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Published February 1, 1981 | public
Journal Article

Pressure, temperature, and time indicators in mafic schist; their application to reconstructing the polymetamorphic history of Vermont

Abstract

Mineral chemistry and overgrowth relationships in mafic schist from Vermont are shown to be sensitive indicators of pressure, temperature, and relative time and to be good chronicles of the Paleozoic history of this polymetamorphic terrane. Within the common assemblage, amphibole + chlorite + epidote + plagioclase +quartz+ Ti-phase ± carbonate ± K-mica ± Fe^(3+)-oxide, electron microprobe analyses show that increasing metamorphic grade (as defined by intercalated pelitic schist) is recorded by an increase in the edenite, glaucophane, and tschermakite contents of amphibole, in the anorthite content of plagioclase, and in the substitution of (Al^(VI),F^(2+), Ti), Al^(IV) for (Fe^(2+), Mg, Mn), Si in biotite, chlorite, and muscovite. With increasing pressure the glaucophane component of amphibole increases. For medium-pressure metamorphism the albite-oligoclase gap is in the garnet zone, where amphibole has between 1.2 and 1.8 formula proportion Al^(IV) and (Al^(VI) + Fe^(3+) + Ti + Cr). This gap is below the garnet isograd in low-pressure mafic schist where Al^(IV) and (Al^(VI) + Fe^(3+) + Ti + Cr) in the amphibole are both less than 0.6. Mineral growth periods observed are characterized by metamorphic grade and facies series and are assigned to two Ordovician (Taconic) and two Devonian (Acadian) events. Silurian-Devonian mafic schist in northeastern Vermont records two periods of low-pressure, Devonian metamorphism. These events are expressed by medium-pressure and low-pressure metamorphism in the Cambrian and Ordovician rocks to the west and south. In the pre-Silurian rocks high-pressure and medium-pressure metamorphism is assigned to the Ordovician. The observed high-pressure metamorphism is confined to a 110 by 40 km area along the Green Mountain anticlinorium axis in north-central Vermont.

Additional Information

© 1981 American Journal of Science. Contribution No. 3043, Publications of the Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125. We thank the many geologists whose geologic maps helped direct the sampling for this project. Discussions in and out of the field with J. R. Anderson, J. L. Rosenfeld, and J. B. Thompson, Jr. were especially beneficial. Marrion Hood, Evelyn and Morgan Potter, and Elizabeth Wheelwright extended true Yankee hospitality during the field seasons. The collection of mineral compositional data was aided enormously by the expertise of A. A. Chodos in the operation and maintenance of the Caltech electron microprobe. Constructive criticism by the reviewers of this paper, P. Robinson, R. J. Tracy, and A. B. Thompson, are appreciated. Support from National Science Foundation Grants DES 69-0064 and EAR 75-03416 to A.L.A. and Geological Society of America Penrose Bequest Research Grants 1554-71 and 1670-72 to J.L. are gratefully acknowledged. The senior author wishes to thank the Institut für Kristallographie und Petrographie, Eidgenossische Technische Hochschule Zürich for financial support during the writing of later drafts of this manuscript.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 26, 2023