TY - JOUR
T1 - Early Paleozoic jadeitites in Japan
T2 - An overview
AU - Tsujimori, Tatsuki
N1 - Funding Information:
This work is dedicated to Bob Coleman who has addressed the significance of recognition of the ophiolite– blueschist associations with jadeitites and eclogites in the early ‘70s. I always appreciate his encouragement, ‘Tatz, keep going!!’. This research was supported by Center for Northeast Asian Studies, Tohoku University in part by grants from the MEXT/JSPS KAKENHI (15H05212). Kennet E. Flores and anonymous reviewers provided helpful feedback. This manuscript was also improved by Daniel Pastor–Galán and Jesse Walters. I thank these researchers for their help and ‘Jadero’ (George Harlow and his collaborators) for long–term collaboration.
PY - 2017/10/1
Y1 - 2017/10/1
N2 - Paleozoic jadeitite-bearing serpentinite-matrix mélange represents the oldest mantle wedge record of a Pacific- type subduction zone of proto-Japan. Most jadeitites are fluid precipitates (P-type), but some jadeitites are metasomatic replacement (R-type) which preserve relict minerals and protolith textures. The beauty and preciousness of some gem-quality, semi-translucent varieties of jadeitites in the Itoigawa-Omi area led to the designation of jadeitite as the national stone of Japan by the Japan Association of Mineralogical Sciences. Zircon geochronology indicates jadeitite formed prior to Late Paleozoic Renge metamorphism that formed blueschist and rare eclogite. For example, in the Itoigawa-Omi and Osayama localities, older jadeitites and younger high-pressure/low- temperature metamorphic rocks in a single mélange complex imply different histories for the subduction channel and jadeite-bearing serpentinite-matrix mélange. This suggests that the jadeitite-hosted mélange (or serpentinized peridotite) can stay within the mantle wedge for a considerable time; thus recrystallization, resorption, and re-precipitation of jadeitite can continue in the mantle wedge environment. Therefore, studies of Paleozoic jadeitites in Japan have great potential to elucidate the earliest stages of orogenic growth (oceanward-accretion and landward-erosion) associated with the subduction of the paleo-Pacific oceanic plates, and to test geophysical observations of modern analogues from a mixture of fossilized mantle wedges and subduction channels.
AB - Paleozoic jadeitite-bearing serpentinite-matrix mélange represents the oldest mantle wedge record of a Pacific- type subduction zone of proto-Japan. Most jadeitites are fluid precipitates (P-type), but some jadeitites are metasomatic replacement (R-type) which preserve relict minerals and protolith textures. The beauty and preciousness of some gem-quality, semi-translucent varieties of jadeitites in the Itoigawa-Omi area led to the designation of jadeitite as the national stone of Japan by the Japan Association of Mineralogical Sciences. Zircon geochronology indicates jadeitite formed prior to Late Paleozoic Renge metamorphism that formed blueschist and rare eclogite. For example, in the Itoigawa-Omi and Osayama localities, older jadeitites and younger high-pressure/low- temperature metamorphic rocks in a single mélange complex imply different histories for the subduction channel and jadeite-bearing serpentinite-matrix mélange. This suggests that the jadeitite-hosted mélange (or serpentinized peridotite) can stay within the mantle wedge for a considerable time; thus recrystallization, resorption, and re-precipitation of jadeitite can continue in the mantle wedge environment. Therefore, studies of Paleozoic jadeitites in Japan have great potential to elucidate the earliest stages of orogenic growth (oceanward-accretion and landward-erosion) associated with the subduction of the paleo-Pacific oceanic plates, and to test geophysical observations of modern analogues from a mixture of fossilized mantle wedges and subduction channels.
KW - Forearc mantle wedge
KW - Jadeitite
KW - Oeyama ophiolite
KW - Paleozoic
KW - Renge metamorphic rocks
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U2 - 10.2465/jmps.170406a
DO - 10.2465/jmps.170406a
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85033788157
SN - 1345-6296
VL - 112
SP - 217
EP - 226
JO - Journal of Mineralogical and Petrological Sciences
JF - Journal of Mineralogical and Petrological Sciences
IS - 5
ER -