首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
文章检索
  按 检索   检索词:      
出版年份:   被引次数:   他引次数: 提示:输入*表示无穷大
  收费全文   5篇
  免费   1篇
地质学   6篇
  2019年   1篇
  2017年   2篇
  2014年   1篇
  2013年   2篇
排序方式: 共有6条查询结果,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1
1.
In the classical view of metamorphic microstructures, fast viscous relaxation (and so constant pressure) is assumed, with diffusion being the limiting factor in equilibration. This contribution is focused on the only other possible scenario – fast diffusion and slow viscous relaxation – and brings an alternative interpretation of microstructures typical of high‐grade metamorphic rocks. In contrast to the pressure vessel mechanical model applied to pressure variation associated with coesite inclusions in various host minerals, a multi‐anvil mechanical model is proposed in which strong single crystals and weak grain boundaries can maintain pressure variation at geological time‐scales in a polycrystalline material. In such a mechanical context, exsolution lamellae in feldspar are used to show that feldspar can sustain large differential stresses (>10 kbar) at geological time‐scales. Furthermore, it is argued that the existence of grain‐scale pressure gradients combined with diffusional equilibrium may explain chemical zoning preserved in reaction rims. Assuming zero net flux across the microstructure, an equilibrium thermodynamic method is introduced for inferring pressure variation corresponding to the chemical zoning. This new barometric method is applied to plagioclase rims around kyanite in felsic granulite (Bohemian Massif, Czech Republic), yielding a grain‐scale pressure variation of 8 kbar. In this approach, kinetic factors are not invoked to account for mineral composition zoning preserved in rocks metamorphosed at high grade.  相似文献   
2.
Pressure is one of the most important parameters to be quantified in geological problems. However, in metamorphic systems the pressure is usually calculated with two different approaches. One pressure calculation is based on petrological phase equilibria and this pressure is often termed thermodynamic pressure. The other calculation is based on continuum mechanics, which provides a mean stress that is commonly used to estimate the thermodynamic pressure. Both thermodynamic pressure calculations can be justified by the accuracy and applicability of the results. Here, we consider systems with low‐differential stress (<1 kbar) and no irreversible volumetric deformation, and refer to them as conventional systems. We investigate the relationship between mean stress and thermodynamic pressure. We discuss the meaning of thermodynamic pressure and its calculation for irreversible processes such as viscous deformation and heat conduction, which exhibit entropy production. Moreover, it is demonstrated that the mean stress for incompressible viscous deformation is essentially equal to the mean stress for the corresponding viscous deformation with elastic compressibility, if the characteristic time of deformation is five times longer than the Maxwell viscoelastic relaxation time that is equal to the ratio of shear viscosity to bulk modulus. For typical lithospheric rocks, this Maxwell time is smaller than c. 10,000 years. Therefore, numerical simulations of long‐term (>10 kyr) geodynamic processes, employing incompressible deformation, provide mean stress values that are close to the mean‐stress value associated with elastic compressibility. Finally, we show that for conventional systems the mean stress is essentially equal to the thermodynamic pressure. However, mean stress and, hence, thermodynamic pressure can be significantly different from the lithostatic pressure.  相似文献   
3.
A low‐grade metamorphic “Coloured Mélange” in North Makran (SE Iran) contains lenses and a large klippe of low temperature, lawsonite‐bearing blueschists formed during the Cretaceous closure of the Tethys Ocean. The largest blueschist outcrop is a >1,000 m thick coherent unit with metagabbros overlain by interlayered metabasalts and metavolcanoclastic rocks. Blueschist metamorphism is only incipient in coarse‐grained rocks, whereas finer grained, foliated samples show thorough metamorphic recrystallization. The low‐variance blueschist peak assemblage is glaucophane, lawsonite, titanite, jadeite±phengitic mica. Investigated phase diagram sections of three blueschists with different protoliths yield peak conditions of ~300–380°C at 9–14 kbar. Magnesio‐hornblende and rutile cores indicate early amphibolite facies metamorphism at >460°C and 2–4 kbar. Later conditions at slightly higher pressures of 6–9 kbar at 350–450°C are recorded by barroisite, omphacite and rutile assemblages before entering into the blueschist facies and finally following a retrograde path through the pumpellyite–actinolite facies across the lawsonite stability field. Assuming that metamorphic pressure is lithostatic pressure, the corresponding counterclockwise P–T path is explained by burial along a warm geothermal gradient (~15°C/km) in a young subduction system, followed by exhumation along a cold gradient (~8°C/km); a specific setting that allows preservation of fresh undecomposed lawsonite in glaucophane‐bearing rocks.  相似文献   
4.
