The Monte Maggiore peridotite (Corsica, France): a case study of mantle evolution in the Ligurian Tethys
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Published:January 01, 2010
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CiteCitation
Giovanni B. Piccardo, Luisa Guarnieri, 2010. "The Monte Maggiore peridotite (Corsica, France): a case study of mantle evolution in the Ligurian Tethys", Petrological Evolution of the European Lithospheric Mantle, M. Coltorti, H. Downes, M. Grégoire, S. Y. O’Reilly
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Abstract
The Monte Maggiore peridotite represents subcontinental mantle that underwent tectonic and magmatic evolution during the rifting stage of the Jurassic Ligurian Tethys oceanic basin. Pristine garnet peridotites were first equilibrated under spinel-facies conditions. During continental extension they were diffusely infiltrated by asthenospheric melts that consisted of single fractional melt increments (6% melting degree) showing depleted MORB (mid-ocean ridge basalt) signature. Diffuse melt migration of undersaturated melts at spinel-facies conditions formed reactive spinel peridotites, and melt impregnation at plagioclase-facies conditions formed impregnated plagioclase peridotites. Further focused melt migration occurred within high-porosity dunite channels.
Subsequently, the single melt fractions underwent coalescence...
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Contents
Petrological Evolution of the European Lithospheric Mantle

Several different databases and models have been developed over many years of petrological study carried out by several European and non-European groups on mantle xenoliths, peridotite massifs, ophiolites and mafic magmas spanning in age from Archaean to Recent times. This volume aims to bring together these different approaches and to integrate the geochemical perceptions of the European upper mantle. The papers include regional petrological studies of the European lithospheric mantle, from Spain to the Pannonian Basin, from Corsica and Serbia as far north as Svalbard. Six contributions are based on studies of mantle xenoliths, while the remaining three deal with ophiolitic and peridotitic complexes. A further article provides an update on the textural classification of mantle rocks using a computer-aided approach and there is an introductory overview.