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eclogite

 
Dictionary: ec·lo·gite   (ĕk'lə-jīt') pronunciation
n.
A coarse-grained greenish rock consisting primarily of garnet and sodic pyroxene, and often including quartz, kyanite, and rutile.

[French éclogite, from Greek eklogē, selection (because the minerals it contains are not usually found together). See eclogue.]


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Any member of metamorphic rocks whose original composition is similar to that of basalt. Eclogites consist primarily of green pyroxene (omphacite) and red garnet (pyrope), with small amounts of various other minerals such as kyanite and rutile. These minerals in the eclogite are the result of reactions in originally igneous minerals having been subjected to extremely high pressures and moderate to relatively high temperatures.

For more information on eclogite, visit Britannica.com.

Sci-Tech Encyclopedia: Eclogite
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A very dense rock composed of red-brown garnet and the grape-green pyroxene omphacite. Eclogites possess basaltic bulk chemistry, and their garnets are rich in the components pyrope, almandine, and grossular, while the pyroxenes are rich in jadeite and diopside.

Eclogite occurrences may be subdivided into three broad categories: Group a eclogites are found as layers, lenses, or boudins in schists and gneisses seemingly of the amphibolite facies. Quartz, together with zoisite or kyanite, commonly occurs in these rocks. Amphibole of barroisitic composition may also be present. Group b eclogites are found as inclusions in kimberlites and basalts. They are frequently accompanied by xenoliths of garnet peridotite. Group c eclogites are found as blocks and lenses in schists of the glaucophane-schist facies. Such eclogites do not contain kyanite, rarely contain quartz, but bear amphibole, epidote, rutile, or sphene.

Eclogite is the name given to the highest-pressure facies of metamorphism; the critical mineral assemblage defining this facies is garnet + omphacite, together with kyanite or quartz in rocks of basaltic composition. Where sedimentary and granitic rocks have been metamorphosed under eclogite facies conditions, they result in spectacular omphacite + garnet + quartz-bearing mica schists and metagranitic gneisses such as are found in the Sezia-Lanzo zone of the western Alps. See also Metamorphic rocks.

The high density of eclogite, together with its elastic properties, makes it a candidate for upper mantle material. Large quantifies of basaltic oceanic crust are returned to the mantle through the process of subduction, where prevailing high pressures convert it to eclogite. The quantity and distribution of eclogite within the mantle is not known; that it occurs is known from the nodules brought up in kimberlite pipes and in basalts.


Wikipedia: Eclogite
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Eclogite piece with a garnet (red) and omphacite (greyish-green) groundmass. The sky-blue crystals are kyanite. Some white quartz is seen too, it was probably once coesite. A few gold-white phengite mica minerals can be seen at the top. Coin of 1 euro (2,3 cm) for scale.
Eclogite

Eclogite (pronounced /ˈɛklədʒaɪt/) is a coarse-grained mafic (basaltic in composition) metamorphic rock. Eclogite is of special interest for at least two reasons. First, it forms at pressures greater than those typical of the crust of the Earth. Second, being unusually dense rock, eclogite can play an important role in driving convection within the solid Earth.

The fresh rock can be striking in appearance, with red to pink garnet (almandine-pyrope) in a green matrix of sodium-rich pyroxene (omphacite). Accessory minerals include kyanite, rutile, quartz, lawsonite, coesite, amphibole, phengite, paragonite, zoisite, dolomite, corundum, and, rarely, diamond. Plagioclase is not stable in eclogites. Glaucophane and titanite (sphene) form in eclogite as pressures decrease during exhumation of the rocks, or may be earlier formed minerals that did not entirely react away.

Contents

Origins

Eclogite typically results from high-pressure metamorphism of mafic igneous rock (typically basalt or gabbro) as it plunges into the mantle in a subduction zone. Such eclogites are generally formed from precursor mineral assemblages typical of blueschist metamorphism. Eclogite can also form from magmas that crystallize and cool within the mantle or lower crust of continents.

Eclogite facies

Eclogite facies is determined by the temperature and pressure conditions required to metamorphose basaltic rocks to an eclogite assemblage. The typical eclogite mineral assemblage is garnet (pyrope to almandine) plus clinopyroxene (omphacite).

Eclogites record pressures in excess of 1.2 GPa (45 km depth) at >400–1000 °C and usually in excess of 600-650 °C. This is extremely high pressure, medium to high temperature metamorphism. Diamond and coesite occur as trace constituents in some eclogites and record particularly high pressures. In fact, ultrahigh-pressure (UHP) metamorphism has been defined as metamorphism within the eclogite facies but at pressures greater than those of the quartz-coesite transition (the two minerals have the same composition—silica). Some UHP rocks appear to record burial at depths greater than 150 km.

Eclogites containing lawsonite (a hydrous calcium-aluminium silicate) are very rarely exposed at the Earth's surface, although they are predicted from experiments to form during normal subduction of oceanic crust at depths between ~ 45-300 kilometers. The rarity of lawsonite eclogites therefore does not reflect unusual formation conditions but unusual exhumation processes. Examples of lawsonite eclogite are known from the U.S. (Franciscan Complex of California; xenoliths in Arizona); Guatemala (Motagua fault zone), Corsica, Australia, the Dominican Republic, Canada (British Columbia), and Turkey.

