Abstract

Sapphirine-bearing symplectites that replace kyanite in eclogites from the Greek Rhodope Massif have previously been attributed to a high-pressure granulite-facies metamorphic event that overprinted the eclogitic peak metamorphic assemblage. The eclogitic mineralogy consisted of garnet, omphacitic pyroxene, rutile and kyanite and is largely replaced by low-pressure minerals. Omphacite was initially replaced by symplectites of diopside and plagioclase that were subsequently replaced by symplectites of amphibole and plagioclase. Garnet reacted during decompression to form a corona of plagioclase, amphibole and magnetite. Rutile was partly transformed to ilmenite and kyanite decomposed to produce a high-variance mineral assemblage of symplectitic spinel, sapphirine, plagioclase and corundum. The presence of quartz and corundum in the kyanite eclogites is evidence for the absence of bulk equilibrium and obviates a conventional analysis of phase equilibria based on the bulk-rock composition. To circumvent this difficulty we systematically explored the pressure-temperature-composition (P-T-X) space of a thermodynamic model for the symplectites in order to establish the pressure-temperature (P-T) conditions at which the symplectites were formed after kyanite. This analysis combined with conventional thermometry indicates that the symplectites were formed at amphibolite-facies conditions. The resulting upper-pressure limit (∼0.7 GPa) of the sapphirine-producing metamorphic overprint is roughly half the former estimate for the lower pressure limit of the symplectite forming metamorphic event. Temperature was constrained (T ∼ 720°C) using garnet-amphibole mineral thermometry. The P-T conditions inferred here are consistent with thermobarometry from other lithologies in the Rhodope Massif, which show no evidence of granulite-facies metamorphism. Regional geological arguments and ion-probe (SHRIMP) zircon dating place the post-eclogite-facies metamorphic evolution in Eocene times.

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