Abstract

Kornerupine ± prismatine is present in granulite-facies paragneiss at two locations in the Grenvillian New Jersey Highlands, occurring in an assemblage composed of quartz + biotite + K-feldspar + plagioclase + garnet + Fe-Ti oxides ± sillimanite ± rutile ± graphite. Estimates of the metamorphic conditions of the host gneiss are ≥600 MPa and ~740 °C during the Ottawan phase of the Grenvillian Orogeny. Geochemical compositions of kornerupine-bearing gneiss are consistent with protoliths that were graywacke sandstone and pelite. Metagraywacke is characterized by (in wt. %) 62–76% SiO2, 0.3–0.8% TiO2, 13–16% Al2O3, 0.6–4.3% CaO, 2.2–6.4% Na2O, 1.7–7.4% K2O, and 90–260 ppm Zr; metapelite has lower SiO2 (53–66%) and CaO (0.5–2.0%), higher TiO2 (0.9–1.8%), Al2O3, (15–26%), and Zr (210–490 ppm), and comparable Na2O (2.5–4.9%) and K2O (2.5–7.4%). Indices of weathering and alteration yield low to intermediate values implying a relatively unweathered sediment source. Provenance discriminants suggest the protoliths formed from immature, first-cycle sediments derived mainly from a felsic arc-related source. The geological relationships of kornerupine-bearing gneiss are most compatible with boron sourced from B-rich sediments deposited in the protoliths between ca. 1299 and 1238 Ma. The breakdown of these sediments due to dehydration reactions during Ottawan prograde metamorphism led to mobilization of a B-rich fluid that migrated short distances to favorable structural sites in the host gneiss, resulting in precipitation of the borosilicates.

Highlights

  • Kornerupine is a complex hydrous magnesium-iron-aluminum borosilicate that has an orthorhombic crystal structure and a boron content of

  • [37], unlike thoseevaporites of typical that marine evaporites that average 25‰ [38]. These lenses are undeformed and lack a penetrative metamorphic fabric, they contain zircon as an early part of the paragenetic sequence that yielded a U-Pb age of these lenses are undeformed and lack a penetrative metamorphic fabric, they contain zircon as an early part of the paragenetic sequence that yielded a U-Pb age of 1040 ± 4 Ma [11], and they crop out tens of km from the kornerupine locations at Ringwood and Mase Mountain, making them an unlikely source of boron in biotite gneiss

  • Rare occurrences of kornerupine ± prismatine in the Grenvillian New Jersey Highlands are recognized in granulite-facies biotite paragneiss formed from graywacke and pelite protoliths

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Summary

Introduction

Kornerupine is a complex hydrous magnesium-iron-aluminum borosilicate that has an orthorhombic crystal structure and a boron content of

Geologic Setting
Ottawan Metamorphic Conditions
Field Relationships and Stratigraphy
Ringwood
Mase Mountain Location
Mineralogy
Protolith Geochemistry
Provenance
Plot the New
Depositional Environment
Implications
Metamorphism of a Marine Evaporite Protolith
Replacement by B-Rich Hydrothermal Fluid
10. Alteration
Breakdown
Conclusions
Full Text
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