Rare earth element evolution and migration in plagiogranites: a record preserved in epidote and allanite of the Troodos ophiolite
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Anenburg, Michael
Katzir, Yaron
Rhede, Dieter
Jöns, Niels
Bach, Wolfgang
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http://link.springer.com/
Abstract
Plagiogranites from the Troodos ophiolite in
Cyprus are occasionally epidotised, either partially or completely.
Epidotisation phenomena include replacement of
pre-existing minerals and filling of miarolitic cavities. In
addition to epidote, miarolites in one plagiogranite body
(located near the village of Spilia) contain coexisting ferriallanite-(Ce)
and allanite-(Y). Textural and geochemical
evidence indicates that late-stage REE-enriched granitic
melt facilitated crystallisation of magmatic ferriallanite-
(Ce). High REE contents persisted after fluid exsolution, causing crystallisation of allanite-(Y) from hydrothermal
fluids in the miarolites. The REE pattern of the hydrothermal
allanite-(Y) is characterised by LREE and Eu depletion,
similar to the parent plagiogranitic magma. As allanite
had sequestered most of the REE in the fluid, epidote
took over as the principle hydrothermal mineral. Epidote in
Troodos plagiogranites records a fluid evolutionary trend
beginning with REE-rich–Eu-depleted similar to allanite-
(Y) and gradually transforming into the REE-depleted–
Eu-enriched pattern prevalent throughout ‘conventional’
sub-seafloor fluids. A comparison of allanite-bearing
and allanite-absent plagiogranites from the same locality
suggests that REE-bearing fluids migrated from the
plagiogranites. Similar fluid evolution trends observed in
diabase-hosted epidote, located adjacent to a large plagiogranite
body, suggest influx of plagiogranite-derived REEbearing
fluids. Epidotisation in oceanic settings is usually
considered to be the result of alteration by high fluxes of
seawater-derived hydrothermal fluids. Although epidotisation
by magmatic fluids has been suggested to occur in
plagiogranites, our study shows that this autometasomatic
process is the dominant mechanism by which epidosites
form in plagiogranites. Furthermore, epidotisation of diabase
has been attributed solely to seawater-derived fluids,
but we show that it is possible for diabase-hosted epidosites
to form by migration of plagiogranite-derived fluids.
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Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology