Effect of Water on the Composition of Partial Melts of Greenstone and Amphibolite
- 14 April 1989
- journal article
- other
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 244 (4901) , 195-197
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.244.4901.195
Abstract
Closed-system partial melts of hydrated, metamorphosed arc basalts and andesites (greenstones and amphibolites), where only water structurally bound in metamorphic minerals is available for melting (dehydration melting), are generally water-undersaturated, coexist with plagioclase-rich, anhydrous restites, and have compositions like island arc tonalites. In contrast, water-saturated melting at water pressures of 3 kilobars yields strongly peraluminous, low iron melts that coexist with an amphibolebearing, plagioclase-poor restite. These melt compositions are unlike those of most natural silicic rocks. Thus, dehydration melting over a range of pressures in the crust of island arcs is a plausible mechanism for the petrogenesis of islands arc tonalite, whereas water-saturated melting at pressure of 3 kilobars and above is not.Keywords
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