Eclogite is the highest pressure metamorphic facies and is usually only the result of advancement from blueschist metamorphic conditions.

Importance of eclogite

Photomicrograph of a thin section of eclogite from Turkey. Green omphacite (+ late chlorite) + pink garnet + blue glaucophane + colorless phengite.

Eclogite is a rare and important rock because it is formed only by conditions typically found in the mantle or the lowermost part of thickened continental crust.

Eclogites are helpful in elucidating patterns and processes of plate tectonics because many represent oceanic crust that has been subducted to depths in excess of 35 km and then returned to the surface.

Eclogite that is brought to shallow conditions is unstable, and retrograde metamorphism often occurs: secondary amphibole and plagioclase may form reaction rims on the primary pyroxene, and titanite may form rims about rutile. Eclogite may completely retrogress to amphibolite or granulite during exhumation. In some retrogressed eclogites and accompanying more silica-rich rocks, UHP (ultrahigh-pressure) metamorphism has been recognized only because of the preservation of coesite and/or diamond inclusions within trace minerals such as zircon and titanite.

Xenoliths of eclogite occur in the kimberlite pipes of the diamond mines of Africa, Russia, Canada, and elsewhere. Eclogites in granulite terranes are known from the Musgrave Block of central Australia where a continental collision took place at 550-530 Ma, resulting in burial of rocks to >45 km (15 kilobars) and rapid (in less than 10 million years![citation needed]) exhumation via thrust faults prevented significant melting. Felsic rocks in these terranes contain sillimanite, kyanite, coesite, orthoclase and pyroxene, and are rare, peculiar rocks formed by an unusual tectonic event.

Eclogite and basalt petrogenesis

Peridotite is the dominant rock type of the upper mantle, not eclogite, as established by seismic and petrologic evidence. Likewise, peridotite is a much more important source rock of common magmas.

Melting of eclogite to produce basalt is generally not supported in modern petrology. Unreasonably high degrees of partial melting are required to attain basaltic compositions. To get a basalt from melting an eclogite (ie; a rock with basalt composition) it has to undergo 100% partial melting. Instead, basalts can be modelled as having been produced by 1 to 25% partial melting of peridotite, such as harzburgite and lherzolite. However, some andesite-like rocks could be produced from partial melting of eclogite; for instance, an unusual rock type called adakite (first described from Adak Island in the Aleutians) has been proposed to be a product of partial melting of eclogite. Likewise, partial melting of eclogite has been modeled to produce tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite melts.[1]

Basalt is generally created as a partial melt of peridotite at between 20-120 km depth. Eclogite is denser than the surrounding asthenosphere. Unless the eclogite is created in very young oceanic crust, it is cool at the time of initial subduction and so is usually carried down to great depths without melting. If that subducted eclogite is subsequently carried upwards during mantle convection together with peridotite, then it would melt by decompression melting (see discussion in igneous rock) at lower temperature than the accompanying peridotite. Eclogite-derived melts may therefore be part of the melt contribution derived from mantle plumes.

Eclogite diamonds

Many diamonds from eclogite xenoliths have a 13C:12C isotope ratio different from that typical of diamonds from peridotite xenoliths. The carbon isotopic differences between harzburgitic and eclogitic diamonds supports the hypothesis that those eclogite xenoliths formed from basalt carried down within subduction zones.

Eclogite diamonds are also typically higher in nitrogen, and will have a different suite of mineral inclusions than harzburgitic diamonds. Harzburgitic diamonds typically have titaniferous pyrope, chromian spinel and Cr-diopside inclusions, minerals which are not typically found in eclogites.

Distribution

Eclogites occur with garnet peridotites in Greenland and in other ophiolite complexes. Examples are known in Saxony, Bavaria, Carinthia, Norway and Newfoundland. A few eclogites also occur in the northwest highlands of Scotland and the Massif Central of France. Glaucophane-eclogites occur in Italy and the Pennine Alps. Occurrences exist in western North America, including the southwest[2] and the Franciscan Formation of the California Coast Ranges.[3] Transitional Granulite-Eclogite facies granitoid, felsic volcanics, mafic rocks and granulites occur in the Musgrave Block of the Petermann Orogeny, central Australia.

References

  • Harvey Blatt and Robert Tracy, 1995, Petrology: igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic, Freeman, ISBN 0-7167-2438-3
  • A. Camacho, B.J. Hensen and R. Armstrong, Isotopic test of a thermally driven intraplate orogenic model, Australia', Geology, 30, pp. 887–890

External links

Metamorphic facies - edit
Prehnite-pumpellyite | Zeolite | Greenschist | Blueschist | Eclogite | Amphibolite | Granulite

 
 
Learn More
smaragdite (mineralogy)
eclogite facies (petrology)
omphacite (mineralogy)

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Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
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