Feldspars and fluids in cooling plutons
- 1 March 1978
- journal article
- Published by Mineralogical Society in Mineralogical Magazine
- Vol. 42 (321) , 1-17
- https://doi.org/10.1180/minmag.1978.042.321.01
Abstract
Summary: Alkali feldspars in plutonic igneous rocks vary both in their exsolution textures and in the structural state of their components. The primary factor leading to this diversity is the availability of hydrothermal fluids during their cooling history. In many plutons feldspar variation is related to degree of fractionation as indicated by rock chemistry. The variation reflects build-up of water with magmatic evolution and implies that fluids did not circulate freely in the intrusives in the temperature range of unmixing and ordering. Experimental work bearing on the role of fluids in subsolidus changes in feldspars is reviewed, and points of overlap between crystallographic studies of feldspars and stable isotope studies are discussed.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Experimental studies of sodic microperthites from the Loch Ailsh syeniteLithos, 1974
- Coexisting alkali feldspars in felsic members of the Cauro-Bastelica ring complex, CorsicaLithos, 1974
- The alkali-feldspar solvus at 1 kilobar water-vapour pressureMineralogical Magazine, 1974
- Zur Synthese und Stabilit t der Albit-ModifikationenTschermaks Mineralogische und Petrographische Mitteilungen, 1971
- An experimental study of ordering in sodium-rich alkali feldsparsMineralogical Magazine and Journal of the Mineralogical Society, 1968
- Phase-equilibrium studies in the system NaAlSiO4 (nepheline)–KAlSiO4 (kalsilite)–SiO2-H2OMineralogical Magazine and Journal of the Mineralogical Society, 1965
- Alkali ion exchange between vapor and feldspar phasesAmerican Journal of Science, 1963
- The crystalline modifications of NaAlSi 3 O 8American Journal of Science, 1957
- Origin of the Contrasting Mineralogy of Extrusive and Plutonic Salic RocksThe Journal of Geology, 1952
- The System NaAlSi3O8-KAlSi3O8-H2OThe Journal of Geology, 1950