METAMORPHIC EVOLUTION OF ECLOGITE AND ASSOCIATED GARNET-MICA SCHIST IN THE HIGH-PRESSURE METAMORPHIC MAKSYUTOV COMPLEX, URAL, RUSSIA

dc.contributor.authorSchulte B.
dc.contributor.authorBlumel P.
dc.date.accessioned2021-01-11T02:44:30Z
dc.date.available2021-01-11T02:44:30Z
dc.date.issued1999
dc.description.abstractMetasedimentary garnet-mica schists are interlayered with metabasic garnet-omphacite schists and enclose eclogite boudins in the high-pressure metamorphic Maksyutov complex in the Southern Urals, Russia. These three rock types were investigated in one outcrop and compared chemographically and thermobarometrically. The Fe/Mg distributions between garnet rim-omphacite and garnet rim-phengite pairs indicate different equilibration temperatures for the three samples, with the lowest temperature (500°C, >1.5 GPa) for the eclogite boudin, an intermediate temperature (630°C, >1.7 GPa) for the foliated eclogite and the highest temperature (650°C, >1.7 GPa) for the garnet-mica schist. The garnets in garnet-mica schist enclose abundant chloritoid relics and the Fe/Mg distribution between chloritoid and garnet records an earlier high-temperature stage (650°C, >2.0 GPa) before the garnet rim-phengite temperatures were reached. Together with some minimum- and maximum-pressure estimates three different prograde pressure-temperature paths and a common retrograde metamorphic evolution are interpreted from the chemographic and thermobarometric data. The different early metamorphic evolutions and conditions confirm the variability of protoliths, which are also indicated by different U/Pb zircon and rutile ages.
dc.identifierhttps://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=1018718
dc.identifier.citationInternational Journal of Earth Sciences, 1999, , 4, 561-576
dc.identifier.issn1437-3254
dc.identifier.urihttps://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/22584
dc.subjectURAL
dc.subjectMAKSYUTOV COMPLEX
dc.subjectGARNET
dc.subjectCHLORITOID
dc.subjectT PATH
dc.titleMETAMORPHIC EVOLUTION OF ECLOGITE AND ASSOCIATED GARNET-MICA SCHIST IN THE HIGH-PRESSURE METAMORPHIC MAKSYUTOV COMPLEX, URAL, RUSSIA
dc.typeСтатья

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