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Publicly Available Published by De Gruyter November 13, 2015

Experimental phase-equilibrium study of Al- and Ti-contents of calcic amphibole in MORB—A semiquantitative thermobarometer

  • W.G. Ernst EMAIL logo and Jun Liu
From the journal American Mineralogist

Abstract

Calcic amphiboles were synthesized from a natural mid-ocean ridge basalt (MORB) in 39 experiments representing 24 sets of pressure-temperature (P-T) conditions ranging from 650-950 °C, 0.8-2.2 GPa, at ƒO₂ controlled by the fayalite-magnetite-quartz (FMQ) buffer, and Paqueous fluid = Ptotal. Experiments lasted up to 1630 h at low temperatures; in all cases, synthesized hornblendes were coarse-grained (5-7 × 10-15 μm) and chemically homogeneous. Over the investigated pressure range, Ca-amphibole coexisting with phases rich in Al and Ti gradually changes composition from sodic-calcic, Si-rich at low temperatures to calcic, Si-poor at high temperatures: it is barroisite at 650 °C, edenite at 700 °C, and pargasite at 800-950 °C. Electron microprobe data were combined with 41 comparable analyses from the literature for Ca-amphiboles synthesized from MORBs at intermediate ƒO₂ in order to erect a petrogenetic grid for the experimental range 0.0-2.2 GPa, 450-1050 °C. Isopleths for Al2O3 in Ca-amphibole exhibit markedly negative P-T slopes, indicating increasing Al2O3 contents with both P and T. In contrast, TiO2 isopleths are nearly independent of P, demonstrating that TiO2 in Ca-amphibole increases almost exclusively as a function of T. For natural metabasaltic assemblages that contain coexisting Al-rich and Tirich phases, and closely approached chemical equilibrium under crustal or uppermost mantle conditions, this semiquantitative petrogenetic grid allows the simultaneous assignment of attendant P and T employing Ca-amphibole Al2O3 and TiO2 contents. However, during slow cooling, natural Ca-amphiboles may exsolve TiO2 as rutile, titanite, and/or ilmenite, but in general do not redistribute Al2O3, so this thermobarometer must be applied with caution to inhomogeneous specimens.

Received: 1997-7-21
Accepted: 1998-5-7
Published Online: 2015-11-13
Published in Print: 1998-9-1

© 2015 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston

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