Mechanism of Mineral Reactions Inferred from Textures of Impure Dolomitic Marbles from East Greenland

Mineral assemblages and chemical compositions of minerals found in impure dolomitic marbles embedded in gneisses and migmatites of the E. Greenland Caledonian fold belt (Scoresby Sund) suggest that the marbles were metamorphosed near 630 °C at 5 kb pressure. The analysis of complex textural and mine...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Petrology
Main Author: BUCHER-NURMINEN, K.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 1982
Subjects:
Online Access:http://petrology.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/23/3/325
https://doi.org/10.1093/petrology/23.3.325
Description
Summary:Mineral assemblages and chemical compositions of minerals found in impure dolomitic marbles embedded in gneisses and migmatites of the E. Greenland Caledonian fold belt (Scoresby Sund) suggest that the marbles were metamorphosed near 630 °C at 5 kb pressure. The analysis of complex textural and mineralogical relations among minerals such as dolomite, calcite, forsterite, pargasite, chlorite, spinel, diopside and phlogopite led to the conclusion that the major mineralogical features of the rocks were probably caused by sodium metasomatism at constant temperature and pressure. The effect of the inferred sodium metasomatism may be summarized by three schematic reactions all involving modal changes of excess dolomite, calcite, forsterite, chlorite and spinel: (a) nucleation and growth of pargasite, (b) resorption of phlogopite, and (c) growth of pargasite from phlogopite.