Saskia Grund, Timm John, Johannes C. Vrijmoed, Håkon Austrheim, Torgeir B. Andersen
{"title":"镁铁质地壳角闪石化的机理研究:来自挪威西部片麻岩地区kr<s:1> keneset辉长岩体的启示","authors":"Saskia Grund, Timm John, Johannes C. Vrijmoed, Håkon Austrheim, Torgeir B. Andersen","doi":"10.1111/jmg.12809","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Fluid–rock interactions play a key role in the formation, evolution and recycling of the Earth's crust. For fluids to infiltrate rocks and enable and sustain fluid-mediated mineral transformations, fluid pathways are required. In this study, we examined the potential mechanisms of formation of such pathways via detailed mineralogical, petrophysical and thermodynamic analysis of a dry, essentially ‘non-porous’ gabbro that was hydrated and transformed into an amphibolite under amphibolite-facies conditions. During a previous regional HP eclogite-facies metamorphism, the gabbro did not equilibrate and preserved almost entirely its igneous textures and magmatic minerals. Rock transformation during amphibolitization was triggered by fluid infiltration through a newly opened N–S striking fracture network. An equally spaced fracture network formed by mode I opening related to the formation of an E–W striking shear zone at the northern and southern borders of the gabbro body. The amphibolitization process allowed the fluid to pervasively infiltrate the rock from the fracture into the pristine gabbro. The essentially fully amphibolitized sample exhibits some unaffected gabbroic mineral relicts. Even though the amphibolitization process led to the formation of ~70 vol.% hydrous phases, it was accompanied by densification and related porosity formation. The modes and compositions of minerals within partly amphibolitized rocks indicate that besides the uptake of H<sub>2</sub>O, no significant mass exchanges were necessary for this transformation, at least on the thin section scale. Thermodynamic modelling and petrological data show that the transition from gabbro to amphibolite favours porosity formation. In the model, the reaction front proceeded as soon as the gabbro at the reactive interfaces of the affected minerals was sufficiently transformed. At this point, fluid was not consumed further but remained as a free fluid phase, which progressed through the newly formed pore space and advanced amphibolitization. Once the gabbro was almost entirely amphibolitized, its mineral content and mineral chemistry no longer changed, so the progress of amphibolitization progress was controlled by fluid availability. This case study shows that fluid–rock interaction leading to hydration of a rock can be efficiently maintained in almost non-permeable, dry and mafic crust and, therefore, strongly affects the petrophysical properties of the Earth's crust.</p>","PeriodicalId":16472,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Metamorphic Geology","volume":"43 4","pages":"385-405"},"PeriodicalIF":3.5000,"publicationDate":"2025-03-17","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/jmg.12809","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"A Mechanistic Look at the Amphibolitization of Mafic Crust: Insights From the Kråkeneset Gabbro Body, Western Gneiss Region, Norway\",\"authors\":\"Saskia Grund, Timm John, Johannes C. Vrijmoed, Håkon Austrheim, Torgeir B. Andersen\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/jmg.12809\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>Fluid–rock interactions play a key role in the formation, evolution and recycling of the Earth's crust. For fluids to infiltrate rocks and enable and sustain fluid-mediated mineral transformations, fluid pathways are required. In this study, we examined the potential mechanisms of formation of such pathways via detailed mineralogical, petrophysical and thermodynamic analysis of a dry, essentially ‘non-porous’ gabbro that was hydrated and transformed into an amphibolite under amphibolite-facies conditions. During a previous regional HP eclogite-facies metamorphism, the gabbro did not equilibrate and preserved almost entirely its igneous textures and magmatic minerals. Rock transformation during amphibolitization was triggered by fluid infiltration through a newly opened N–S striking fracture network. An equally spaced fracture network formed by mode I opening related to the formation of an E–W striking shear zone at the northern and southern borders of the gabbro body. The amphibolitization process allowed the fluid to pervasively infiltrate the rock from the fracture into the pristine gabbro. The essentially fully amphibolitized sample exhibits some unaffected gabbroic mineral relicts. Even though the amphibolitization process led to the formation of ~70 vol.% hydrous phases, it was accompanied by densification and related porosity formation. The modes and compositions of minerals within partly amphibolitized rocks indicate that besides the uptake of H<sub>2</sub>O, no significant mass exchanges were necessary for this transformation, at least on the thin section scale. Thermodynamic modelling and petrological data show that the transition from gabbro to amphibolite favours porosity formation. In the model, the reaction front proceeded as soon as the gabbro at the reactive interfaces of the affected minerals was sufficiently transformed. At this point, fluid was not consumed further but remained as a free fluid phase, which progressed through the newly formed pore space and advanced amphibolitization. Once the gabbro was almost entirely amphibolitized, its mineral content and mineral chemistry no longer changed, so the progress of amphibolitization progress was controlled by fluid availability. 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A Mechanistic Look at the Amphibolitization of Mafic Crust: Insights From the Kråkeneset Gabbro Body, Western Gneiss Region, Norway
Fluid–rock interactions play a key role in the formation, evolution and recycling of the Earth's crust. For fluids to infiltrate rocks and enable and sustain fluid-mediated mineral transformations, fluid pathways are required. In this study, we examined the potential mechanisms of formation of such pathways via detailed mineralogical, petrophysical and thermodynamic analysis of a dry, essentially ‘non-porous’ gabbro that was hydrated and transformed into an amphibolite under amphibolite-facies conditions. During a previous regional HP eclogite-facies metamorphism, the gabbro did not equilibrate and preserved almost entirely its igneous textures and magmatic minerals. Rock transformation during amphibolitization was triggered by fluid infiltration through a newly opened N–S striking fracture network. An equally spaced fracture network formed by mode I opening related to the formation of an E–W striking shear zone at the northern and southern borders of the gabbro body. The amphibolitization process allowed the fluid to pervasively infiltrate the rock from the fracture into the pristine gabbro. The essentially fully amphibolitized sample exhibits some unaffected gabbroic mineral relicts. Even though the amphibolitization process led to the formation of ~70 vol.% hydrous phases, it was accompanied by densification and related porosity formation. The modes and compositions of minerals within partly amphibolitized rocks indicate that besides the uptake of H2O, no significant mass exchanges were necessary for this transformation, at least on the thin section scale. Thermodynamic modelling and petrological data show that the transition from gabbro to amphibolite favours porosity formation. In the model, the reaction front proceeded as soon as the gabbro at the reactive interfaces of the affected minerals was sufficiently transformed. At this point, fluid was not consumed further but remained as a free fluid phase, which progressed through the newly formed pore space and advanced amphibolitization. Once the gabbro was almost entirely amphibolitized, its mineral content and mineral chemistry no longer changed, so the progress of amphibolitization progress was controlled by fluid availability. This case study shows that fluid–rock interaction leading to hydration of a rock can be efficiently maintained in almost non-permeable, dry and mafic crust and, therefore, strongly affects the petrophysical properties of the Earth's crust.
期刊介绍:
The journal, which is published nine times a year, encompasses the entire range of metamorphic studies, from the scale of the individual crystal to that of lithospheric plates, including regional studies of metamorphic terranes, modelling of metamorphic processes, microstructural and deformation studies in relation to metamorphism, geochronology and geochemistry in metamorphic systems, the experimental study of metamorphic reactions, properties of metamorphic minerals and rocks and the economic aspects of metamorphic terranes.