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Controls on the mechanisms of fluid infiltration and front advection during regional metamorphism: a stable isotope and textural study of retrograde Dalradian rocks of the SW Scottish Highlands

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors investigated the role of calcite-calcite grain edge flow in the retrograde infiltration of H2O-CO2 fluids into dolomite-ankerite facies.
Abstract
Vein-controlled retrograde infiltration of H2O-CO2 fluids into Dalradian epidote amphibolite facies rocks of the SW Scottish Highlands under greenschist facies conditions resulted in alteration of calcite-rich marble bands to dolomite and spatially associated 18O enrichment of about 10%. on a scale of metres. Fluid inclusion data indicate that the retrograde fluid was an H2O-salt mixture with a low CO2 content, and that the temperature of the fluid was about 400d C. Detailed petrographic and textural (backscattered electron imaging) studies at one garnet-grade locality show that advection of fluid into marbles proceeded by a calcite-calcite grain edge flow mechanism, while alteration of non-carbonate wall-rock is associated with veinlets and microcracks. Stable isotopic analysis of carbonates from marble bands provides evidence for advection of isotopic fronts through carbonate wall-rocks perpendicular to dolomite veins, and fluid fluxes in the range 2.4–28.6 m3/m2 have been computed from measured advection distances. Coincidence of isotope and reaction fronts is considered to result from reaction-enhanced kinetics of isotope exchange at the reaction front. Front advection distances are related to the proportion of calcite to quartz in each marble band, with the largest advection distance occurring in nearly pure calcite matrix. This relationship indicates that fluid flow in carbonates is only possible along fluid-calcite-calcite grain edges. However, experimental constraints on dihedral angles in calcite-fluid systems require that pervasive infiltration occurred in response to calcite dissolution initiated at calcite-calcite grain junctions rather than to an open calcite pore geometry. The regional extent of the retrograde infiltration event has been documented from the high δ18O of dolomite-ankerite carbonates from veins and host-rocks over an area of least 50 × 50 km in the SW Scottish Highlands. Isotopically exotic 18O-rich retrograde fluids have moved rapidly upwards through the crust, inducing isotopic exchange and mineral reaction in wall-rocks only where lithology, pore geometry or mineral solubilities, pressure and temperature have been appropriate for pervasive infiltration to occur.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanisms of fluid flow and fluid–rock interaction in fossil metamorphic hydrothermal systems inferred from vein–wallrock patterns, geometry and microstructure

TL;DR: In this article, a range of processes for vein formation, including formation of closed system fibrous veins by dissolution-precipitation creep, pressure-or kinetically dependent closed system segregation veins in which transfer of soluble components from wallrock to vein leaves behind a residual selvage, similar vein-selvage patterning, but with mass imbalances between vein and wallrock requiring fluid advection through both interconnected fracture networks and in the surrounding permeable rock.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ion microprobe analysis of oxygen isotope ratios in quartz from Skye granite: healed micro-cracks, fluid flow, and hydrothermal exchange

TL;DR: In this article, the ion probe analysis of one grain showed a gradient of 13 µm over 400 µm and a greater range in δ18O than all quartz previously analyzed on the Isle of Skye.
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of grain boundaries and transient porosity in rocks as fluid pathways for reaction front propagation

TL;DR: In this paper, the pseudomorphic replacement of Carrara marble by calcium phosphates was used as a model system in order to study the influence of different fluid pathways for reaction front propagation induced by fluid-rock interaction.
Journal ArticleDOI

P-T-X effects on equilibrium carbonate-H 2 O-CO 2 -NaCl dihedral angles: constraints on carbonate permeability and the role of deformation during fluid infiltration

TL;DR: In this paper, the dihedral angles in the NaCl-H2O-CO2-calcite-dolomite-magnesite system have been determined at pressures ranging from 0.5 to 7 kbar and temperatures from 450°C to 750°C.
Journal ArticleDOI

Regional-scale fluid flow and element mobility in Barrow’s metamorphic zones, Stonehaven, Scotland

TL;DR: The geochemistry of metamorphic quartz vein formation in Barrow's index mineral zones north of Stonehaven, Scotland, was investigated in order to assess regional fluid flow and mass transfer.
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An enlarged and updated internally consistent thermodynamic dataset with uncertainties and correlations: the system K2O–Na2O–CaO–MgO–MnO–FeO–Fe2O3–Al2O3–TiO2–SiO2–C–H2–O2

TL;DR: In this paper, a revised and much enlarged version of the thermodynamic dataset given earlier (Holland & Powell, 1985) is presented, which includes data for 123 mineral and fluid end-members made consistent with over 200 P-T-XCO2-fO2 phase equilibrium experiments.
Journal ArticleDOI

The nature of O18/O16 and C13/C12 secular trends in sedimentary carbonate rocks

TL;DR: In this paper, measurements on 170 carbonate rocks show decreasing δO 18 of similar magnitude for both limestones and dolomites over a time span of ~ 2800 m.y.
Journal ArticleDOI

Volatile production and transport in regional metamorphism

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that H2O and CO2 produced during devolatilization of an average pelite will occupy ∼12 vol. % of the rock at 500°C and 5 kb.
Journal ArticleDOI

The transport of heat and matter by fluids during metamorphism

TL;DR: In this article, non-dimensional solutions to the equations for the combined advective and diffusive one-dimensional transport of heat and solute in a layer are derived for fixed temperature/concentration on the boundaries and initial conditions of a linear gradient across the layer or a step function at the lower boundary.
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