SERPENTINITES IN AN ALPINE CONVERGENT SETTING: EFFECTS OF METAMORPHIC GRADE AND DEFORMATION ON MICROSTRUCTURES

dc.contributor.authorAuzende A.-L.
dc.contributor.authorBaronnet A.
dc.contributor.authorGuillot S.
dc.contributor.authorDevouard B.
dc.date.accessioned2024-09-28T07:10:28Z
dc.date.available2024-09-28T07:10:28Z
dc.date.issued2006
dc.description.abstractAlpine antigorite serpentinites associated with eclogites were investigated to determine if they can be used as indicators of the tectono-metamorphic conditions during subduction and exhumation processes. The detailed petrology of serpentinites sampled in the Monviso massif (Western Alps, Italy) was combined with a transmission electron microscopy study. Alpine serpentinites display a degree of serpentinization close to 100%. Antigorite is the main mineral present, forming non-pseudomorphic textures in the various studied samples and exhibiting a homogeneous chemical composition with limited cationic substitutions. Considering its oceanic origin, the Alpine serpentinite in the Monviso massif formed a lizardite + chrysotile assemblage that recrystallized under greenschist-facies conditions into poorly ordered antigorite, with a modulation wavelength showing significant variations at the crystal scale. Under blueschist-facies conditions, the modulation wavelength of antigorite becomes regular. Thus, periodic antigorites can be related to high-grade conditions, while poorly ordered antigorites characterize lower metamorphic grade. In the present study, we failed to observe any elimination of structural defects with increasing metamorphic grade. While around 50% of the antigorite crystals are highly ordered, it seems that this ordering is at least partly obliterated by retrogressive deformation. Antigorite displays strong evidence of deformation-sensitivity, and the observed microstructures can be directly related to the mechanical behaviour of serpentinites in subduction zones. We investigated the deformation-induced microstructures in serpentinites collected in the Erro-Tobbio eclogitic unit (Ligurian Alps, Italy), which appear to preserve prograde and retrograde structures formed during subduction. According to the microstructural evidence, shearing is accommodated by brittle and/or ductile deformation mechanisms. Collected samples were fractured at different scales (cm to nm) and have a well-developed schistosity characterized by a strong crystallographic fabric. With increasing metamorphic grade, the brittle behaviour gives way to pressure-solution, which persists up to eclogite-facies conditions. The common obliteration of high-grade microstructures in antigorite, as observed in the Monviso serpentinites, results from continuous recrystallization of this mineral during retrogressive deformation. © 2006 E. Schweizerbart'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung.
dc.identifierhttps://www.elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=14465676
dc.identifier.citationEuropean Journal of Mineralogy, 2006, 18, 1, 21-33
dc.identifier.doi10.1127/0935-1221/2006/0018-0021
dc.identifier.issn0935-1221
dc.identifier.urihttps://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/45422
dc.subjectANTIGORITE
dc.subjectDEFORMATION
dc.subjectHP-LT METAMORPHISM
dc.subjectMICROSTRUCTURES
dc.subjectPRESSURE SOLUTION
dc.subjectSERPENTINITE
dc.titleSERPENTINITES IN AN ALPINE CONVERGENT SETTING: EFFECTS OF METAMORPHIC GRADE AND DEFORMATION ON MICROSTRUCTURES
dc.typeСтатья

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