• Title of article

    The granite-upper mantle connection in terrestrial planetary bodies: an anomaly to the current granite paradigm?

  • Author/Authors

    Bernard Bonin، نويسنده , , Jean Bébien، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
  • Pages
    15
  • From page
    131
  • To page
    145
  • Abstract
    Granite formed in the terrestrial planets very soon after their accretion. The oldest granite-forming minerals (4.4 Ga zircon) and granite (4.0 Ga granodiorite) indicate conditions resembling the present-day ones, with the presence of oceans and external processes related to liquid water. As a result, the current granite paradigm states that granite is not issued directly from the melting of the mantle. However, a granite-upper mantle connection is well established from several pieces of evidence. Tiny micrometre- to millimetre-sized enclaves of granite-like glassy and crystalline materials in Earthʹs mantle rocks are known in oceanic and continental areas. Earthʹs mantle-forming minerals, such as olivine, pyroxene, and chromite, can contain silicic materials, either as glass inclusions or as crystallised products (quartz or tridymite, sanidine, K-feldspar, and/or plagioclase close to albite end-member). Importantly, the same evidence is amply found in some types of meteorites, whether they are primitive, such as ordinary chondrites, or differentiated, such as IIE irons, howardite–eucrite–diogenite (HED), and Martian shergottite–nakhlite–chassignite (SNC) achondrites. Although constituting apparently an anomaly, the granite-upper mantle connection can be reconciled with the current granite paradigm by recognising that the conditions prevailing in the formation of granite are not only necessarily crustal but can occur also at depths in mantle rocks. Unresolved problems to be explored further include whether tiny amounts of granitic material within terrestrial mantles may be hints of greater abundances and more direct mantle involvement, and what role can be played by granite trapped within the upper mantle in lithosphere buoyancy.
  • Keywords
    granite , Silicic glass , Terrestrial planets , mantle , meteorites , Paradigm
  • Journal title
    lithos
  • Serial Year
    2005
  • Journal title
    lithos
  • Record number

    1286523