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Polybaric fractional crystallisation of arc magmas: an experimental study simulating trans-crustal magmatic systems

Felix Marxer*, Peter Ulmer, Othmar Müntener

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Abstract

Crystallisation-driven differentiation is one fundamental mechanism proposed to control the compositional evolution of magmas. In this experimental study, we simulated polybaric fractional crystallisation of mantle-derived arc magmas. Various pressure–temperature trajectories were explored to cover a range of potential magma ascent paths and to investigate the role of decompression on phase equilibria and liquid lines of descent (LLD). Fractional crystallisation was approached in a step-wise manner by repetitively synthesising new starting materials chemically corresponding to liquids formed in previous runs. Experiments were performed at temperatures ranging from 1140 to 870 °C with 30 °C steps, and pressure was varied between 0.8 and 0.2 GPa with 0.2 GPa steps. For most fractionation paths, oxygen fugacity (fO 2) was buffered close to the Ni-NiO equilibrium (NNO). An additional fractionation series was conducted at fO 2 corresponding to the Re-ReO 2 buffer (RRO ≈ NNO+2). High-pressure experiments (0.4–0.8 GPa) were run in piston cylinder apparatus while 0.2 GPa runs were conducted in externally heated pressure vessels. Resulting liquid lines of descent follow calc-alkaline differentiation trends where the onset of pronounced silica enrichment coincides with the saturation of amphibole and/or Fe–Ti–oxide. Both pressure and fO 2 exert crucial control on the stability fields of olivine, pyroxene, amphibole, plagioclase, and Fe–Ti–oxide phases and on the differentiation behaviour of arc magmas. Key observations are a shift of the olivine–clinopyroxene cotectic towards more clinopyroxene-rich liquid composition, an expansion of the plagioclase stability field and a decrease of amphibole stability with decreasing pressure. Decompression-dominated ascent trajectories result in liquid lines of descent approaching the metaluminous compositional range observed for typical arc volcanic rocks, while differentiation trends obtained for cooling-dominated trajectories evolve to peraluminous compositions, similar to isobaric liquid lines of descent at elevated pressures. Experiments buffered at RRO provide a closer match with natural calc-alkaline differentiation trends compared to fO 2 conditions close to NNO. We conclude that decompression-dominated fractionation at oxidising conditions represents one possible scenario for arc magma differentiation.

Original languageEnglish
Article number3
JournalContributions to Mineralogy and Petrology
Volume177
Issue number1
Early online date7 Dec 2021
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2022

Keywords

  • Arc magmatism
  • Calc-alkaline rocks
  • Fractional crystallisation
  • Liquid line of descent
  • Magma differentiation
  • Polybaric differentiation

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Geochemistry and Petrology
  • Geophysics

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