Title of article :
Complexity in the behavior and recrystallization of monazite during high-T metamorphism and fluid infiltration
Author/Authors :
Kelly، نويسنده , , Nigel M. and Harley، نويسنده , , Simon L. and Mِller، نويسنده , , Andreas، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Abstract :
A detailed study of monazite grains in silica-undersaturated and quartz-bearing Mg–Al metapelite from the Oygarden Group of islands, east Antarctica, reveals a complex history of growth and recrystallization during two separate events in the Neoproterozoic and earliest Cambrian. Monazite grains from garnet-poor and garnet-rich metapelite preserve core domains that have ages corresponding to growth and/or recrystallization at granulite facies (P ≈ 9–1.0 GPa, T ≥ 850–900 °C) conditions during the Rayner Structural Episode between 930 and 890 Ma. High-Th rims (≤ 22 wt.% ThO2) that are in textural equilibrium with sapphirine–orthopyroxene symplectites formed after garnet during late-Rayner decompression, occur on monazite grains in garnet-rich assemblages, and give electron microprobe ages (883 ± 18 Ma) within error of core domains (903 ± 14 Ma). These high-Th rim domains are interpreted to have formed through recrystallization of liberated inclusions via a process dominated by coupled dissolution–reprecipitation reactions facilitated by transient fluid films on the large surface areas in the symplectite and not by new growth. In garnet-poor metapelite, monazite grains that have grain boundaries in textural equilibrium with the granulite-facies assemblage also show alteration to higher-Th compositions on rims and along vein-like fractures. This compositional shift is accompanied by partial- to complete-resetting of ages to ~ 500 Ma, along with minor modification of core domain ages. Textures and patterns of chemical age resetting are interpreted to also be the result of a coupled dissolution–reprecipitation reaction process, but in contrast to garnet-bearing assemblages, this alteration occurred during a fluid influx at lower temperatures during regional ‘Pan African’ tectonism. This study highlights the susceptibility of monazite to resetting, with fluid-present conditions dramatically increasing the potential for recrystallization.
Keywords :
monazite , Recrystallization , trace element , Rayner Complex , Antarctica , Electron microprobe dating
Journal title :
Chemical Geology
Journal title :
Chemical Geology