Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Melt–Rock Interaction Experiments Reveal Rapid Microstructural and Chemical Changes at Lower Crustal Conditions

View through CrossRef
ABSTRACTThe reactive flow of melt through the mantle or crust triggers chemical disequilibrium, driving reactions that significantly alter the mineral assemblages and physical properties of host rocks. However, the degrees of chemical difference required to initiate these reactions and their timescale remain poorly understood. In this study, we present piston–cylinder reaction experiments simulating lower crustal conditions, where largely anhydrous lower crustal granoblastic dioritic gneiss interacts with a hydrous mafic melt, created from the same gneiss but modified by the addition of ~6‐wt.% H2O. Remarkably, reactions occurred within just 12 h, producing microstructures that closely resemble those observed in natural, melt‐fluxed rocks from the lower arc crust in Fiordland, New Zealand. Melt–rock interactions led to the formation of epitaxial, multilayer symplectic coronae of pargasite + plagioclase or quartz partially replacing pre‐existing pyroxene grains. The protolith plagioclase and amphibole are either completely dissolved into the melt or replaced by a modified composition of the same mineral. The melt exhibits compositional variations that correlate with distance from the melt–rock reaction front. Quenched melt chemistry data demonstrate the potential for melt compositions to continuously evolve in response to both crystallisation and melt–rock interactions during reactive flow. Importantly, our findings reveal that melt–rock reactions, initiated by melt not drastically different from the solid rock (protolith), can induce significant changes in rock composition and thus physical properties in a short time. Our findings have broad implications for understanding the compositional evolution of migrating melts and the chemical and mechanical evolution of the Earth's mantle and lower crust in general.
Title: Melt–Rock Interaction Experiments Reveal Rapid Microstructural and Chemical Changes at Lower Crustal Conditions
Description:
ABSTRACTThe reactive flow of melt through the mantle or crust triggers chemical disequilibrium, driving reactions that significantly alter the mineral assemblages and physical properties of host rocks.
However, the degrees of chemical difference required to initiate these reactions and their timescale remain poorly understood.
In this study, we present piston–cylinder reaction experiments simulating lower crustal conditions, where largely anhydrous lower crustal granoblastic dioritic gneiss interacts with a hydrous mafic melt, created from the same gneiss but modified by the addition of ~6‐wt.
% H2O.
Remarkably, reactions occurred within just 12 h, producing microstructures that closely resemble those observed in natural, melt‐fluxed rocks from the lower arc crust in Fiordland, New Zealand.
Melt–rock interactions led to the formation of epitaxial, multilayer symplectic coronae of pargasite + plagioclase or quartz partially replacing pre‐existing pyroxene grains.
The protolith plagioclase and amphibole are either completely dissolved into the melt or replaced by a modified composition of the same mineral.
The melt exhibits compositional variations that correlate with distance from the melt–rock reaction front.
Quenched melt chemistry data demonstrate the potential for melt compositions to continuously evolve in response to both crystallisation and melt–rock interactions during reactive flow.
Importantly, our findings reveal that melt–rock reactions, initiated by melt not drastically different from the solid rock (protolith), can induce significant changes in rock composition and thus physical properties in a short time.
Our findings have broad implications for understanding the compositional evolution of migrating melts and the chemical and mechanical evolution of the Earth's mantle and lower crust in general.

Related Results

Hafnium isotopic record of crustal maturation during Middle Triassic magmatism in the Southern Alps (Italy)
Hafnium isotopic record of crustal maturation during Middle Triassic magmatism in the Southern Alps (Italy)
<p>Tracing the origin and evolution of magmas on their pathway through the lithosphere is key to understanding the magmatic processes that eventually produce eruption...
Reliability-based design (RBD) of shallow foundations on rock masses
Reliability-based design (RBD) of shallow foundations on rock masses
[ACCESS RESTRICTED TO THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI AT AUTHOR'S REQUEST.] The reliability-based design (RBD) approach that separately accounts for variability and uncertainty in load(...
Modelling subsurface melt of Swiss glaciers
Modelling subsurface melt of Swiss glaciers
Glacier subsurface melt, consisting of englacial and basal melt, is far less understood than surface mass balance. Yet it represents a potentially relevant component of glacier ret...
Fluid and melt inclusion study of magmatic-hydrothermal mineralization in the Ossa Morena Zone (SW Spain)
Fluid and melt inclusion study of magmatic-hydrothermal mineralization in the Ossa Morena Zone (SW Spain)
The Ossa Morena Zone (OMZ) in the southwest of Spain is one of the most complex and best studied areas in the Variscan Belt, and records a heterogeneous tectonic evolution from the...
A novel experimental V-Sc olivine-melt oxybarometer for arc magmas
A novel experimental V-Sc olivine-melt oxybarometer for arc magmas
This manuscript is a preprint. A substantially revised and peer-reviewed version has been published in Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2025.12.0...
The IMPULSE experiment: New oceanic crustal record of thermal plume pulsing of Earth’s strongest mantle plume
The IMPULSE experiment: New oceanic crustal record of thermal plume pulsing of Earth’s strongest mantle plume
Thermal pulsing is thought to be a characteristic process of major mantle convection cells.  Seafloor features near Iceland, known as the "V-Shaped Ridges" (VSRs), may comprise the...
An experimental study of melt migration in crystal-rich mushes
An experimental study of melt migration in crystal-rich mushes
<p>Increasingly, volcanologists model mature volcanic systems as being fed by stratified magma reservoirs, that is, small lenses of eruptible magma suspended within a...

Back to Top