INENCO   05446
INSTITUTO DE INVESTIGACIONES EN ENERGIA NO CONVENCIONAL
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Petrogenesis of migmatites and leucogranites from Sierra de Molinos, Salta, Northwest Argentina: A petrologic and geochemical study
Autor/es:
SOLA ALFONSO; BECCHIO, RAÚL; MARCIO PIMENTEL
Revista:
LITHOS
Editorial:
ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
Referencias:
Lugar: Amsterdam; Año: 2013 vol. 177 p. 470 - 491
ISSN:
0024-4937
Resumen:
In Sierra de Molinos, Eastern Cordillera, NW Argentina the relationship between different components of an anatectic system developed in high temperature and low pressure conditions (b800 °C and 4?6 kbar) can be observed. This allows the direct insight on the origin of migmatites and granites by anatexis of psammo?pelitic metasedimentary rocks. Four principal rock types have been recognized in Sierra de Molinos 1) metasedimentary rocks, assigned to the Puncoviscana Formation, 2)metatexitemigmatites, 3) diatexitemigmatites and 4) anatectic granitoids including: leucogranites, trondhjemites and pegmatite/aplitic dykes. The metamorphic grade increases from phyllites and schists at sub-greenschist and greenschist facies in the west, to upper amphibolite facies migmatites in the east. The mineral assemblages indicate a progressive increase in temperature without a significant change in pressure. The ages obtained for granitoids and migmatites are identical within analytical errors and indicate that the metamorphic peak and anatectic granite generation occurred at ca. 470 Ma. We use petrological and geochemical variations to investigate the formation of granitemagma from migmatites that derived frommetasedimentary protoliths. This provides evidence of the processes that occur during the evolution (melting, segregation and crystallization stages) of partially molten terranes, for which particular components: protolith, residuum and melt fractions are identified. Mass balance calculations are used to estimate the degree of partial melting and the degree of melt extraction in migmatites. Petrological and compositional data suggest that migmatites from this region are the result of open system processes and that fluid-absent melting played a major role in the formation of migmatites and leucogranites. The geochemical evidence suggests that the compositional variation within the anatectic rocks from Molinos can be understood as a result of 1) variable degrees of melt?residuum separation and 2) fractional crystallization of the anatectic melt. Compared to the protolith, most of the migmatites have melt-depleted compositions (up to 0.25 of melt extraction). In the same fashion most of the leucosomes represent cumulate products of fractional crystallization. This means that they have lost some liquid of evolved composition and represent evidence of the melt extraction pathways and linkage to the magma ascent conduits