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Published December 15, 2024 | Published
Journal Article

Garnet clinopyroxenite formation via amphibole-dehydration in continental arcs: Evidence from Fe isotopes

  • 1. ROR icon California Institute of Technology
  • 2. Minerlab Limitada, Calle 51 Sur No 80i-34, 110861, Bogotá, DC, Colombia

Abstract

Lower-crustal garnet clinopyroxenite (sometimes termed “arclogite”) fractionation in thick-crustal (>35 km) arc settings presents a compelling model to explain Fe-depletion trends, high oxygen fugacity, and evidence of recent delamination observed in many continental arcs. However, the origin of the garnet clinopyroxenites via igneous or metamorphic processes remains unclear. Due to the preferential incorporation of light Fe isotopes in garnet relative to clinopyroxene or amphibole, Fe isotopes are ideally suited for studying the effects of garnet fractionation on magmatic systems. Here, we present whole-rock and mineral Fe isotope data from a suite of lower to mid/upper-crustal Andean xenoliths from Mercaderes, Colombia. This data is combined with petrography, major and trace element mineral and whole-rock chemistry, geothermobarometry, and thermodynamic modeling to explore the xenoliths' petrogenesis and the Northern Andes' crustal structure. Whole-rock samples display a narrow range of Fe isotope compositions (δ56Fe = –0.02 to +0.11 ‰), which do not correlate with lithology, chemistry, or pressure-temperature conditions. This result is inconsistent with previous studies predicting the existence of an isotopically light Fe reservoir in the garnet-rich lower Andean crust. Through thermodynamic modeling, we show that the lack of isotopic fractionation in the Mercaderes xenoliths is more consistent with the suite representing a prograde metamorphic sequence, in which amphibole dehydration reactions drive metamorphism of mid/upper-crustal diorite protoliths. While our data do not preclude the presence of garnet clinopyroxenite cumulates at the base of the Andean crust, or that the delamination of such cumulates played an important role in the evolution of the Andes, they do indicate that not all garnet clinopyroxenites are cumulate in origin. Instead, the lower Andean crust represents an amalgamation of igneous and metamorphic rock, with metamorphism of mid-crustal lithologies and partial melting of mafic cumulate roots acting in tandem to drive densification and delamination of the lower crust in a self-feeding mechanism.

Copyright and License

© 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights are reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies.

Acknowledgement

We thank C. Ma (Caltech) for assistance with the EMPA, T.M. Present (Caltech) for his help with XRF spectroscopy, O. Wilner (Caltech) for help with the ICP-MS, R. Grigoryan (Caltech) for support with the Neptune, and K. McCarty (Pomona) and N.F. Dalleska (Caltech) for their help with LA-ICP-MS. We thank P. Asimow and J. Eiler for their helpful discussion during the course of this work. This work was supported by NSF grant EAR 1943629 awarded to C. Bucholz. E. Sosa was supported by the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship under grant DGE‐1745301. We thank Fang-Zhen Teng for editorial handling of our manuscript. This manuscript was significantly improved by thoughtful and constructive reviews from E. Cottrell and one anonymous reviewer.

Contributions

Emma S. Sosa: Writing – original draft, Visualization, Investigation, Formal analysis, Conceptualization. Claire E. Bucholz: Writing – review & editing, Funding acquisition, Conceptualization. Juan David Hernández-Montenegro: Writing – review & editing, Formal analysis. Andrés Rodríguez-Vargas: Writing – review & editing, Resources. Michael A. Kipp: Writing – review & editing, Formal analysis. François L.H. Tissot: Writing – review & editing, Supervision, Resources.

Data Availability

All original data are available in the supplementary materials.

Supplemental Material

Supplementary material (PDF)

Supplementary spreadsheet (XLSX)

Additional details

Created:
October 28, 2024
Modified:
October 28, 2024