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Anatexis and fluid regime of the deep continental crust: New clues from melt and fluid inclusions in metapelitic migmatites from Ivrea Zone ( NW Italy)
Author(s) -
Carvalho Bruna B.,
Bartoli Omar,
Ferri Fabio,
Cesare Bernardo,
Ferrero Silvio,
Remusat Laurent,
Capizzi Luca S.,
Poli Stefano
Publication year - 2019
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/jmg.12463
Subject(s) - geology , anatexis , metamorphic facies , geochemistry , muscovite , biotite , fluid inclusions , melt inclusions , microcline , mineralogy , plagioclase , andradite , quartz , partial melting , olivine , facies , crust , skarn , paleontology , structural basin
We investigate the inclusions hosted in peritectic garnet from metapelitic migmatites of the Kinzigite Formation (Ivrea Zone, NW Italy) to evaluate the starting composition of the anatectic melt and fluid regime during anatexis throughout the upper amphibolite facies, transition, and granulite facies zones. Inclusions have negative crystal shapes, sizes from 2 to 10 μm and are regularly distributed in the core of the garnet. Microstructural and micro‐Raman investigations indicate the presence of two types of inclusions: crystallized silicate melt inclusions (i.e., nanogranitoids, NI ), and fluid inclusions ( FI ). Microstructural evidence suggests that FI and NI coexist in the same cluster and are primary (i.e., were trapped simultaneously during garnet growth). FI have similar compositions in the three zones and comprise variable proportions of CO 2 , CH 4 , and N 2 , commonly with siderite, pyrophyllite, and kaolinite, suggesting a COHN composition of the trapped fluid. The mineral assemblage in the NI contains K‐feldspar, plagioclase, quartz, biotite, muscovite, chlorite, graphite and, rarely, calcite. Polymorphs such as kumdykolite, cristobalite, tridymite, and less commonly kokchetavite, were also found. Rehomogenized NI from the different zones show that all the melts are leucogranitic but have slightly different compositions. In samples from the upper amphibolite facies, melts are less mafic (FeO + MgO = 2.0–3.4 wt%), contain 860–1700 ppm CO 2 and reach the highest H 2 O contents (6.5–10 wt%). In the transition zone melts have intermediate H 2 O (4.8–8.5 wt%), CO 2 (457–1534 ppm) and maficity (FeO + MgO = 2.3–3.9 wt%). In contrast, melts at granulite facies reach highest CaO, FeO + MgO (3.2–4.7 wt%), and CO 2 (up to 2,400 ppm), with H 2 O contents comparable (5.4–8.3 wt%) to the other two zones. Our results represent the first clear evidence for carbonic fluid‐present melting in the Ivrea Zone. Anatexis of metapelites occurred through muscovite and biotite breakdown melting in the presence of a COH fluid, in a situation of fluid–melt immiscibility. The fluid is assumed to have been internally derived, produced initially by devolatilization of hydrous silicates in the graphitic protolith, then as a result of oxidation of carbon by consumption of Fe 3+ ‐bearing biotite during melting. Variations in the compositions of the melts are interpreted to result from higher T of melting. The H 2 O contents of the melts throughout the three zones are higher than usually assumed for initial H 2 O contents of anatectic melts. The CO 2 contents are highest at granulite facies, and show that carbon‐contents of crustal magmas are not negligible at high T . The activity of H 2 O of the fluid dissolved in granitic melts decreases with increasing metamorphic grade. Carbonic fluid‐present melting of the deep continental crust represents, together with hydrate‐breakdown melting reactions, an important process in the origin of crustal anatectic granitoids.