Abstract

Geochemical modeling using the basalt composition analyzed at the Vega 2 landing site indicates that intermediate to silicic liquids can be generated by fractional crystallization and equilibrium partial melting. Fractional crystallization modeling using variable pressures (0.01 GPa to 0.5 GPa) and relative oxidation states (FMQ 0 and FMQ -1) of either a wet (H2O = 0.5 wt%) or dry (H2O = 0 wt%) parental magma can yield silicic (SiO2 > 60 wt%) compositions that are similar to terrestrial ferroan rhyolite. Hydrous (H2O = 0.5 wt%) partial melting can yield intermediate (trachyandesite to andesite) to silicic (trachydacite) compositions at all pressures but requires relatively high temperatures (≥ 950°C) to generate the initial melt at intermediate to low pressure whereas at high pressure (0.5 GPa) the first melts will be generated at much lower temperatures (< 800°C). Anhydrous partial melt modeling yielded mafic (basaltic andesite) and alkaline compositions (trachybasalt) but the temperature required to produce the first liquid is very high (≥ 1130°C). Consequently, anhydrous partial melting is an unlikely process to generate derivative liquids. The modeling results indicate that, under certain conditions, the Vega 2 composition can generate silicic liquids that produce granitic and rhyolitic rocks. The implication is that silicic igneous rocks may form a small but important component of the northeast Aphrodite Terra.

Highlights

  • Silicic magma (SiO2 > 60 wt.%) on Earth is produced by differentiation of mafic magma, partial melting of crustal lithologies, and/or hybrid processes of assimilation and fractional crystallization [1,2,3,4,5]

  • The purpose of this study is to determine if silicic (SiO2 > 60 wt%) magma can be generated from a parental magma or rock similar in composition to the basalt analyzed at the Vega 2 landing site

  • The modeling results presented in this study only indicate that silicic liquids, under the scenarios outlined, can be derived from a parental magma composition similar to that analyzed at the Vega 2 landing site

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Summary

Introduction

Silicic magma (SiO2 > 60 wt.%) on Earth is produced by differentiation (fractional crystallization) of mafic (basalt, basaltic andesite) magma, partial melting of crustal lithologies, and/or hybrid processes of assimilation and fractional crystallization [1,2,3,4,5]. Most silicic magmas are primarily produced at subduction zones and collisional settings but minor volumes are produced at extensional settings, including large igneous provinces, oceanic ridge settings, and continental rifts [6,7,8,9]. Silicic igneous rocks (dacite, granodiorite, rhyolite, granite) are mostly associated with crustal recycling processes and ubiquitous within the continental crust of Earth but less so within oceanic crust. The occurrence of sialic (silica and alumina-rich rocks) crust is a defining characteristic of Earth with respect to other telluric planets, satellites and asteroids in the Solar System [10,11,12].

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