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GY111 Physical Geology

GY111 Physical Geology. Metamorphic Rocks Lecture. Metamorphism. Causes of Metamorphism Elevated T & P Fluids (H2O, CO2, CH4, etc.) Directed Stress. Types of Metamorphism. Regional: occur along convergent plate boundaries. Contact: occurs along margin of a magma intrusion.

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GY111 Physical Geology

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  1. GY111 Physical Geology Metamorphic Rocks Lecture

  2. Metamorphism • Causes of Metamorphism • Elevated T & P • Fluids (H2O, CO2, CH4, etc.) • Directed Stress

  3. Types of Metamorphism • Regional: occur along convergent plate boundaries. • Contact: occurs along margin of a magma intrusion. • Seafloor/Hydrothermal: associated with circulating hydrothermal fluids- mostly at divergent ocean ridge systems. • Shock: meteorite impact.

  4. Contact Metamorphic Rocks • Fine-grained because of relatively short time frame for recrystallization. • Develop low-pressure metamorphic minerals (i.e. Andalusite). • Hornfels: generic dark contact metamorphic rock. • Felsite: light-colored contact metamorphic rock. • Skarn: Ca-silicate rich contact metamorphic rock formed by intrusion of silicate magma into limestone or dolostone.

  5. Types of Metamorphism: Tectonic Environments

  6. Metamorphic Textures • Cleavage: tendency of a rock to break along smooth even planes • Foliation: preferred alignment of platy grains (i.e. mica) or banding (i.e. gneiss or marble) • Lineation: preferred alignment of elongated minerals (i.e. amphibole)

  7. Metamorphic Texture: Foliation

  8. Foliated Regional Metamorphic Rocks • Schist • Gneiss • Slate • Phyllite

  9. Foliation vs. Cleavage • All regional metamorphic rocks contain a foliation- in low grade (Low T) rocks the grains are microscopic so you can’t “see” the foliation • Cleavage in rocks is the tendency to split along smooth planes. Rocks with microscopic foliation tend to have excellent rock cleavage

  10. Granoblastic Metamorphic Rocks • Granoblastic metamorphic textures are produced when the constituent grains of the rock are equidimensional- i.e. the grains have the same diameter in any direction. • Granoblastic rocks therefore do not develop foliation • Examples: marble, quartzite, greenstone, amphibolite*, hornfels, granulite quartzite

  11. Granulites • Granulites, as their name implies, have a granular texture composed of pyroxene, plagioclase and garnet • Granulites form at the highest grades of metamorphism when portions of the protolith melt and exit the rock leaving behind a “restite” that is devoid of H2O or other fluids

  12. Protoliths • Protolith: original rock that becomes metamorphosed • Common Protolith/metamorphic rock relationships • Protolith Low Med High Shale slate, phyllite schist gneiss Basalt greenstone amph. amph. Sandstone quartzite quartzite quartzite Limestone marble marble marble

  13. Large Crystal Textures • Large metamorphic crystals are termed porphyroblasts • Common porphyroblast forming minerals include: Garnet, Andalusite, Staurolite, Kyanite, Plagioclase, Amphibole Garnet porphyroblast

  14. Large Crystal Textures cont. • Large crystals that are inherited from protolith are porphyroclasts. • Augen: eye-shaped feldspar porphyroclasts in gneiss

  15. Banded Foliation • Gneiss, migmatites, and impure marbles often display banding foliation. • Banding is marked by alternating light and dark layers of mineral segregations.

  16. Metamorphic Isograds • Isograd: this first appearance of an index metamorphic mineral • Minerals: Chlorite, Muscovite, Biotite, Garnet, Staurolite, Kyanite, Sillimanite Isograds

  17. Relationship of Texture and Grade • Increasing metamorphic grade results in larger grain size. Increase in grain size

  18. Metamorphic Facies Concept • Metamorphic Facies: regions on a T vs. P graph Very High T geotherm Facies boundary Geotherm High T geotherm High P geotherm

  19. Geotherms and Plate Tectonics • Subduction zones have unusually low geotherms- High P geotherm (Blue schist & Eclogite facies) • Volcanic/Magmatic Arcs have unusually high geotherms- High T geotherm (Slate>Phyllite>Schist>Gneiss>Granulite; greenschist – amphibolite- granulite facies)

  20. Geothermobarometry • Mineral assemblages can be used to calculate P-T of crystallization during metamorphism

  21. P-T-time paths • Geothermobarometry can be used to track P-T-time paths • This allows the tectonic environment to be determined for the metamorphic rock

  22. Exam Summary • Know the causes of metamorphism. • Be able to list protoliths of common metamorphic rocks. • Be able to list metamorphic facies and draw geotherms on a P-T diagram. • Know metamorphic textural terms. • Be able to correlate geotherms with tectonic environments. • Be able to list and describe the various types of metamorphism. • Be familiar with the concept of metamorphic isograds.

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