponding to individual lithologic layers that acted as metamorphic aquifers. Fluid-rock ratios recorded by the aquifers are greater than those recorded by the intervening beds by factors of up to 50–60. At the highest grades of metamorphism (sillimanite zone), however, flow through the Waterville Formation was as pervasive as through the Vassalboro Formation. The Waterville and Vassalboro Formations experienced the same metamorphic event. The difference in pattern of fluid flow through the two formations therefore reflects the important control that lithology exerts on the permeability of rocks during metamorphism. Micaceous, carbonate-bearing sandstones evidently were more permeable than argillaceous carbonate rocks. The greater permeability of the sandstones may result from a greater concentration of grain boundaries between unlike minerals in the rocks.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Contributions to mineralogy and petrology 99 (1988), S. 401-415 
    ISSN: 1432-0967
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Crystal size distributions (CSDs) measured in metamorphic rocks yield quantitative information about crystal nucleation and growth rates, growth times, and the degree of overstepping (ΔT) of reactions during metamorphism. CSDs are described through use of a population density function n=dN/dL, where N is the cumulative number of crystals per unit volume and L is a linear crystal size. Plots of ln (n) vs. L for olivine+pyroxene and magnetite in high-temperature (1000° C) basalt hornfelses from the Isle of Skye define linear arrays, indicating continuous nucleation and growth of crystals during metamorphism. Using the slope and intercept of these linear plots in conjunction with growth rate estimates we infer minimum mineral growth times of less than 100 years at ΔT〈10° C, and nucleation rates between 10−4 and 10−1/cm3/s. Garnet and magnetite in regionally metamorphosed pelitic schists from south-central Maine have CSDs which are bell-shaped. We interpret this form to be the result of two processes: 1) initial continuous nucleation and growth of crystals, and 2) later loss of small crystals due to annealing. The large crystals in regional metamorphic rocks retain the original size frequency distribution and may be used to obtain quantitative information on the original conditions of crystal nucleation and growth. The extent of annealing increases with increasing metamorphic grade and could be used to estimate the duration of annealing conditions if the value of a rate constant were known. Finally, the different forms of crystal size distributions directly reflect differences in the thermal histories of regional vs. contact metamorphosed rocks: because contact metamorphism involves high temperatures for short durations, resulting CSDs are linear and unaffected by annealing, similar to those produced by crystallization from a melt; because regional metamorphism involves prolonged cooling from high temperatures, primary linear CSDs are later modified by annealing to bell shapes.
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  • 6
    ISSN: 1432-0967
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract We measured the C- and O-isotopic composition of carbonate minerals in the Waits River Formation, eastern Vermont, to determine the extent of fluid infiltration during regional metamorphism over an approx. 2000 km2 area in a deep-seated (〉25 km) Barrovian terrane. From a petrologic study of this terrane, Ferry proposed the existence of a large regional metamorphic hydrothermal system with two first-order features: (1) on the scale of the entire terrane fluid flow was focused into the axes of two major antiforms of regional extent; (2) on a smaller scale (about 100 km2) flow was further focused around synmetamorphic granitic plutons that intruded along the axes of the antiforms. We find isotopic evidence for both the regional hydrothermal activity along the antiforms and the more intense fluid flow around synmetamorphic plutons. The evidence for hydrothermal activity around the plutons is large heavy isotope depletions, up to 6–9‰ in δ18Ocarb and δ13Ccarb, in diopside zone rocks adjacent to the plutons. These isotopic shifts are greater than can be explained solely by prograde metamorphic reactions. We find two lines of evidence for the more diffuse regional flow that was focused into axes of the antiforms. First, δ18Ocarb and δ13Ccarb, within individual outcrops become increasingly homogeneous with increasing grade towards antiform axes, indicating that the rocks equilibrated with a permeating fluid. Second, there are depletions in 18O near the margins of the Waits River Formation which can be interpreted as a dispersed, advective infiltration front displaced toward the antiform axes. These fronts were modelled using Eq. 13 of Bickle and Baker and imply time-integrated fluid of 105–106 cm3/cm2, which are consistent with values derived by Ferry from measured progress of prograde devolatilization reactions.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 7
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Contributions to mineralogy and petrology 124 (1996), S. 235-254 
    ISSN: 1432-0967
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract  Siliceous dolomites and limestones contain abundant retrograde minerals produced by hydration-carbonation reactions as the aureole cooled. Marbles that contained periclase at the peak of metamorphism bear secondary brucite, dolomite, and serpentine; forsterite-dolomite marbles have retrograde tremolite and serpentine; wollastonite limestones contain secondary calcite and quartz; and wollastonite-free limestones have retrograde tremolite. Secondary tremolite never appears in marbles where brucite has replaced periclase or in wollastonite-bearing limestones. A model for infiltration of siliceous carbonates by CO2-H2O fluid that assumes (a) vertical upwardly-directed flow, (b) fluid flux proportional to cooling rate, and (c) flow and reaction under conditions of local equilibrium between peak temperatures and ≈400 °C, reproduces the modes of altered carbonate rocks, observed reaction textures, and the incompatibility between tremolite and brucite and between tremolite and wollastonite. Except for samples from a dolomite xenolith, retrograde time-integrated flux recorded by reaction progress is on the order of 1000 mol fluid/cm2 rock. Local focusing of flow near the contact is indicated by samples from the xenolith that record values an order of magnitude greater. Formation of periclase, forsterite, and wollastonite at the peak of metamorphism also required infiltration with prograde time-integrated flux approximately 100–1000 mol/cm2. The comparatively small values of prograde and retrograde time-integrated flux are consistent with lack of stable isotope alteration of the carbonates and with the success of conductive thermal models in reproducing peak metamorphic temperatures recorded by mineral equilibria. Although isobaric univariant assemblages are ubiquitous in the carbonates, most formed during retrograde metamorphism. Isobaric univariant assemblages observed in metacarbonates from contact aureoles may not record physical conditions at the peak of metamorphism as is commonly assumed.
