Are you an EPFL student looking for a semester project?
Work with us on data science and visualisation projects, and deploy your project as an app on top of Graph Search.
The complex electrical impedance of a garnet-biotite-sillimanite residual enclave in the Neogene dacite of El Hoyazo (SE Spain) has been determined up to 978. °C at 200-300. MPa. This well studied material represents a direct sampling of the Alborán Domain thinned lower crust undergoing partial melting. The paragenesis is garnet. +. biotite. +. sillimanite. +. plagioclase. +. graphite. ±. cordierite coexisting with widespread ( . 10. wt.%) rhyolitic melt occurring as inclusions and interstitial glass and developed during regional anatexis at 850. ±. 50. °C and 500-700. MPa.The samples were used in cyclic measurements consisting in heating-cooling ramps at progressively higher maximum temperature to observe the effect of reactions on conductivity. In the first cycle up to 850. °C at 2-3. kbar, re-melting of the interstitial glass is achieved with no additional reactions and logarithmic conductivity (S/m) is up to -1.5. At T. >. 950. °C new melt with orthopyroxene. +. ilmenite is produced from biotite partial breakdown and the logarithmic conductivity (S/m) is up to -0.7. Application of mixing models as Hashin-Shtrikman bounds or Archie's Law, shows that once interconnected, melt controls the electrical conductivity of the enclave. The electrical conductivity of the rock can be simulated with the electrical conductivity data obtained on the starting Matrix glass of the enclave and with the new melt.Our experimental results obtained on a graphitic metasedimentary material evidence show that graphite does not contribute to the conductivity enhancement and that the electrical anomaly observed below the Betics can be explained as effect of partial melting of a residual crust. Comparison with previous works on mafic granulites shows that similar conductivity values can be achieved both by melting of a residual felsic crust or by melting of mafic materials and suggests that pelitic rocks can be more common at deep levels than expected. © 2012 Elsevier B.V..
Brice Tanguy Alphonse Lecampion, Andreas Möri, Dmitriy Garagash
Alexandra Roma Larisa Kushnir, Michael Heap
Anders Meibom, Stéphane Laurent Escrig