2. igneous petrology of gabbros from hole 1105a: oceanic magma ...

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Atlantis II Fracture Zone grew at an average of 0.4 cm/yr (Dick et al.,. 1991b). ...... Committee for participation in ODP Legs 179 (Hammer Drilling and. NERO).
Casey, J.F., and Miller, D.J. (Eds.) Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results Volume 179

2. IGNEOUS PETROLOGY OF GABBROS FROM HOLE 1105A: OCEANIC MAGMA CHAMBER PROCESSES1 P. Thy2

ABSTRACT Hole 1105A penetrated 158 m of gabbros at a site offset 1.3 km eastnortheast from Hole 735B on the Atlantis Bank near the Atlantis II Fracture Zone. A total of 118 m of dominantly medium- to coarse-grained intercalated Fe-Ti oxide gabbro and olivine gabbro was recovered from Hole 1105A that shows many petrographic features similar to those recovered from the upper part of Hole 735B. The main rock types are distinguished based on the constituent cumulus phases, with the most primitive gabbros consisting of olivine, plagioclase, and clinopyroxene. The inferred crystallization order is subsequently Fe-Ti oxides (ilmenite and titanomagnetite), followed by orthopyroxene, then apatite, and finally biotite. Orthopyroxene appears to replace olivine in a narrow middle interval. The magmatic evolution is likewise reflected in the mineral compositions. Plagioclase varies from An66 to An28. Olivine varies from Fo78 to Fo35. The gap in olivine crystallization occurs between Fo46 and Fo40 and coincides approximately with the appearance of orthopyroxene (~En50). The clinopyroxenes show large compositional variation in Mg/(Mg+Fetotal) from 0.84 to 0.51. The nonquadrilateral cations of clinopyroxene similarly show large variations with Ti increasing for the olivine gabbros and decreasing for the Fe-Ti oxide gabbros with the decrease in Mg/(Mg+Fetotal). The apatites are mainly flourapatites. The compositional variation in the gabbros is interpreted as a comagmatic suite resulting from fractional crystallization. Pyroxene geothermometry suggests equilibration temperatures from 1100°C and below. The coexisting Fe-Ti oxide minerals indicate subsolidus equilibration temperatures from 900°C for olivine gabbros to 700°C for the

1Thy,

P., 2003. Igneous petrology of gabbros from Hole 1105A: oceanic magma chamber processes. In Casey, J.F., and Miller, D.J. (Eds.), Proc. ODP, Sci. Results, 179, 1–76 [Online]. Available from World Wide Web: . [Cited YYYY-MM-DD] 2 Department of Geology, University of California, One Shields Avenue, Davis CA 95616, USA. [email protected] Initial receipt: 10 November 2000 Acceptance: 11 March 2003 Web publication: 23 June 2003 Ms 179SR-017

P. THY OCEANIC MAGMA CHAMBER PROCESSES most evolved apatite-bearing gabbros. The cryptic variation in the olivine gabbros defines two or three lenses, 40 to 60 m thick, each characterized by a distinct convex zoning with a lower segment indicating upward reverse fractionation, a central maximum, and an upper segment showing normal fractionation. The Fe-Ti oxide gabbros show cryptic variations independent of the host olivine gabbros and reveal a systematic upward normal fractionation trend transgressing host olivine gabbro boundaries. Forward fractional crystallization modeling, using a likely parental magma composition from the Atlantis II Fracture Zone (MgO = 7.2 wt%; Mg/[Mg+Fe2+] = 0.62), closely matches the compositions of coexisting olivine, plagioclase, and clinopyroxene. This modeling suggests cosaturation of olivine, plagioclase, and clinopyroxene from 1155°C and the addition of Fe-Ti oxides from 1100°C. The liquid line of descent initially shows increasing FeO with moderately increasing SiO2. After saturation of Fe-Ti oxides, the liquid strongly decreases in FeO and TiO2 and increases in SiO2, reaching dacitic compositions at ~10% liquid remaining. The calculations indicate that formation of olivine gabbros can be accounted for by