ANHYDROUS PARTIAL MELTING OF AN IRON-RICH MANTLE .1. SUBSOLIDUS PHASE ASSEMBLAGES AND PARTIAL MELTING PHASE-RELATIONS AT 10 TO 30 KBAR

被引:80
作者
BERTKA, CM
HOLLOWAY, JR
机构
[1] ARIZONA STATE UNIV,DEPT GEOL,TEMPE,AZ 85287
[2] ARIZONA STATE UNIV,DEPT CHEM,TEMPE,AZ 85287
关键词
D O I
10.1007/BF00310770
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
Anhydrous partial melting experiments, at 10 to 30 kbar from solidus to near liquidus temperature, have been performed on an iron-rich martian mantle composition, DW. The DW subsolidus assemblage from less-than-or-equal-to 5 kbar to at least 24 kbar is a spinel lherzolite. At 25 kbar garnet is stable at the solidus along with spinel. The clinopyroxene stable on the DW solidus at and above 10 kbar is a pigeonitic clinopyroxene. Pigeonitic clinopyroxene is the first phase to melt out of the spinel lherzolite assemblage at less than 20-degrees-C above the solidus. Spinel melts out of the assemblage about 50-degrees-C above the solidus followed by a 150-degrees to 200-degrees-C temperature interval where melts are in equilibrium with orthopyroxene and olivine. The temperature interval over which pigeonitic clinopyroxene melts out of an iron-rich spinel lherzolite assemblage is smaller than the temperature interval over which augite melts out of an iron-poor spinel lherzolite assemblage. The dominant solidus assemblage in the source regions of the Tharsis plateau, and for a large percentage of the martian mantle, is a spinel Iherzolite.
引用
收藏
页码:313 / 322
页数:10
相关论文
共 57 条
[51]  
TAKAHASHI E, 1983, AM MINERAL, V68, P859
[52]  
THOMPSON RN, 1972, CARNEGIE I WASH YB, V71, P615
[53]   MARTIAN LITHOSPHERIC THICKNESS FROM ELASTIC FLEXURE THEORY [J].
THURBER, CH ;
TOKSOZ, MN .
GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 1978, 5 (11) :977-980
[54]   THEORETICAL PREDICTION OF PHASE-RELATIONSHIPS IN PLANETARY MANTLES [J].
WOOD, BJ ;
HOLLOWAY, JR .
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, 1982, 87 :A19-A30
[55]  
Wood C.A., 1981, P LUNAR PLANET SCI C, V12B, P1359
[56]  
[No title captured]
[57]  
1981, BASALTIC VOLCANISM T, P633