Metasomatism during subduction: products and possible paths in the Catalina Schist, California
On Santa Catalina Island, southern California, lawsonite-albite to amphibolite facies metasedimentary, metamafic, and metaultramafic rocks show veining and chemical alteration that reflect fluid flow and mass transfer at 15 to 45 km depths in an Early Cretaceous subduction zone. In many exposures, m...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Chemical geology 1993-08, Vol.108 (1), p.61-92 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | On Santa Catalina Island, southern California, lawsonite-albite to amphibolite facies metasedimentary, metamafic, and metaultramafic rocks show veining and chemical alteration that reflect fluid flow and mass transfer at 15 to 45 km depths in an Early Cretaceous subduction zone. In many exposures, multiple generations of cross-cutting syn- and post-kinematic veins record fluid transport and metasomatism during various stages of prograde metamorphism and uplift. Mineralogy and whole-rock compositions demonstrate chemical redistribution, especially of Si, Al, and alkali elements (Na, K), but also of many trace elements, particularly B and LILE (Rb, Cs, Sr, and Ba). Evidence exists for mass transfer, at both local and larger scales, via mechanical mixing, diffusional, and fluid-mediated transfer processes. Highest-grade, amphibolite facies rocks contain feldspar + quartz ± mica ± amphibole leucosomes and pegmatites attributed to migmatization; the leucosomes and pegmatites reflect
high-
P
T
mass transfer in felsic silicate liquids.
Veining and replacement in blueschist grade rocks comprise three contrasting types of assemblages: (1) silica-saturated (quartz-rich), (2) potassic (white-mica ± quartz-rich), and (3) sodic and silica-undersaturated (albite/Na-amphibole-rich, quartz-absent). Evidence for silicification and alkali exchange also occurs in greenschist and amphibolite facies units. In all units, the evidence for metasomatism (e.g., veins; stable isotope homogenization; rinds on blocks) is particularly abundant in melange zones, in which melange matrix compositions resulting from mechanical mixtures of mafic, ultramafic, and sedimentary rocks were shifted by metasomatic additions and subtractions during melange formation. Geochemical evidence (particularly stable isotope data) indicates that the blueschist, greenschist, and amphibolite units exchanged with fluids of similar compositions.
The diverse metasomatic features in the Catalina Schist provide evidence regarding fluid sources and paths. Based on the stable isotope data, the H
2O-rich, low-salinity (∼ 1 to 2 equivalent wt. % NaCl), C/1bO/1bH/1bS/1bN fluids are believed to have been derived from low-grade, largely sedimentary parts of the subduction zone (analogs for fluid sources are the low-grade units). Metasomatic changes could be driven by flow across boundaries between contrasting lithologies and by variations in pressure and temperature along the fluid flow paths. Simple predictions of mass |
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ISSN: | 0009-2541 1872-6836 |
DOI: | 10.1016/0009-2541(93)90318-D |