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  • 8
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Contributions to mineralogy and petrology 124 (1996), S. 334-345 
    ISSN: 1432-0967
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract  A one-dimensional model for coupled heat flow, fluid flow, and mineral reaction predicts the identity and spatial and temporal distributions of mineral assemblages produced during contact metamorphism of siliceous dolomite. Results are compared to mineral distributions predicted by transport models for fluid flow along steady-state temperature profiles and to mineral distributions observed in contact aureoles to assess whether a detailed analysis of heat flow is required to extract meaningful information of fluid flow history from field data. Results identify several mineral assemblages whose interpretation in terms of fluid flow is dependent on an understanding of their thermal history. Certain key mineral assemblages, however, are sensitive records of the geometry and amount of fluid flow but are insensitive to thermal history. The presence or absence of these mineral assemblages constrains the history of fluid flow during contact metamorphism of siliceous dolomite regardless of the details of heat flow. Occurrences of the key assemblages record both magmatic fluid flow in the direction of decreasing temperature (Alta, Elkhorn aureoles) and metamorphic fluid flow in the direction of increasing temperature (Beinn an Dubhaich, Kasuga-mura aureoles) during contact metamorphism. Time-integrated input fluid flux averages on the order of 100 mol/cm2 with a range of ±1 order of magnitude.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 9
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Contributions to mineralogy and petrology 128 (1997), S. 313-334 
    ISSN: 1432-0967
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Periclase formed in steeply dipping marbles from the Beinn an Dubhaich aureole, Scotland, and the Silver Star aureole, Montana, by the reaction dolomite = periclase + calcite + CO2. Equilibrium between rock and fluids with X CO 2 〈 1 requires that reaction was infiltration-driven. Brucite pseudomorphs after periclase occur in the Beinn an Dubhaich aureole either as bed-by-bed replacement of dolomite or in a lens along the contact between dolomite and a pre-metamorphic dike. Transport theory predicts that infiltration drove both periclase reaction and 18O-depletion fronts which moved at significantly different velocities along the flow path. The distributions of brucite and 18O-depleted rocks are identical in surface exposures, thus indicating upward flow. Time-integrated flux (q) was 〈500 mol/cm2 and the fluid source was magmatic. Because periclase and its hydrated equivalent brucite are unaltered to dolomite by retrograde reactions, the exposure of brucite marbles accurately images the flow paths of peak metamorphic fluids. In the Silver Star aureole brucite pseudomorphs after periclase exclusively occur in tabular bodies that are beds with elevated Mg/Ca. The spatial pattern of 18O-depletion requires upward vertical fluid flow. Estimated prograde q ≈ 103–104 mol/cm2 and the fluid source was magmatic. Low Mg/Ca, 18O-depleted, brucite-free rocks pose a dilemma because the periclase reaction front should have traveled ≈18 times further through them than the isotope alteration front. The dilemma is resolved by reaction textures that indicate periclase and brucite were destroyed in low Mg/Ca rocks by infiltration-driven retrograde carbonation reactions. Values of retrograde q were ≈103–104 mol/cm2. Brucite (after periclase) was preserved only in high Mg/Ca layers where periclase developed in greater abundance. The geometry of brucite marbles at Silver Star thus reflects the location of high Mg/Ca beds rather than the geometry of fluid flow. Retrograde reactions must be considered before the mineralogical record of prograde fluid flow can correctly be interpreted. In both aureoles fluid flow, mineral reaction, and isotope depletion were structurally controlled by bedding and lithologic contacts.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 10
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Contributions to mineralogy and petrology 130 (1998), S. 358-378 
    ISSN: 1432-0967
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract The mineralogy and O-isotope geochemistry of siliceous limestones from the Ritter Range pendant constrain the geometry and amount of fluid flow during contact metamorphism associated with emplacement of a pluton of the Sierra Nevada Batholith. Wollastonite (Wo) replaces calcite (Cal) + quartz (Qtz) on a layer-by-layer basis in homoclinal beds that strike NW and dip almost vertically. At the peak of metamorphism (P≈ 1500 bars, T≈ 600 °C) fluid in equilibrium with Cal, Qtz, and Wo has composition XCO2=0.28, requiring that the Wo-forming reaction was driven by infiltration of reactive H2O-rich fluid. The spatial distribution of Wo and Cal + Qtz records that peak metamorphic fluid flow was layer-parallel, upward. Bounds on the prograde time-integrated fluid flux associated with formation of Wo are set by: (1) the overlap in O-isotope composition between Wo-bearing and Wo-free rocks (〉245 mol fluid/cm2 rock); (2) the amount of fluid that would drive the Wo-reaction front upward to the present level of exposure from a point at depth where Cal, Qtz, and Wo would be in equilibrium with pure CO2 (〈1615 mol/cm2). Back-reaction of Wo to Cal + Qtz records an additional time-integrated retrograde fluid flux of ≈ 200–1000 mol/cm2. The direction and amount of flow inferred from mineralogical and isotopic data agree with the results of the hydrologic model for metamorphic fluid flow in the area of Hanson et al. (1993). Fingers of Wo-bearing rock that extend farthest from the fluid source along contacts between limestone and more siliceous rocks point to strong control of flow geometry at the 0.1–100 m scale exerted by premetamorphic structures. Studies that neglect structural control at this scale may fail to predict correctly fundamental aspects of contact metamorphic fluid flow.
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