The behavior of igneous continental crust during subduction is modeled by means of vapor-absent partial melting experiments in a tonalite, containing equal amounts of biotite and hornblende, at pressures of 15 32 kbar. The experiments produce leucogranitic melts coexisting with garnet + omphacitic clinopyroxene + K-feldspar + kyanite + quartz/coesite ± phengite ± zoisite. Experimental constraints and geometrical analysis of phase equilibria show that the hydrous phases that control dehydration-melting of tonalites in deep thickened continental crust and in the upper mantle are phengile and zoisite. The negatively sloping amphibole + quartz vapor-absent solidus characteristic of amphibolites is largely suppressed in tonalites, because amphibole is eliminated by water-conserving reactions that also consume K-feldspar and kyanite and produce phengite and zoisite. The temperature at which melt first appears in the experiments varies from <900°C at 15 kbar, to 1000°C at 27 kbar, to < 925°C at 32 kbar. Moderate degrees of partial melting (20-30%) yield residual assemblages with mantle-like densities but which can still contain minor amounts of hydrous phases. Partial melting of tonalitic crust during continental subduction can thus generate incompatible element-rich residues that would be able to remain in the mantle indefinitely, acting as long-term sources of metasomatic fluids. © Oxford University Press 2004; All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Patiño Douce, A. E. (2005). Vapor-absent melting of tonalite at 15-32 kbar. Journal of Petrology, 46(2), 275–290. https://doi.org/10.1093/petrology/egh071
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