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Origin and mechanical significance of honeycomb garnet in high‐pressure metasedimentary rocks from the Tauern Window, Eastern Alps
Author(s) -
HAWKINS A. T.,
SELVERSTONE J.,
BREARLEY A. J.,
BEANE R. J.,
KETCHAM R. A.,
CARLSON W. D.
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
journal of metamorphic geology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.639
H-Index - 114
eISSN - 1525-1314
pISSN - 0263-4929
DOI - 10.1111/j.1525-1314.2007.00714.x
Subject(s) - geology , quartz , pressure solution , schist , mineralogy , metamorphic rock , carbonate , fluid inclusions , electron backscatter diffraction , geochemistry , materials science , composite material , microstructure , paleontology , metallurgy
High‐pressure schists (2–2.5 GPa) from the Eclogite Zone in the Tauern Window contain honeycomb garnet in which fine webs of garnet surround strain‐free quartz ± carbonate grains. High‐resolution X‐ray computed tomography shows that the garnet webs form a cellular structure that coats all surfaces of the inclusions. Electron backscatter diffraction analysis shows that the garnet cells are crystallographically continuous with more massive garnet regions, and that the quartz ± carbonate inclusions have random orientations; in contrast, matrix quartz exhibits a prominent crystallographic preferred orientation (CPO). High‐resolution transmission electron microscopy shows few dislocations in either the garnet or the inclusion quartz. Most honeycomb garnet is chemically homogeneous, but some displays asymmetric core–rim zoning. Taken together, these observations are most consistent with formation of the garnet sheets via precipitation from a wetting fluid along quartz–quartz grain boundaries, or possibly via wholesale precipitation of garnet + quartz ± carbonate from a fluid. In either case, a silicate‐rich aqueous fluid must have been present. The likelihood that a fully wetting fluid existed at high pressure has important implications for rheology during subduction of metasedimentary rocks: strain may be accommodated by grain rotation and sliding in an aqueous silicate slurry, rather than via dislocation creep mechanisms at high pressures. The absence of a CPO in early quartz may thus point to involvement of a pervasive grain‐boundary fluid rather than requiring low differential stresses during subduction.