TY - JOUR
T1 - Coesite and clinopyroxene exsolution lamellae in chromites
T2 - In-situ ultrahigh-pressure evidence from podiform chromitites in the Luobusa ophiolite, southern Tibet
AU - Yamamoto, Shinji
AU - Komiya, Tsuyoshi
AU - Hirose, Kei
AU - Maruyama, Shigenori
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank H. Yamamoto, M. Terabayashi, Y. Kaneko, I. Katayama, and T. Iizuka for assistance in field work. The field collaboration with J. S. Yang, L. D. Shi and H. Wu was helpful and much appreciated. We thank N. Takafuji and H. Hoshi for TEM analytical help, and B. F. Windley for comment on early versions of this manuscript. S. Y. is supported by a Japan Society for the Promotion of Science Research Fellowship for Young Scientists.
PY - 2009/5
Y1 - 2009/5
N2 - We report in-situ petrological evidence of deep mantle origin from podiform chromitites in the Luobusa ophiolite, southern Tibet. Analytical transmission electron microscopy measurements reveal that chromites in podiform chromitites from the Luobusa ophiolite have numerous exsolution lamellae of diopsidic clinopyroxene and coesite, which indicate an ultrahigh-pressure origin of over 3 GPa (> 100 km deep). The presence of these lamellae, coupled with abundant micro-inclusions of clinopyroxene, requires high solubility of SiO2 and CaO in the host chromite, and suggests a precursor of chromite, a CaFe2O4-structured high-pressure polymorph, stable at pressures over 12.5 GPa (> 380 km deep). These nano-scale observations and geological occurrence indicate that the mantle peridotite under the Tibetan mid-ocean ridge was transported from the deep mantle (at least 100 km, probably more than 380 km deep) by the mantle convection. It implies that the root of mantle upwelling has a much deeper origin than previously believed.
AB - We report in-situ petrological evidence of deep mantle origin from podiform chromitites in the Luobusa ophiolite, southern Tibet. Analytical transmission electron microscopy measurements reveal that chromites in podiform chromitites from the Luobusa ophiolite have numerous exsolution lamellae of diopsidic clinopyroxene and coesite, which indicate an ultrahigh-pressure origin of over 3 GPa (> 100 km deep). The presence of these lamellae, coupled with abundant micro-inclusions of clinopyroxene, requires high solubility of SiO2 and CaO in the host chromite, and suggests a precursor of chromite, a CaFe2O4-structured high-pressure polymorph, stable at pressures over 12.5 GPa (> 380 km deep). These nano-scale observations and geological occurrence indicate that the mantle peridotite under the Tibetan mid-ocean ridge was transported from the deep mantle (at least 100 km, probably more than 380 km deep) by the mantle convection. It implies that the root of mantle upwelling has a much deeper origin than previously believed.
KW - Chromite
KW - Coesite
KW - Exsolution lamellae
KW - Ophiolite
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U2 - 10.1016/j.lithos.2008.05.003
DO - 10.1016/j.lithos.2008.05.003
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:63449125467
SN - 0024-4937
VL - 109
SP - 314
EP - 322
JO - Lithos
JF - Lithos
IS - 3-4
ER -