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Published May 2008 | public
Journal Article

Petrogenesis of Ultramafic Rocks from the Ultrahigh-pressure Metamorphic Kimi Complex in Eastern Rhodope (NE Greece)

Abstract

Widespread bodies of garnet–spinel metaperidotites with pyroxenitic layers occur in the ultrahigh-pressure metamorphic Kimi Complex. In this study we address the origin of such peridotite–pyroxenite associations in the context of polybaric melting regimes. We conduct a detailed geochemical investigation of major and trace element relations and compare them with a range of major element modelling scenarios. With increasing bulk-rock MgO content, the garnet–spinel metaperidotites exhibit decreasing CaO, Al_(2)O_3, TiO_2, and Na_(2)O along with increasing Ni and a gradually increasing Zr/Zr* anomaly, consistent with an origin as residues after variable degrees of melt extraction. The major element modelling further suggests a polybaric adiabatic decompression melting regime beginning at high to ultrahigh pressure, with an intermediate character between pure batch and fractional melting and a mean extent of melting of 9–11%. The pyroxenites exhibit major element compositions that cannot be reproduced by experimental or calculated melts of peridotite. Moreover, the Kimi pyroxenites have highly variable Ni and Sc contents and a wide range of Mg-number (0·76–0·89), inconsistent with an origin as frozen melts or the products of melt–peridotite interaction. However, both the major element systematics and the observed rare earth element patterns, with both convex and concave shapes, can be explained by an origin as clinopyroxene-rich, high-pressure cumulates involving garnet and/or Cr-spinel.

Additional Information

© 2007 Oxford University Press. Received January 25, 2007; accepted February 13, 2008. First published online: March 24, 2008. I.B. and E.M. were financially supported by the Project 'Pythagoras I', co-funded by the European Social Fund (75%) and National Resources (25%), and by the National Technical University of Athens for the Special Research Project 'Protagoras'. P.D.A. was financially supported by the US National Science Foundation through grant EAR-0239513. Critical and constructive reviews by O. Müntener, E. Hellebrand and an anonymous reviewer helped us to improve the manuscript and are gratefully acknowledged. We want to express our sincere thanks to M. Wilson for her helpful remarks and extraordinarily patient editorial handling.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 18, 2023