Metamorphism Changes in rocks due to increasing P-T conditions and/or interaction with fluids.

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Metamorphism Changes in rocks due to increasing P-T conditions and/or interaction with fluids.

Transcript of Metamorphism Changes in rocks due to increasing P-T conditions and/or interaction with fluids.

Page 1: Metamorphism Changes in rocks due to increasing P-T conditions and/or interaction with fluids.

Metamorphism• Changes in rocks due to increasing P-T conditions and/or interaction with fluids.

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Importance

1. Mineral Resources

2. Mountain Building Events

3. History of Continental Crust

Uncut Ruby and SapphireOldest rocks on the Earth

(4.0 billion year old gneiss from Northern Canada)

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Metamorphism usually involves changes in:

• mineralogy formation of new metamorphic minerals

• texture development of metamorphic “fabrics”

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Mineralogical Changes

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Textural Changes

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Metamorphic Conditions

• All changes occur in the SOLID state between ~100C and 800 C

“Solid State Recrystallization” = Metamorphism

• Metamorphic “Grade” refers to general P-T conditions

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• High-temperature limit grades into partial melting migmatites (“mixed rocks”)

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Agents of Metamorphism

• Temperature:

depends on geothermal gradient (avg. 30°C/km)

• Pressure: 1. lithostatic - uniform P, due to weight of overlying

rock; 1 kb (0.1 GPa) = 3.3 km depth.

2. differential - unequal P in different directions; produces metamorphic rock fabrics

• Fluids: H2O-dominated ± CO2. Derived from metamorphic reactions (internal) or magmatic fluids (external).

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Types of Metamorphism

Two main types at tectonically active regions:

(1) Contact Metamorphism (2) Regional Metamorphism

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Contact Metamorphism• thermal metamorphism due

to heat of igneous intrusions

• narrow zones (<1 km wide)

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Regional Metamorphism

• Large, regional areas of crust affected (thousands of km2); one or more episodes of orogeny with combined elevated geothermal gradients and deformation

• Associated with mountain building processes at convergent plate boundaries (subduction zones; collision zones)

Examples: Andes, Himalayas, Appalachians

• Full range of P-T metamorphic conditions; foliated rocks are a characteristic product

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Variable P-T Conditions in a Convergent Plate Setting

Low P, high T (contact)

high P and T (regional)

high P, low T (“blueschist”)

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Non-foliated

Foliated

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Slaty Cleavage

Common Metamorphic Fabrics

Schistocity

Gneissic Banding

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Origin of Metamorphic Foliation

Produced by differential stress

Compressive

Shearing

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Granite Granitic Gneiss

Rotation and flattening of platy (clays, micas) or elongate minerals (hornblende, feldspars)

Origin of Metamorphic Foliation

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“Protolith” = parent rock type prior to metamorphism

Broad Compositional Categories

based on mineralogy and textures ultimately inherited from the “protolith”.

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Quartz Sandstone

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(a) Limestone (fiossiliferous)

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Shale Schist

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IMPORTANT CONCEPT:

Metamorphic assemblages are a function of P-T and protolith chemistry

Different protoliths will yield different mineral assemblages at the same P-T conditions

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3 Most Important Compositional Categories

1. Pelites: protolith = Al-rich, fine-grained clastic sediments (shales, siltstones). Classic slate-phyllite-schist-gneiss sequence.

2. Calcareous: protolith = carbonate rocks (limestones, dolostones, shaly ls). Marbles, calc-silicate rocks.

3. Mafic and Ultramafic: protolith = ultramafic to mafic igneous rocks. Greenstones, amphibolites, granulites.

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metamorphic grade (low, intermediate, high) is the most basic way to classify based on P-T

P-T Classification

BUT, we can be more specific than that!

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P-T diagram showing “Metamorphic Facies”

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Metamorphic Facies are broad characterizations of the P-T conditions experienced by metamorphic rocks in an area. They are represented by “fields” or “polygons” on a P-T diagram.

If we find rocks in the field with a particular mineralogy, then a certain facies (P-T conditions) may be assigned to the area.

Adirondacks, NY

NJ Highlands rocks

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• Facies are defined by distinctive mineral assemblages

• Facies boundaries are defined by important mineral reactions and the disappearance/appearance of distinctive minerals.

Protolith = mafic igneous rocks