The Second Hutton Symposium on the Origin of Granites and Related Rocks

Source region of a granite batholith: evidence from lower crustal xenoliths and inherited accessory minerals
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Published:January 01, 1992
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CiteCitation
Calvin F. Miller, John M. Hanchar, Joseph L. Wooden, Victoria C. Bennett, T. Mark Harrison, David A. Wark, David A. Foster, 1992. "Source region of a granite batholith: evidence from lower crustal xenoliths and inherited accessory minerals", The Second Hutton Symposium on the Origin of Granites and Related Rocks, P. E. Brown, B. W. Chappell
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Like many granites, the Late Cretaceous intrusives of the eastern Mojave Desert, California, have heretofore provided useful but poorly focused images of their source regions. New studies of lower crustal xenoliths and inherited accessory minerals are sharpening these images.
Xenoliths in Tertiary dykes in this region are the residues of an extensive partial melting event. Great diversity in their composition reflects initial heterogeneity (both igneous and sedimentary protoliths) and varying amounts of melt extraction (from <10% to >70%). Mineral assemblages and thermobarometry suggest that the melting event occurred at T≥750°C at a depth of about 40 km. Present-day Sr, Nd,...
- accessory minerals
- alkaline earth metals
- anatexis
- batholiths
- California
- Cretaceous
- dikes
- genesis
- geologic barometry
- geologic thermometry
- granites
- igneous rocks
- inclusions
- intrusions
- ion probe data
- isotopes
- lead
- magmas
- mass spectra
- Mesozoic
- metals
- mineral assemblages
- Mojave Desert
- monazite
- nesosilicates
- orthosilicates
- P-T conditions
- partial melting
- Pb-206/Pb-204
- phosphates
- plutonic rocks
- protoliths
- radioactive isotopes
- silicates
- spectra
- Sr-87/Sr-86
- stable isotopes
- strontium
- Th/U
- United States
- Upper Cretaceous
- xenoliths
- xenotime
- zircon
- zircon group
- Old Woman-Piute Batholith