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Hematite and magnetite precipitates in olivine from the Sulu peridotite: A result of dehydrogenation-oxidation reaction of mantle olivine?

  • Shyh-Lung Hwang , Tzen-Fu Yui EMAIL logo , Hao-Tsu Chu , Pouyan Shen , Yoshiyuki Iizuka , Houng-Yi Yang , Jingsui Yang and Zhiqin Xu
From the journal American Mineralogist

Abstract

Analytical electron microscopic observations have been carried out on a garnet peridotite from the Maobei area, Sulu ultrahigh-pressure terrane. The results showed that olivine in this garnet peridotite (5.3-6.6 GPa; 853-957 °C), contains precipitates of chromian magnetite and chromian-titanian hematite at dislocations and (001) faults. Specific crystallographic relationships were determined between these precipitates and the olivine host, viz. [101]Mt//[001]Ol, [110]Mt//[01̄1]Ol, and [01̄1]Mt//[011]Ol; and [0001]Hm//[100]Ol and [101̄0]Hm//[001]Ol. These oriented oxides are not associated with silicate/silica phases and therefore cannot be accounted for by the mechanism of olivine oxidation. It is postulated that these magnetite and hematite precipitates most likely have resulted from dehydrogenation-oxidation of nominally anhydrous mantle olivine during rock exhumation. In view of the contrasting diffusion rates of H and Fe in the olivine lattice, it is suggested that the formation process might actually take place in steps. Hydrogen diffusion with concomitant quantitative oxidation of Fe2+ to Fe3+ in olivine occurred early during initial rock exhumation and was followed by slow Fe diffusion forming magnetite/hematite at stacking faults and dislocations within the olivine lattice. Two requirements are essential under such a scenario: an ample amount of H content of the olivine, and an appropriate exhumation rate, probably in the range of 6-11 mm/year, of the host rock. It is also noted that such dehydrogenation-oxidation processes may hamper a correct estimate of the actual P-T conditions and mantle oxidation state based on mineral chemistries present in mantle eclogite/peridotite. The present study demonstrates that oriented mineral inclusions may not necessarily form through exsolution processes sensu stricto, but may form through a series of more complicated reaction mechanisms.

Received: 2007-9-10
Accepted: 2008-2-5
Published Online: 2015-4-1
Published in Print: 2008-7-1

© 2015 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston

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