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Water transport by subduction; clues from garnet of Erzgebirge UHP eclogite

Esther Schmaedicke and Juergen Gose
Water transport by subduction; clues from garnet of Erzgebirge UHP eclogite
American Mineralogist (May 2017) 102 (5): 975-986

Abstract

A key question concerning the water budget of Earth's mantle is how much water is actually recycled into the mantle by the subduction of eclogitized oceanic crust. Hydrous phases are stable only in quartz eclogite not coesite eclogite so that water transport to greater depths is mainly governed by structural water in omphacite and garnet. Here we explore if garnet can be used as a proxy to assess the amount of this water. Available data on the water contents of garnet in coesite eclogite vary over orders of magnitude, from a few up to ca. 2000 ppm. By implication, the maximum bulk-rock water contents are unrealistically high (wt% level). New data from the Erzgebirge indicate moderate amounts of structural H (sub 2) O stored in garnet (43-84 ppm), omphacite (400-820 ppm), and in the bulk coesite eclogite (ca. 280-460 ppm). Higher garnet water contents occur, but these are not primary features. They are related to molecular water in fluid inclusions that can be attributed to eclogite-facies fluid influx postdating the metamorphic peak. Fluid influx also caused the uptake of additional structural water in garnet domains close to fluid inclusions. Such secondary H (sub 2) O incorporation is only possible in the case of primary water-deficiency indicating that garnet hosted less water than it was able to store. This is insofar astonishing as comparably high H (sub 2) O amounts are liberated by the breakdown of prograde eclogite-facies hydrous minerals as a result of ultrahigh-pressure (UHP) metamorphism. Judging from Erzgebirge quartz eclogite, dehydration of 5-10% hydrous minerals (+ or -equal portions of zoisite+calcic amphibole) produces 1500-3000 ppm water. We infer that the largest part of the liberated water escaped, probably due to kinetic reasons, and hydrated exhuming UHP slices in the hanging-wall. Depending on the physical conditions, water influx in eclogite during exhumation (1) produces fluid inclusions and simultaneously enhances the structural water content of nominally anhydrous minerals-as in the Erzgebirge-and/or (2) it may give rise to retrograde hydrous minerals. We conclude that eclogite transports moderate quantities of water (several hundred parts per million) to mantle depths beyond 100 km, an amount equivalent to that in ca. 1% calcic amphibole.


ISSN: 0003-004X
EISSN: 1945-3027
Coden: AMMIAY
Serial Title: American Mineralogist
Serial Volume: 102
Serial Issue: 5
Title: Water transport by subduction; clues from garnet of Erzgebirge UHP eclogite
Affiliation: University Erlangen-Nuernberg, GeoZentrum Nordbayern, Erlangen, Germany
Pages: 975-986
Published: 201705
Text Language: English
Publisher: Mineralogical Society of America, Washington, DC, United States
References: 47
Accession Number: 2017-042068
Categories: Igneous and metamorphic petrology
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus. incl. 4 tables
N50°10'00" - N51°00'00", E12°00'00" - E14°10'00"
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2017, American Geosciences Institute. Abstract, copyright, Mineralogical Society of America. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States
Update Code: 201723

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