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  • 1
    In: Geowissenschaften, Berlin : Ernst & Sohn, 1988, 15(1997), 9, Seite 306-309, 0933-0704
    In: volume:15
    In: year:1997
    In: number:9
    In: pages:306-309
    Type of Medium: Article
    Pages: Ill.
    ISSN: 0933-0704
    Language: German
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2018-12-20
    Description: Thermal Ionization Mass Spectrometry (TIMS) and Synchrotron X-Ray Fluoresence (SYXRF) are two methods for analyzing the isotope and trace element compositions of geological materials (e.g. rocks and fluids), in order to reconstruct their origin and history. We present several examples of how geological problems can be solved using these analytical methods: 1) age-dating of the oceanic crust beneath Gran Canaria (Canary Islands) using the Sm-Nd isotopic system, 2) tracing the origin of volcanic seamounts, ridges and ophiolites along the Pacific margin of Costa Rica with radiogenic isotope systems (Sr, Nd and Pb), 3) evaluating the role of seawater alteration on the composition of the oceanic crust using B isotopes, and 4) determining the input of halogens and other elements into the stratosphere during volcanic eruptions and assessing their effect on the ozone layer.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 3
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    Elsevier
    In:  Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors, 69 (3-4). pp. 176-206.
    Publication Date: 2019-05-08
    Description: Teleseismic P-wave travel time residuals recorded by a mobile, shortperiod network are interpreted using the composition of crustal and upper mantle xenoliths. A three-dimensional inversion of the P residuals revealed a small-scale anomalous domain with a velocity reduction of 3% in the crust and a broad low-velocity anomaly of 4% beneath the Moho down to a depth of 50 km. Xenoliths of the Miocene Urach volcanic field (“UVF”, 1300 km2; 355 eruptive centres, mostly diatremes) comprise phlogopite-bearing, clinopyroxene-rich mantle xenoliths, evidence for large ion lithophile element (LIL) metasomatism in an originally depleted harzburgitic mantle, reflecting chemical modification of the upper mantle beneath the UVF. The metasomatism caused partial melting in the spinel peridotite stability field, indicated by glasses in xenoliths, and a diapiric uprise of the partially molten metasomatized mantle. The observed reduction of the P-wave velocity of 4% in the lithospheric mantle can be explained by a local enrichment of phlogopite accompanied by increased temperatures. The crustal low-velocity body coincides very well with the postulated volume of an ancient intracrustal magma chamber or system of chambers required by the composition of xenoliths, the magnetization of the diatremes and the spatial distribution of the volcanic eruption centres.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-05-08
    Description: Crustal xenoliths in three Cenozoic volcanic fields of West Germany, the Northern Hessian Depression (NHD), the Eifel and the Urach/Hegau, include medium to high-grade meta sedimentary and felsic to mafic meta-igneous rocks. Also present in all three suites are pyroxenites and hornblendites. For each volcanic field, a model crustal profile is proposed based on calculated or measured P-wave velocities of xenoliths and depth-Vp relationships (EGT Central Segment and Rhenish Massif traverses). The xenolith lithologies from the NHD and the Eifel show some similarities. The middle crust between the depths of about 10 and 25 km consists mainly of meta-sediments, felsic gneisses and granulites. Meta-sedimentary rock types are particularly abundant in the Eifel at depths of between about 5 and 15 km but are less common within the NHD xenolith collection. The felsic gneisses range from meta-granites to meta-tonalites (I-and S-type). Eifel meta-sediments range from meta-pelites to meta-greywackes and meta-quartzites. The NHD xenolith suite contains a few highly depleted granulite-facies meta-sedimentary fragments. At depths between 24 and 26 km, the increase in Vp from about 6.8 to 〉 8 km s−1 (28–34 km) is correlated with the presence of mafic granulites intercalated with eclogites, pyroxenites and hornblendites. Beneath North Hessia, the granulite layer problably grades into a composite eclogite-peridotite layer at the lower part of this transition zone. The crust beneath the Urach/Hegau consists largely of meta-sediments with subordinate felsic meta-igneous rocks. Most of the meta-sedimentary samples seem to be depleted in felsic components, suggesting intra-crustal differentiation by partial melting. The Urach crust contains lithologies which are similar to the outcropping Moldanubian-type para-gneisses of the Black Forest. Mafic and ultramafic xenoliths from the Urach/Hegau differ in their mineralogy and chemical composition from the Eifel and NHD mafic granulites. They represent meta-cumulates derived from alkaline magmas which intruded the base of the crust and underwent deformation and recrystallization. Petrographic and chemical differences between Urach/Hegau and Eifel/NHD are believed to reflect the contrasting styles of crustal evolution in the Rhenohercynian and the Moldanubian belts of the Variscan orogen.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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