Abstract

Small dolomite marble lenses and bands occur in the vast Caledonian migmatite and gneiss area of NW Spitsbergen (Svalbard archipelago). The fine-banded marbles contain numerous assemblages of minerals: calcite, dolomite, olivine, clinohumite, diopside, amphibole, chlorite, spiner and phologopite. The coexistence of calcite + dolomite + olivine + chlorite + spinel over the entire area indicates metamorphic temperatures of 600 to 680° at an estimated pressure of 4 kilobars. A temperature of near 600°C for the peak of metamorphism is suggested by mineral assemblages at the southernmost locality, Jäderinfjellet. Calcite-dolomite geothermometry indicated 595°C at the same locality. The spatial distribution of the marble assemblages suggests that metamorphism occurred under nearly isothermal conditions over an area of at least 25 by 30 kilometres.

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