Archaean Intracrustal Differentiation from Partial Melting of Metagabbro-Field and Geochemical Evidence from the Central Region of the Lewisian Complex, NW Scotland

The central region of the mainland Lewisian gneiss complex of NW Scotland is a granulite-facies migmatite terrane. With the exception of ultramafic and rare calc-silicate rocks, all other lithologies partially melted during Neoarchaean, ultrahigh-temperature (Badcallian) metamorphism. The clearest e...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Johnson, Tim, Fischer, S., White, R., Brown, M., Rollinson, H.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Oxford University Press 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/47376
_version_ 1848757815935500288
author Johnson, Tim
Fischer, S.
White, R.
Brown, M.
Rollinson, H.
author_facet Johnson, Tim
Fischer, S.
White, R.
Brown, M.
Rollinson, H.
author_sort Johnson, Tim
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The central region of the mainland Lewisian gneiss complex of NW Scotland is a granulite-facies migmatite terrane. With the exception of ultramafic and rare calc-silicate rocks, all other lithologies partially melted during Neoarchaean, ultrahigh-temperature (Badcallian) metamorphism. The clearest evidence is preserved within large layered mafic–ultramafic bodies that exhibit macroscopic features diagnostic of anatexis. In situ partial melting of metagabbroic rocks produced patches and sheets of coarse-grained plagioclase-rich leucosome containing euhedral peritectic clinopyroxene. These leucosomes connect with larger, laterally continuous tonalite or trondhjemite sheets that record segregation and migration of melt away from the metagabbro source rocks. This melt loss allowed wide-scale preservation of granulite-facies assemblages within the residual melanosome. Whole-rock major and trace element geochemistry is broadly consistent with the field evidence, but suggests contamination of the metagabbroic rocks by their host-rocks and a strong mineralogical control on trace element distributions, the consequence of large diffusive length scales during protracted ultrahigh-temperature metamorphism. Variations in the trace element composition of the felsic sheets reflect heterogeneities in the source rocks, the presence of material entrained from the melanosome and fractional crystallization dominated by plagioclase. The felsic sheets are largely cumulate, suggesting loss of the evolved melt fraction to higher crustal levels. Partial melting of felsic gneisses that surround the mafic–ultramafic bodies is inevitable at the implied metamorphic peak provided they contained hydrous phases, although the field evidence is largely obscured by later reworking. This study provides insights into the processes involved in intracrustal differentiation during the Neoarchaean, during which partial melting of mafic rocks is likely to have made a more significant contribution than during the Phanerozoic.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T09:34:06Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-47376
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T09:34:06Z
publishDate 2012
publisher Oxford University Press
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-473762017-02-28T01:48:19Z Archaean Intracrustal Differentiation from Partial Melting of Metagabbro-Field and Geochemical Evidence from the Central Region of the Lewisian Complex, NW Scotland Johnson, Tim Fischer, S. White, R. Brown, M. Rollinson, H. metagabbro migmatite Lewisian complex partial melting intracrustal differentiation Archaean The central region of the mainland Lewisian gneiss complex of NW Scotland is a granulite-facies migmatite terrane. With the exception of ultramafic and rare calc-silicate rocks, all other lithologies partially melted during Neoarchaean, ultrahigh-temperature (Badcallian) metamorphism. The clearest evidence is preserved within large layered mafic–ultramafic bodies that exhibit macroscopic features diagnostic of anatexis. In situ partial melting of metagabbroic rocks produced patches and sheets of coarse-grained plagioclase-rich leucosome containing euhedral peritectic clinopyroxene. These leucosomes connect with larger, laterally continuous tonalite or trondhjemite sheets that record segregation and migration of melt away from the metagabbro source rocks. This melt loss allowed wide-scale preservation of granulite-facies assemblages within the residual melanosome. Whole-rock major and trace element geochemistry is broadly consistent with the field evidence, but suggests contamination of the metagabbroic rocks by their host-rocks and a strong mineralogical control on trace element distributions, the consequence of large diffusive length scales during protracted ultrahigh-temperature metamorphism. Variations in the trace element composition of the felsic sheets reflect heterogeneities in the source rocks, the presence of material entrained from the melanosome and fractional crystallization dominated by plagioclase. The felsic sheets are largely cumulate, suggesting loss of the evolved melt fraction to higher crustal levels. Partial melting of felsic gneisses that surround the mafic–ultramafic bodies is inevitable at the implied metamorphic peak provided they contained hydrous phases, although the field evidence is largely obscured by later reworking. This study provides insights into the processes involved in intracrustal differentiation during the Neoarchaean, during which partial melting of mafic rocks is likely to have made a more significant contribution than during the Phanerozoic. 2012 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/47376 Oxford University Press restricted
spellingShingle metagabbro
migmatite
Lewisian complex
partial melting
intracrustal differentiation
Archaean
Johnson, Tim
Fischer, S.
White, R.
Brown, M.
Rollinson, H.
Archaean Intracrustal Differentiation from Partial Melting of Metagabbro-Field and Geochemical Evidence from the Central Region of the Lewisian Complex, NW Scotland
title Archaean Intracrustal Differentiation from Partial Melting of Metagabbro-Field and Geochemical Evidence from the Central Region of the Lewisian Complex, NW Scotland
title_full Archaean Intracrustal Differentiation from Partial Melting of Metagabbro-Field and Geochemical Evidence from the Central Region of the Lewisian Complex, NW Scotland
title_fullStr Archaean Intracrustal Differentiation from Partial Melting of Metagabbro-Field and Geochemical Evidence from the Central Region of the Lewisian Complex, NW Scotland
title_full_unstemmed Archaean Intracrustal Differentiation from Partial Melting of Metagabbro-Field and Geochemical Evidence from the Central Region of the Lewisian Complex, NW Scotland
title_short Archaean Intracrustal Differentiation from Partial Melting of Metagabbro-Field and Geochemical Evidence from the Central Region of the Lewisian Complex, NW Scotland
title_sort archaean intracrustal differentiation from partial melting of metagabbro-field and geochemical evidence from the central region of the lewisian complex, nw scotland
topic metagabbro
migmatite
Lewisian complex
partial melting
intracrustal differentiation
Archaean
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/47376