Sapphirine-bearing symplectites that replace kyanite in eclogites from the Greek Rhodope Massif have previously been attributed to a high-pressure granulite-facies metamorphic event that overprinted the eclogitic peak metamorphic assemblage. The eclogitic mineralogy consisted of garnet, omphacitic pyroxene, rutile and kyanite and is largely replaced by low-pressure minerals. Omphacite was initially replaced by symplectites of diopside and plagioclase that were subsequently replaced by symplectites of amphibole and plagioclase. Garnet reacted during decompression to form a corona of plagioclase, amphibole and magnetite. Rutile was partly transformed to ilmenite and kyanite decomposed to produce a high-variance mineral assemblage of symplectitic spinel, sapphirine, plagioclase and corundum. The presence of quartz and corundum in the kyanite eclogites is evidence for the absence of bulk equilibrium and obviates a conventional analysis of phase equilibria based on the bulk-rock composition. To circumvent this difficulty we systematically explored the pressure-temperature-composition (P-T-X) space of a thermodynamic model for the symplectites in order to establish the pressure-temperature (P-T) conditions at which the symplectites were formed after kyanite. This analysis combined with conventional thermometry indicates that the symplectites were formed at amphibolite-facies conditions. The resulting upper-pressure limit (~0.7 GPa) of the sapphirine-producing metamorphic overprint is roughly half the former estimate for the lower pressure limit of the symplectite forming metamorphic event. Temperature was constrained (T ~ 720°C) using garnet-amphibole mineral thermometry. The P-T conditions inferred here are consistent with thermobarometry from other lithologies in the Rhodope Massif, which show no evidence of granulite-facies metamorphism. Regional geological arguments and ion-probe (SHRIMP) zircon dating place the post-eclogite-facies metamorphic evolution in Eocene times.  相似文献   
5.
We review published evidence that rocks can develop, sustain and record significant pressure deviations from lithostatic values. Spectroscopic studies at room pressure and temperature (P-T) reveal that in situ pressure variations in minerals can reach GPa levels. Rise of confined pressure leads to higher amplitude of these variations documented by the preservation of α-quartz incipiently amorphized under pressure (IAUP quartz), which requires over 12 GPa pressure variations at the grain scale. Formation of coesite in rock-deformation experiments at lower than expected confined pressures confirmed the presence of GPa-level pressure variations at elevated temperatures and pressures within deforming and reacting multi-mineral and polycrystalline rock samples. Whiteschists containing garnet porphyroblasts formed during prograde metamorphism that host quartz inclusions in their cores and coesite inclusions in their rims imply preservation of large differences in pressure at elevated pressure and temperature. Formation and preservation of coherent cryptoperthite exsolution lamellae in natural alkali feldspar provides direct evidence for grain-scale, GPa-level stress variations at 680°C at geologic time scales from peak to ambient P-T conditions. Similarly, but in a more indirect way, the universally accepted’ pressure-vessel’ model to explain preservation of coesite, diamond and other ultra-high-pressure indicators requires GPa-level pressure differences between the inclusion and the host during decompression at temperatures sufficiently high for these minerals to transform into their lower pressure polymorphs even at laboratory time scales. A variety of mechanisms can explain the formation and preservation of pressure variations at various length scales. These mechanisms may double the pressure value compared to the lithostatic in compressional settings, and pressures up to two times the lithostatic value were estimated under special mechanical conditions. We conclude, based on these considerations, that geodynamic scenarios involving very deep subduction processes with subsequent very rapid exhumation from a great depth must be viewed with due caution when one seeks to explain the presence of microscopic ultrahigh-pressure mineralogical indicators in rocks. Non-lithostatic interpretation of high-pressure indicators may potentially resolve long-lasting geological conundrums.  相似文献   
6.
International Journal of Earth Sciences - The synmetamorphic nappe system of the Rhodope Metamorphic Complex has been deformed into dome-and-basin structures attributed to syn- to post-convergent...  相似文献   
1
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号