Beard, James S. et al. (2008): Onset and progression of two-stage serpentinization and magnetite formation in olivine-rich troctolite, Core 227, IODP Hole U1309D
Leg/Site/Hole:
Related Expeditions:
IODP 304 U1309 IODP 305 U1309 IODP 340T U1309
Identifier:
ID:
2011-073674
Type:
georefid
Creator:
Name:
Beard, James S.
Affiliation:
Virginia Museum of Natural History, Department of Earth Sciences, Martinsville, VA, United States
Role:
author
Name:
Frost, B. Ronald
Affiliation:
University of Wyoming, United States
Role:
author
Name:
Fryer, Patricia
Affiliation:
University of Hawaii at Honolulu, United States
Role:
author
Identification:
Title:
Onset and progression of two-stage serpentinization and magnetite formation in olivine-rich troctolite, Core 227, IODP Hole U1309D
Year:
2008
Source:
In: Anonymous, Geological Society of America, 2008 annual meeting
Publisher:
Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
Volume:
40
Issue:
6
Pages:
454
Abstract:
Early serpentinization in core 227, IODP Hole U1309D is an approximately isochemical (except for water) replacement of olivine by a mixture of antigorite (Mg#92) and Fe-rich (Mg#65) brucite. The early serpentinite veins (type 1) are thin (<0.05mm) and exploit pre-existing cracks in olivine. Early serpentinization was a high-temperature (>300 degrees C), rock-dominated, event. The second (main) episode of serpentinization produced through-going, mm-scale lizardite(Mg#96)-magnetite veins (type 2). Type 2 veins reflect open system serpentinization whose mineralogy and bulk chemistry requires the addition of silica. Magnetite forms one or more distinct bands in the interior of type 2 veins. At the margins of type 2 veins (i.e. where they are in reaction contact with relict olivine) a brucite-serpentine mixture, similar to that found in type 1 veins, is present. The magnetite-lizardite cores of type 2 veins form by oxidation of the Fe component of this marginal brucite to yield magnetite combined with silicification of the Mg component of brucite to yield a more magnesian serpentine. However, the brucite-out reaction alone cannot account for the composition of the serpentine in the type 2 veins; desilication of ferrous serpentine must also occur. In the core 227 samples olivine in contact with seawater initially reacts to form the low aSiO2 assemblage Fe-rich brucite plus serpentine. Unless isolated from seawater (as in type 1 veins), the brucite then reacts to form magnetite and a magnesian serpentine. Hence, magnetite and olivine are never in contact in these samples. The desilication of serpentine in the type 2 veins is a reflection of the instability of Fe-rich serpentine with respect to magnetite at low silica activity. Thus, the composition of serpentine coexisting with magnetite in serpentinites is a function of serpentine-magnetite and not serpentine-olivine equilibria.
Language:
English
Genre:
Rights:
URL:
Coverage: Geographic coordinates: North:75.0000 West:-80.0000 East:
20.0000 South:-57.0000
Keywords: Igneous and metamorphic petrology; Atlantic Ocean; cores; Expeditions 304/305; gabbros; high temperature; igneous rocks; Integrated Ocean Drilling Program; IODP Site U1309; magnetite; metasomatism; Mid-Atlantic Ridge; mineral composition; nesosilicates; North Atlantic; olivine; olivine group; orthosilicates; oxides; phase equilibria; plutonic rocks; serpentinization; silicates; temperature; troctolite; veins;
.