Abstract

Abstract. Previous measurements of water in deformed quartzites using conventional Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) instruments have shown that water contents of larger grains vary from one grain to another. However, the non-equilibrium variations in water content between neighboring grains and within quartz grains cannot be interrogated further without greater measurement resolution, nor can water contents be measured in finely recrystallized grains without including absorption bands due to fluid inclusions, films, and secondary minerals at grain boundaries.Synchrotron infrared (IR) radiation coupled to a FTIR spectrometer has allowed us to distinguish and measure OH bands due to fluid inclusions, hydrogen point defects, and secondary hydrous mineral inclusions through an aperture of 10 µm for specimens > 40 µm thick. Doubly polished infrared (IR) plates can be prepared with thicknesses down to 4–8 µm, but measurement of small OH bands is currently limited by strong interference fringes for samples < 25 µm thick, precluding measurements of water within individual, finely recrystallized grains. By translating specimens under the 10 µm IR beam by steps of 10 to 50 µm, using a software-controlled x − y stage, spectra have been collected over specimen areas of nearly 4.5 mm2. This technique allowed us to separate and quantify broad OH bands due to fluid inclusions in quartz and OH bands due to micas and map their distributions in quartzites from the Moine Thrust (Scotland) and Main Central Thrust (Himalayas).Mylonitic quartzites deformed under greenschist facies conditions in the footwall to the Moine Thrust (MT) exhibit a large and variable 3400 cm−1 OH absorption band due to molecular water, and maps of water content corresponding to fluid inclusions show that inclusion densities correlate with deformation and recrystallization microstructures. Quartz grains of mylonitic orthogneisses and paragneisses deformed under amphibolite conditions in the hanging wall to the Main Central Thrust (MCT) exhibit smaller broad OH bands, and spectra are dominated by sharp bands at 3595 to 3379 cm−1 due to hydrogen point defects that appear to have uniform, equilibrium concentrations in the driest samples. The broad OH band at 3400 cm−1 in these rocks is much less common. The variable water concentrations of MT quartzites and lack of detectable water in highly sheared MCT mylonites challenge our understanding of quartz rheology. However, where water absorption bands can be detected and compared with deformation microstructures, OH concentration maps provide information on the histories of deformation and recovery, evidence for the introduction and loss of fluid inclusions, and water weakening processes.

Highlights

  • Quartz mylonites sheared at middle to lower levels of the continental crust exhibit microstructural and textural evidence of dislocation creep, a process that is widely believed to require water weakening in framework silicates

  • IR spectra of quartz in Moine Thrust (MT) and Main Central Thrust (MCT) samples measured with the synchrotron–Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) system through a 10 μm aperture exhibit OH absorption bands www.solid-earth.net/8/1025/2017/

  • Synchrotron FTIR measurements of MCT samples through a 10 μm aperture show the same sharp OH bands due to hydrogen point defects as measured for larger sampling volumes

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Summary

Introduction

Quartz mylonites sheared at middle to lower levels of the continental crust exhibit microstructural and textural evidence of dislocation creep, a process that is widely believed to require water weakening in framework silicates. Water weakening in the continental crust is inferred because of the high laboratory strengths exhibited by quartz and feldspars in the absence of water (Griggs, 1967; Heard and Carter, 1968; Tullis and Yund, 1977, 1980; Tullis, 1983; Blacic and Christie, 1984) and the postulated effects of water on point defects and disruptions of fully linked Si–O bonds (Griggs, 1974; Hirsch, 1979; Hobbs, 1981; Paterson, 1989). With the advent of FTIR and IR microscopes, water and hydrogen defects in naturally deformed quartz have been reported with OH contents of 300 to > 10 000 ppm (molar H/106Si; Kronenberg and Wolf, 1990; Kronenberg et al, 1990; Nakashima et al, 1995; Gleason and DeSisto, 2008; Seaman et al, 2013; Finch et al, 2016; Kilian et al, 2016), comparable to those required for water weakening in laboratory experiments. Quartz water contents have been reported that show a trend of decreasing OH content towards the center of a high-grade

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