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Crystallization and Breakdown of Metasomatic Phases in Graphite-bearing Peridotite Xenoliths from Marsabit (Kenya)
Auteur(s)
Date de parution
2007
In
Journal of Petrology, Oxford University Press, 2007/48/9/1725-1760
Résumé
Mantle-derived xenoliths from the Marsabit shield volcano (eastern flank of the Kenya rift) include porphyroclastic spinel peridotites characterized by variable styles of metasomatism. The petrography of the xenoliths indicates a transition from primary clinopyroxene-bearing cryptically metasomatized harzburgite (light rare earth element, U, and Th enrichment in clinopyroxene) to modally metasomatized clinopyroxene-free harzburgite and dunite. The metasomatic phases include amphibole (low-Ti Mg-katophorite), Na-rich phlogopite, apatite, graphite and metasomatic low-Al orthopyroxene. Transitional samples show that metasomatism led to replacement of clinopyroxene by amphibole. In all modally metasomatized xenoliths melt pockets (silicate glass containing silicate and oxide micro-phenocrysts, carbonates and empty vugs) occur in close textural relationship with the earlier metasomatic phases. The petrography, major and trace element data, together with constraints from thermobarometry and fO<sub>2</sub> calculations, indicate that the cryptic and modal metasomatism are the result of a single event of interaction between peridotite and an orthopyroxene-saturated volatile-rich silicate melt. The unusual style of metasomatism (composition of amphibole, presence of graphite, formation of orthopyroxene) reflects low <i>P –T</i> conditions (~850–1000°C at < 1•5 GPa) in the wall-rocks during impregnation and locally low oxygen fugacities. The latter allowed the precipitation of graphite from CO<sub>2</sub>. The inferred melt was possibly derived from alkaline basic melts by melt–rock reaction during the development of the Tertiary–Quaternary Kenya rift. Glass-bearing melt pockets formed at the expense of the early phases, mainly through incongruent melting of amphibole and orthopyroxene, triggered by infiltration of a CO<sub>2</sub>-rich fluid and heating related to the magmatic activity that ultimately sampled and transported the xenoliths to the surface.
Identifiants
Type de publication
journal article