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Zeolite assemblages from Northern Patagonian Andes, Argentina: A review

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TLDR
In this paper, very low-grade metamorphic assemblages found in the Northern Patagonian Andes (Argentina) are summarized, according to their mineralogy, textures and structures, three different alteration stages that evidence a progressive decrease in temperature have been established.
Abstract
In this work very low-grade metamorphic assemblages found in the Northern Patagonian Andes (Argentina) are summarized. On the basis of previous studies, several occurrences of zeolites have been delimited. According to their mineralogy, textures and structures, three different alteration stages that evidence a progressive decrease in temperature have been established. The first one (stage I) was the consequence of an event of regional metamorphism that reached the greenschist facies (350 °C and 2 kbar). During this stage, pyroxene, amphibole and feldspar primary phenocrysts broke down to produce an assemblage of actinolite, grossular-andradite, chlorite, albite, prehnite, titanite, clinozoisite, epidote and calcite. In the subsequent stages, direct hydrothermal precipitation took place as the temperature decreased. Thus, zeolites, calc-silicates, calcite, quartz and cristobalite started to precipitate as cavity fillings. During stage II, temperature decreased below 220 °C and wairakite, yugawaralite, laumontite, pectolite, dachiardite, celadonite, thomsonite, pumpellyite and interstratified chlorite/smectite crystallized. Prehnite, adularia, titanite and albite were also deposited but only as minor species. These minerals mainly alter feldspar phenocrysts and fill amygdules of basalts and andesites. Stage III is characterized by a temperature drop (below 180 °C) and by the crystallization of hydrothermal secondary minerals within open spaces. Most of the alkaline zeolites were deposited during this last event of alteration, filling joints in metabasites and granitoids. Although Ca-stilbite is the most abundant alteration mineral, analcime, natrolite, barrerite, offretite, chabazite, stellerite, heulandite, mordenite, scolecite, mesolite, quartz, calcite, cristobalite and smectites were also produced.

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References
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Late Paleozoic to Jurassic silicic magmatism at the Gondwana margin: Analogy to the Middle Proterozoic in North America?

TL;DR: A vast region of upper Paleozoic to Middle Jurassic (300-150 Ma) silicic magmatic rocks that erupted inboard of the Gondwana margin is a possible Phanerozoic analogue to the extensive Middle Proterozoic (1500-1350 Ma) Silicic province that underlies much of the southern mid-continent of North America as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phase equilibria and mineral parageneses of metabasites in low-grade metamorphism

TL;DR: In this article, the Na20-CaO MgO A1203 SiO2-H20 model was proposed to model phase equilibria and mineral parageneses for low-temperature metamorphism of basaltic rocks.
Journal ArticleDOI

A new petrogenetic grid for low‐grade metabasites

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used internally-consistent thermodynamic data to present calculated phase equilibria for the system Na2O-CaO-MgO-Al2O3-SiO2-H2O (NCMASH), in the range 0-500° C and 0.1-10 kbar.
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Mesozoic-Cenozoic evolution of the North Patagonian Batholith in Aysen, southern Chile

TL;DR: A detailed Rb-Sr geochronological and geochemical study has been carried out on granitoids of the North Patagonian batholith in Aysen as mentioned in this paper.
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Compressional- and transpressional-stress pattern for Pliocene and Quaternary brittle deformation in fore arc and intra-arc zones (Andes of Central and Southern Chile)

TL;DR: In this article, the authors performed a kinematic analysis of fault slip data for stress determination on Late Miocene to Quaternary rocks from the fore arc and intra-arc regions of the Chilean Andes, between 33° and 46° south latitudes.
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