Crustal melting and granite magmatism: Key issues

被引:72
|
作者
Brown, M [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Maryland, Dept Geol, Lab Crustal Petrol, College Pk, MD 20742 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1016/S1464-1895(01)00047-3
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
The thermal and theological structure of orogens determines their mechanical behaviour. Collisional orogens are characterized by a clockwise P-T evolution, which means that in the core, where temperatures exceed the wet solidus for common crustal rocks, melt may be present during orogenesis. Field observations of eroded orogens show that middle crust is migmatitic, and geophysical observations have been interpreted to suggest the presence of melt in active orogens. Indeed, the vol. % melt in some active orogens has been estimated by conductivity modelling, assuming that melt is the cause of the anomalies recorded in the data and based on laboratory experiments to calibrate the models. A consequence of these results is that orogenic collapse in mature orogens may be controlled by a partially-molten layer that decouples weak crust from subducting lithosphere, and such a weak layer may enable exhumation of deeply buried crust. Field observations in ancient orogens show that melt segregation and extraction are syntectonic processes, and that melt migration pathways commonly relate to rock fabrics. These processes are being investigated using analog and numerical models. Leucosomes in depleted migmatites record the remnant permeability network, but evolution of permeability networks and amplification of anomalies are poorly understood. Melt segregation and extraction may be cyclic or continuous, depending on the level of applied differential stress and rate of melt pressure buildup. During the clockwise P-T evolution, H2O is transferred from protolith to melt as rocks cross dehydration melting reactions, and H2O may be evolved at low P by crossing supra-solidus decompression-dehydration reactions if micas remain in the depleted prototith. The presence of crystallizing melt or H2O may enable reaction during cooling. However, metasomatism in the evolution of the crust remains a contentious issue. Processes in the lowermost crust may De inferred from studies of xenolith suites brought to the surface in lavas. Using geochemical data, statistical methods and modeling may be applied to evaluate whether migmatites are sources or magma transfer zones for granites, or simply segregated melt that was stagnant in residue, and to compare xenoliths of inferred lower crust with exposed deep crust. Upper crustal granites are a necessary complement to melt-depleted granulites common in the lower crust, but the role of mafic magma in crustal melting remains uncertain. Plutons occur at various depths above and below the brittle-to-viscous transition in the crust and have a variety of 3-D shapes that may vary systematically with depth. The switch from ascent to emplacement may be caused by amplification of instabilities within (permeability, magma flow rate) or surrounding (strength or state of stress) the ascent column, or by the ascending magma intersecting some discontinuity in the crust. Pluton emplacement mechanics are being investigated by modeling. Feedback relations among these processes map moderate compatibility between rates of pluton filling, magma ascent and melt extraction. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science Ltd. Aii rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:201 / 212
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Paleogene granite magmatism in the north of the Truong Son belt and implication for crustal evolution
    Huan, Trinh Dinh
    Tri, Luu Cong
    Anh, Nguyen Tuan
    Anh, Tran Viet
    Giang, Phan Hoang
    Takahashi, Nagi
    Saadsy, Boua Lay
    VIETNAM JOURNAL OF EARTH SCIENCES, 2021, 43 (04): : 444 - 464
  • [2] GRANITE MAGMATISM
    ATHERTON, MP
    JOURNAL OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY, 1993, 150 : 1009 - 1023
  • [3] Isotopic disequilibrium during melting of granite and implications for crustal contamination of magmas
    Knesel, KM
    Davidson, JP
    GEOLOGY, 1996, 24 (03) : 243 - 246
  • [4] Isotopic disequilibrium during melting of granite and implications for crustal contamination of magmas
    Knesel, Kurt M.
    Davidson, Jon P.
    1996, Geological Society of America (24)
  • [5] Granite magmatism and crustal evolution of the Shyok-Darbuk corridor of NE Ladakh, India
    Daga, Megha M.
    Rao, D. Rameshwar
    Rai, Hakim
    EPISODES, 2010, 33 (03): : 183 - 199
  • [6] Magma to mud to magma: Rapid crustal recycling by Permian granite magmatism near the eastern Gondwana margin
    Jeon, Heejin
    Williams, Ian S.
    Chappell, Bruce W.
    EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS, 2012, 319 : 104 - 117
  • [7] From migmatite to magma - crustal melting and generation of granite in the Camboriu Complex, south Brazil
    Martini, Amos
    Bitencourt, Maria de Fatima
    Weinberg, Roberto F.
    De Toni, Giuseppe Betino
    Nardi, Lauro V. S.
    LITHOS, 2019, 340 : 270 - 286
  • [8] Granite magmatism and mantle filiation
    Pichavant, Michel
    Villaros, Arnaud
    Michaud, Julie A. -S.
    Scaillet, Bruno
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF MINERALOGY, 2024, 36 (01) : 225 - 246
  • [9] Magmatism: A crustal and geodynamic perspective
    Ganne, Jerome
    Feng, Xiaojun
    JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY, 2018, 114 : 329 - 335
  • [10] CRUSTAL EVOLUTION BY ARC MAGMATISM
    HAMILTON, W
    PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY A-MATHEMATICAL PHYSICAL AND ENGINEERING SCIENCES, 1981, 301 (1461): : 279 - 291