TY - JOUR
T1 - Mineral distribution within polymineralic veins in the Sanbagawa belt, Japan
T2 - Implications for mass transfer during vein formation
AU - Okamoto, Atsushi
AU - Kikuchi, Taketo
AU - Tsuchiya, Noriyoshi
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgments We thank T. Kuwatani for assistance in undertaking EPMA analyses, M. Toriumi and P. R. L. Browne for valuable comments on an early version of the manuscript, and K. Morohashi for help in the field. We are grateful to M. H. Reed and D. Koehn for extensive reviews of the manuscript and J. Hoefs for editorial handling. This study was supported by a grant from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (No. 18740317) awarded to A. Okamoto.
PY - 2008/9
Y1 - 2008/9
N2 - Pelitic schists of the Sanbagawa metamorphic belt contain several types of polymineralic veins that formed during the late stages of exhumation. The vein mineral assemblages are quartz + albite + K-feldspar + chlorite ± calcite (Type I, II) and quartz + albite + calcite (Type III). Type I and II veins contain quartz and albite with stretched-crystal and elongate-blocky textures, respectively. The mineral species within Type I veins vary with compositional bands within the host rocks. Type III veins are characterized by euhedral to subhedral quartz grains with concentric zoning and a homogeneous distribution along the vein length. The vein textures vary depending on the crack aperture during multiple crack-seal events: <0.08 mm for Type I, and 0.5-10 mm for Type III. Type II veins show intermediate features between Type I and III veins in terms of mineral distribution (weak dependence on the host rock composition) and apparent crack aperture (less than 1-15 mm). These observations suggest a transition in the dominant transport mechanism of vein components with increasing crack aperture, from diffusion from host rocks to fluid advection along cracks.
AB - Pelitic schists of the Sanbagawa metamorphic belt contain several types of polymineralic veins that formed during the late stages of exhumation. The vein mineral assemblages are quartz + albite + K-feldspar + chlorite ± calcite (Type I, II) and quartz + albite + calcite (Type III). Type I and II veins contain quartz and albite with stretched-crystal and elongate-blocky textures, respectively. The mineral species within Type I veins vary with compositional bands within the host rocks. Type III veins are characterized by euhedral to subhedral quartz grains with concentric zoning and a homogeneous distribution along the vein length. The vein textures vary depending on the crack aperture during multiple crack-seal events: <0.08 mm for Type I, and 0.5-10 mm for Type III. Type II veins show intermediate features between Type I and III veins in terms of mineral distribution (weak dependence on the host rock composition) and apparent crack aperture (less than 1-15 mm). These observations suggest a transition in the dominant transport mechanism of vein components with increasing crack aperture, from diffusion from host rocks to fluid advection along cracks.
KW - Mass transfer
KW - Mineral distribution
KW - Polymineralic vein
KW - Sanbagawa metamorphic belt
KW - Vein texture
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U2 - 10.1007/s00410-008-0288-y
DO - 10.1007/s00410-008-0288-y
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:47949103251
SN - 0010-7999
VL - 156
SP - 323
EP - 336
JO - Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology
JF - Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology
IS - 3
ER -