Abstract
Abstract A possible armalcolite pseudomorph has been identified in garnet–sillimanite gneiss from Skallevikshalsen, located c. 30 km NE of Rundvågshetta, in a terrane with the highest metamorphic grade in the Lützow-Holm Complex, East Antarctica. It occurs as an Fe–Mg–Ti compositional domain consisting of ilmenite, rutile and pseudorutile, partially mantled by rutile within ilmenite. The domain yields an average X Mg of 0.171±0.036 exceeding by 3 wt% TiO 2 from armalcolite stoichiometry, while the analysis closest to armalcolite stoichiometry has an X Mg value close to 0.202. Host ilmenite with 0.4 mol% hematite is in contact with prismatic sillimanite, quartz, plagioclase and K-feldspar. In run products of annealing experiments performed to investigate the origin of the pseudomorph, armalcolite–ilmenite reaction coronae were developed around relict rutile in rock fragments of quartz eclogite from the Higashi-Akaishi mass of the Sanbagawa belt, central Shikoku, Japan. The experiments were carried out at 1 atm and 960–1050 °C with wüstite–magnetite buffer and imply a minimum temperature of 1290 °C for armalcolite stability when extrapolated to Skallevikshalsen pressures of 1.0 GPa. Mineral chemistry thermobarometry for Skallevikshalsen yields a metamorphic path with P – T peak conditions of 0.88–1.1 GPa and 970–1050 °C, followed by retrograde metamorphism at 0.6 GPa and 780 °C, and finally metasomatic alteration at c. 630 °C. This P – T path matches that for similar ultrahigh-temperature metamorphic rocks from Rundvågshetta and Sri Lanka, and is markedly lower in temperature than the unreasonable estimates based on armalcolite stability. This discrepancy is inferred to reflect chemical impurities in armalcolite that lower its minimum temperature stability by more than 200 °C.
Published Version
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have