Abstract

Abstract Muscovite granites of the Pilat massif (French Central Massif) can be divided into two large groups. Those belonging to the first group appear in the so-called metamorphic series of the Pilat massif and are associated with granulites of rhyolitic origin from which they were directly derived by anatexis. Those of the second group are doubtless of similar origin, although this is more difficult to establish. All these granites have a constant chemical composition. Their magmatic paragenesis includes, in addition to quartz, potassic feldspar and albite, some biotite, a little muscovite, and occasionally andalusite. The data seem to indicate crystallization under conditions of low pressure and temperatures less than 700 degrees C. Subsequently, secondary muscovitization developed at the expense of andalusite. The muscovite granites of the Pilat massif do not present a mineralization sequence. Their mode of formation was quite different from that of the late hololeucocratic granites resulting from a differentiation of granitoid assemblages.

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