New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics abstracts
Evolution in the understanding of metamorphism of basaltic rocks
and their tectonic settings - a personal perspective
W. G. ERNST
School of Earth Sciences
Stanford University
Stanford, CA 94305-2210, U.S.A.
Abstract In the mid 1950s, the qualitative relationships among
metamorphic mineral fades developed in rocks of basaltic composition
were relatively well understood, but values for the attending state
variables were only guessed at, and the thermodynamic basis underlying
metamorphic reactions had not yet begun to exert a strong influence on
petrology. The relationships of subsolidus recirystallisation to the
structure of the Earth at several scales, to tectonic processes, and to
planetary evolution were virtually unknown. Rapid strides were about to
be made, thanks to substantial increases in governmental support of
research, and to the resultant technological advances in mineralogy,
petrology, and geochemistry; the heightened activity went hand-in-hand
with larger scale revolutions in thinking due to the advent of plate
tectonic concepts, planetological information provided by space
exploration, and comparative studies of metamorphic terranes around the
world.
Experimental phase equilibrium and calorimetric studies,
laboratory-calibrated stable isotope fractionations, and synthetically
determined exchange reactions subsequently allowed thermobarometric
methods to be employed for a broad range of metabasaltic parageneses,
and the erection of a quantitative petrogenetic grid. Coupled with
computed thermal models for divergent and convergent lithospheric plate
boundaries as well as stable plate interiors, it became possible to
estimate the three-dimensional spatial arrangement of metamorphic
assemblages for both oceanic and continental crustal regimes. Mineral
parageneses in ophiolites, oceanic spreading centres, back-arc basins,
and geothermal districts are now reasonably well known. So are phase
assemblages in subducted metabasalts. However, inclusions of coesite
and diamond in garnet at four disparate Eurasian sites, indicate that
initially shallow portions of the continental crust have been taken to
depths exceeding 100 km, then returned to the surface by as yet poorly
understood processes. The deepest portions of continental interiors are
still not well characterised.
Continuing advances in instrumentation now allow the quantitative
documentation of mineral paragenetic, thermobarometric, and age
relationships in recrystallised mafic volcanics and their intrusive
equivalents. Investigations of reaction rates, transformation
mechanisms, and clay-mineral generation are in their infancy, as is the
study of fluid-basalt
interaction. All of these lines of research assume increasing
importance as nations and institutions begin to focus their
intellectual resources on global habitability, environmental change,
and technological capability.
Keywords metamorphism; parageneses; thermobarometry;
metabasalt
Received 7 January 1993; published 14 September 1993
New Zealand Journal of Geology & Geophysics, 1991, Vol. 36:
269—280
0028Ð8306/06/3603—0269 ©The Royal Society of New Zealand 1991
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality
(1238K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process).
Digitisation of this article from the printed journal was kindly
facilitated by the Geological Society of New Zealand
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