IBIGEO   22622
INSTITUTO DE BIO Y GEOCIENCIAS DEL NOA
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Decoupled U-Pb date and chemical zonation of monazite in migmatites: The case for disturbance of isotopic systematics by coupled dissolution-reprecipitation
Autor/es:
NEBEL, OLIVER; KYLANDER-CLARK, ANDREW R.C.; WOLFRAM, LAUREN C.; ZÁVADA, PROKOP; WEINBERG, ROBERTO F.; HASALOVÁ, PAVLÍNA; BECCHIO, RAUL
Revista:
GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA
Editorial:
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
Referencias:
Año: 2020 vol. 269 p. 398 - 412
ISSN:
0016-7037
Resumen:
Monazite is an abundant accessory mineral in metasedimentary rocks and their anatecticproducts. Trace element analysis combined with U-Pb dating of monazite is widely used toreconstruct P-T-t histories of high-grade metamorphic terranes. This approach relies oninterpreting U-Pb dates, which requires understanding the processes that cause isotopicdisturbances. We present in-situ laser ablation split-stream (LASS) results of U-Pb dating andtrace element spot analyses of single monazite grains from anatectic granite samples from aHT-LP migmatitic turbidite terrane exposed in the Sierra de Quilmes, NW Argentina. Thisterrane was part of the back-arc and remained close to anatectic temperatures for most of the~510?440 Ma Famatinian Orogeny, in the Western Gondwana margin. Sampled outcropsdisplay evidence of remelting of the anatectic granites, marked by leucosomes and confirmedby zircon chronology that define multiple thermal peaks and anatexis events during ~60 Myrduration of the arc. U-Pb monazite chronology of these granite samples reveals a continuumof dates between ~500 and 450 Ma recording most of the duration of the Famatinian eventand matching the range of zircon growth ages, but without their multiple, well-defined age populations. Despite each sample yielding a reasonable Famatinian monazite mean date, the results reveal that the isotopic system has been perturbed. Data for each rock sample yield similar date spread for both the cores and the well-defined rims of single monazite grains, indicating a disconnect between U-Pb dates and chemical zonation. We interpret theserandom, within-grain date variations, as a result of coupled dissolution-reprecipitation reactions between monazite grains and ambient fluids, most likely silicate melts. These reactions occurred during a single orogeny marked by long-lasting, high-temperature metamorphic history. During coupled dissolution-reprecipitation reactions, ingrown radiogenic Pb was remobilized and/or redistributed within the grain giving rise to unsupported Pb. This process was likely significant here because dissolution of apatite intosilicate melts during migmatization stabilized monazite, preventing their dissolution but not preventing their reaction with the melt. Redistribution of radiogenic Pb caused by the coupled dissolution-reprecipitation reactions gave rise to meaningless individual dates spreading along the 50 Myr duration of the thermal event associated with the orogeny. In this case, rather than reacting with fluids from a distinct event, monazite dates were perturbed by events occurring during the same orogeny.