4.5 Article

Oxygen isotope record of oceanic and high-pressure metasomatism: a P-T-time-fluid path for the Monviso eclogites (Italy)

Journal

CONTRIBUTIONS TO MINERALOGY AND PETROLOGY
Volume 170, Issue 5-6, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00410-015-1198-4

Keywords

Oxygen isotopes; Subduction; Garnet; Zircon; Shear zone; Ophiolite; Ion microprobe

Funding

  1. Australia Research Council [DP110101599]

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Fluids are considered a fundamental agent for chemical exchanges between different rock types in the subduction system. Constraints on the sources and pathways of subduction fluids thus provide crucial information to reconstruct subduction processes. The Monviso ophiolitic sequence is composed of mafic, ultramafic and minor sediments that have been subducted to similar to 80 km depth. In this sequence, both localized fluid flow and channelized fluids along major shear zones have been documented. We investigate the timing and source of the fluids that affected the dominant mafic rocks using microscale U-Pb dating of zircon and oxygen isotope analysis of mineral zones (garnet, zircon and antigorite) in high-pressure rocks with variable degree of metasomatic modification. In mafic eclogites, Jurassic zircon cores are the only mineralogical relicts of the protolith gabbros and retain delta O-18 values of 4.5-6 parts per thousand, typical of mantle melts. Garnet and metamorphic zircon that grew during prograde to peak metamorphism display low delta O-18 values between 0.2 and 3.8 parts per thousand, which are likely inherited from high-temperature alteration of the protolith on the sea floor. This is corroborated by delta O-18 values of 3.0 and 3.6 parts per thousand in antigorite from surrounding serpentinites. In metasomatized eclogites within the lower shear zone, garnet rim formed at the metamorphic peak shows a shift to higher delta O-18 up to 6 parts per thousand. The age of zircons in high-pressure veins and metasomatized eclogites constrains the timing of fluid flow at high pressure at around 45-46 Ma. Although the oxygen data do not contradict previous reports of interaction with serpentinite-derived fluids, the shift to isotopically heavier oxygen compositions requires contribution from sediment-derived fluids. The scarcity of metasediments in the Monviso sequence suggests that such fluids were concentrated and fluxed along the lower shear zone in a sufficient amount to modify the oxygen composition of the eclogitic minerals.

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