Welcome to the new version of CaltechAUTHORS. Login is currently restricted to library staff. If you notice any issues, please email coda@library.caltech.edu
Published November 2005 | public
Journal Article

Geochemical characteristics of crustal anatexis during the formation of migmatite at the Southern Sierra Nevada, California

Abstract

We provide data on the geochemical and isotopic consequences of nonmodal partial melting of a thick Jurassic pelite unit at mid-crustal levels that produced a migmatite complex in conjunction with the intrusion of part of the southern Sierra Nevada batholith at ca. 100 Ma. Field relations suggest that this pelitic migmatite formed and then abruptly solidified prior to substantial mobilization and escape of its melt products. Hence, this area yields insights into potential mid-crustal level contributions of crustal components into Cordilleran-type batholiths. Major and trace-element analyses in addition to field and petrographic data demonstrate that leucosomes are products of partial melting of the pelitic protolith host. Compared with the metapelites, leucosomes have higher Sr and lower Sm concentrations and lower Rb/Sr ratios. The initial ^(87)Sr/^(86)Sr ratios of leucosomes range from 0.7124 to 0.7247, similar to those of the metapelite protoliths (0.7125–0.7221). However, the leucosomes have a much wider range of initial ε_(Nd) values, which range from −6.0 to −11.0, as compared to −8.7 to −11.3 for the metapelites. Sr and Nd isotopic compositions of the leucosomes, migmatites, and metapelites suggest disequilibrium partial melting of the metapelite protolith. Based on their Sr, Nd, and other trace-element characteristics, two groups of leucosomes have been identified. Group A leucosomes have relatively high Rb, Pb, Ba, and K_2O contents, Rb/Sr ratios (0.15

Additional Information

© 2005 Springer-Verlag. Received: 6 October 2003. Accepted: 10 March 2005. Published online: 5 October 2005. Communicated by Ian Carmichael. Support for this research was provided by NSF grants EAR-9815024 and EAR-0087347. We thank H.P. Taylor, P. Asimow, J. Eiler, and G. Rossman for critical comments on an early version of this manuscript. We thank A.E. Patiño-Douce and C. Miller who gave thoughtful and constructive reviews and I. Carmichael for handling this manuscript.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023