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Document Description
Title
Metamorphic
evolution
of
anatectic
metapelites
from the
Gabriel
high
strain
zone
,
Grenville
Province
Author
Strowbridge
,
Susan
Leah
,
1978-
Description
Thesis
(M.Sc.)--Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
2005.
Earth
Sciences
Date
2005
Pagination
1 v. (various foliations) : ill. (some col.), maps (some col.) + 1 CD-ROM
Subject
Metamorphic
rocks--Québec
(Province);
Metamorphism
(Geology)--Québec
(Province)
Degree
M.Sc.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Department of Earth Sciences
Discipline
Earth Sciences
Language
Eng
Notes
Includes
bibliographical
references.
Abstract
The
Gabriel
High
Strain
Zone
,
exposed
in the
Manicouagan
Reservoir
area
,
is
part
of the
Allochthonous
Belt
of the
eastern
Grenville
Province.
It
was
metamorphosed
under
mid-P
granulite
facies
conditions
during
the
culmination
of the
Ottawan
orogeny
(ca.
1050
Ma).
Anatectic
metapelites
from the
Gabriel
High
Strain
Zone
are
characterized
by
quartz-rich
layers
that also
contain
ferromagnesian
minerals
and
, in
some
cases
sillimanite
,
alternating
with
granitic
layers
which
likely
represent
segregated
leucosome.
--
Samples
of the
quartz-rich
layers
have been
divided
into
three
groups
on the
basis
of the
observed
mineral
assemblages
which
in
turn
are
controlled
by
bulk
composition.
Group
1
has a
moderate
to
high
Alumina
Index
(0.35-0.66)
and the
highest
XMg
(0.51-0.77)
and
contains
the
assemblage
quartz
+
garnet
+
biotite
+
sillimanite
+
cordierite
±
K-feldspar
±
plagioclase
,
group
2
has a
moderate
to
high
Alumina
Index
(0.22-0.60)
and
intermediate
XMg
(0.35-0.51)
and
consists
of the
mineral
assemblage
quartz
+
K-feldspar
+
garnet
+
biotite
+
sillimanite
±
plagioclase
, and
finally
,
group
3
has a
low
Alumina
Index
(0.10-0.13)
and
low
to
intermediate
XMg
(0.23-0.39)
and
is
comprised
of the
assemblage
quartz
+
garnet
+
biotite
+
plagioclase
+
K-feldspar.
These
mineral
assemblages
provide
complementary
information
that
, if
put
together
,
allow
the
P-T
field
of the
thermal
peak
to be
tightly
constrained.
--
Textural
relationships
and
AFM
topologies
in the
KFMASH
system
were
used
to
determine
the
following
sequence
of
reactions
that
affected
these
rocks
with
increasing
temperature.
Cores
of
garnet
porphyroblasts
in
groups
1
and
2
rocks
contain
inclusions
of
sillimanite
needles
and are
interpreted
to have
grown
by
subsolidus
reactions
in the
sillimanite
stability
field.
The
absence
of
muscovite
and the
coexistence
of
sillimanite
porphyroblasts
and
K-feldspar
in the
matrix
are
indicative
of the
reaction:
muscovite
+
albite
+
quartz
->
K-feldspar
+
sillimanite
+
liquid
(R1)
which
marks
the
onset
of
dehydration
melting
in
politic
rocks.
Clear
rims
of
garnet
porphyroblasts
are
consistent
with a
second
phase
of
garnet
growth
by the
continuous
reaction:
biotite
+
sillimanite
+
quartz
->
garnet
+
K-feldspar
+
liquid
(RIIa).
In
addition
, the
coexistence
of
garnet
and
cordierite
in
group
1
rocks
indicates
that the
subsequent
discontinuous
reaction:
biotite
+
sillimanite
+
quartz
->
garnet
+
cordierite
+
liquid
(R2)
was
crossed.
In the
rocks
of
groups
1
and
2
prograde
biotite
was
eliminated
by
reactions
R2
and
RIIa
,
respectively
,
therefore
it
was not
available
for
further
dehydration
melting
by the
reaction:
biotite
+
garnet
+
quartz
->
orthopyroxene
+
cordierite
+
liquid
(R3).
In
contrast
,
group
3
rocks
retain
peak
biotite
,
therefore
the
absence
of
orthopyroxene
in them
indicates
that the
P-T
conditions
for
reaction
R3
were not
reached.
In
all
rocks
,
texturally
late
biotite
and
sillimanite
aggregates
developed
at the
expense
of
garnet
and
cordierite
as a
result
of
reactions
RIIa
and
R2
having
taken
place
in the
reverse
sense
during
cooling.
--
Garnet
porphyroblasts
experienced
extensive
chemical
homogenization
at
high
temperatures
and
only
preserve
, in the
best
cases
, an
incomplete
record
of their
evolution.
For
instance
,
growth
zoning
in
terms
of
grossular
,
which
is
preserved
in the
most
Ca-rich
samples
,
attests
to a
two
stage
garnet
growth
and
variably
developed
rim
zoning
is
consistent
with
retrograde
resetting
of the
composition.
Based
upon
textures
,
AFM
topologies
,
garnet
XFe
isopleths
and the
KFMASH
petrogenetic
grid
it
is
inferred
that the
thermal
peak
occurred
between
6.2
kbar
(between
820
to
870°C)
and
~8.9
kbar
(at
900°C)
and that the
P-T
path
was
clockwise
with
little
decompression
between
the
prograde
and
retrograde
parts
of the
path.
Application
of
thermobarometry
(garnet-biotite
and
GASP)
was of
limited
use
in these
rocks
because:
(a)
biotite
is
in
most
cases
retrograde
and in
addition
experienced
extensive
resetting
of its
composition
during
late
cooling;
and
(b)
it
was
difficult
to
identify
plagioclase
that was
stable
at the
thermal
peak.
However
, in
group
1
and
2
rocks
GASP
isopleths
are
consistent
with the
P-T
field
determined
with the
petrogenetic
grid.
In
addition
,
GASP
isopleths
that
correspond
to
different
stages
of the
metamorphic
evolution
cover
a
narrow
range
further
supporting
the
interpretation
that the
P-T
path
did
not
involve
significant
decompression.
--
The
metamorphic
evolution
of the
sillimanite-bearing
metapelites
of the
Gabriel
High
Strain
Zone
is
consistent
with a
previously
proposed
tectonic
model
which
suggests
that this
zone
was
part
of the
hangingwall
of an
extruded
high-P
unit
known
as the
Manicouagan
Imbricate
Zone.
The
results
of this
study
provide
additional
constraints
to this
model.
For
instance
the
examined
rocks
were
metamorphosed
at
similar
temperatures
, but
lower
pressures
than the
Manicouagan
Imbricate
Zone
and
experienced
a
P-T
path
that
is
consistent
with
heating
and
cooling
with
little
decompression
in
between.
These
observations
indicate
that a
fast
heat
transfer
from the
hot
extruding
Manicouagan
Imbricate
Zone
to the
Gabriel
High
Strain
Zone
may
have been
responsible
for the
metamorphism
of the
latter.
Type
Text
Resource Type
Electronic
thesis
or
dissertation
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
a1705113
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(51.43
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Strowbridge_SusanLeah.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
972.cpd