User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
- A form of andesite modified by hydrothermal processes
Extensive Definition
Metasomatism is the chemical alteration of a
rock by
hydrothermal and
other fluids. It is also known as "alteration".
Metasomatism can occur via the action of
hydrothermal fluids from an igneous or metamorphic
source.
In the igneous
environment, metasomatism creates skarns, greisen, and may affect hornfels in the contact
metamorphic aureole adjacent to an intrusive rock mass. In the
metamorphic environment, metasomatism is created by mass transfer
from a volume of metamorphic
rock at higher stress
and temperature into
a zone with lower stress and temperature, with metamorphic
hydrothermal solutions acting as a solvent. This can be envisaged
as the metamorphic rocks within the deep crust
losing fluids and dissolved mineral components as hydrous
minerals break down, with this fluid percolating up into the
shallow levels of the crust to chemically change and alter these
rocks.
This mechanism implies that metasomatism is open
system behaviour, which is different from classical metamorphism which is the
in-situ mineralogical change of a rock without appreciable change
in the chemistry of the rock. Because metamorphism usually requires
water in order to
facilitate metamorphic reactions, metasomatism and metamorphism
nearly always occur together.
Further, because metasomatism is a mass transfer
process, it is not restricted to the rocks which are changed by
addition of chemical elements and minerals or hydrous
compounds. In all
cases, to produce a metasomatic rock some other rock is also
metasomatised, if only by dehydration reactions with minimal
chemical change. This is best illustrated by gold ore
deposits which are the product of focused concentration of
fluids derived from many cubic
kilometres of dehydrated crust
into thin, often highly metasomatised and altered shear zones
and lodes. The source
region is often largely chemically unaffected compared to the
highly hydrated, altered shear zones, but both must have undergone
complementary metasomatism.
Metasomatism is more complicated in the Earth's
mantle, because the composition of peridotite at high
temperatures can be changed by infiltration of carbonate and silicate melts and by carbon
dioxide-rich and water-rich fluids, as discussed by Luth
(2003). Metasomatism is thought to be particularly important in
changing the composition of mantle peridotite below island arcs as
water is driven out of ocean lithosphere during subduction. Metasomatism has
also been considered critical for enriching source regions of some
silica-undersaturated
magmas. Carbonatite
melts are often considered to have been responsible for enrichment
of mantle peridotite in incompatible
elements.
Types of metasomatites
Metasomatic rocks can be extremely varied. Often, metasomatised rocks are pervasively but weakly altered, such that the only evidence of alteration is bleaching, change in colour or change in the crystallinity of micaceous minerals.In such cases, characterising alteration often
requires microscope investigation of the mineral assemblage of the
rocks to characterise the minerals, any additional mineral growth,
changes in protolith minerals, and so on.
In some cases, geochemical evidence can be found
of metasomatic alteration processes. This is usually in the form of
mobile, soluble elements such as barium, strontium, rubidium, calcium and some rare
earth elements. However, to characterise the alteration
properly, it is necessary to compare altered with unaltered
samples.
When the process becomes extremely advanced,
typical metasomatites can include:
- Chlorite or mica whole-rock replacement in shear zones, resulting in rocks in which the existing mineralogy has been completely recrystallised and replaced by hydrated minerals such as chlorite, muscovite, and serpentine.
- Skarn and skarnoid rock types, typically adjacent to granite intrusions and adjacent to reactive lithologies such as limestone, marl and banded iron formation.
- Greisen deposits within granite margins and cupolas.
Effects of metasomatism in mantle peridotite can
be either modal or cryptic. In cryptic metasomatism, mineral
compositions are changed, or introduced elements are concentrated
on grain boundaries and the peridotite mineralogy appears
unchanged. In modal metasomatism, new minerals are formed.
Cryptic metasomatism may be caused as rising or
percolating melts interact with surrounding peridotite, and
compositions of both melts and peridotite are changed. At high
mantle temperatures, solid-state diffusion can also be
effective in changing rock compositions over tens of centimeters adjacent to melt
conduits: gradients in mineral composition adjacent to pyroxenite dikes may preserve
evidence of the process.
Modal metasomatism may result in formation of
amphibole and phlogopite, and the presence
of these minerals in peridotite xenoliths has been considered
strong evidence of metasomatic processes in the mantle. Formation
of minerals less common in peridotite, such as dolomite, calcite, ilmenite, rutile, and armalcolite, is also
attributed to melt or fluid metasomatism.
Alteration assemblages
Investigation of altered rocks in hydrothermal ore deposits has highlghted several ubiquitous types of alteration assemblages which create distinct groups of metasomatic alteration effects, textures and mineral assemblages.- Propylitic Alteration is caused by iron and sulfur-bearing hydrothermal fluids, and typically results in epidote-chlorite-pyrite alteration, often with hematite and magnetite facies
- Albite-epidote alteration is caused by silica-bearing fluids rich in sodium and calcium, and typically results in weak albite-silica-epidote
- Potassic Alteration, typical of lode gold deposits, results in production of micaceous, potassic minerals such as biotite in iron-rich rocks, muscovite mica or sericite in felsic rocks, and orthoclase (adularia) alteration, often quite pervasive and producing distinct salmon-pink alteration vein selvages.
Rarer types of hydrothermal fluids may include
highly carbonic fluids, resulting in advanced carbonation reactions
of the host rock typical of calc-silicates,
and silica-hematite fluids resulting in production of jasperoids, manto
ore deposits and pervasive zones of silicification, typically
in dolomite
formations.
References
- Luth, R. W., Mantle volatiles -- distribution and consequences. In The Mantle and Core (ed. R. W. Carlson) Volume 2 Treatise on Geochemistry (editors H. D. Holland and K. K. Turekian), Elsevier-Pergamon, Oxford, pages 319-361 (2003). ISBN 0-08-043751-6
See also
propylite in Estonian: Metasomatoos
propylite in French: Métasomatose
propylite in Hungarian: Metaszomatózis
propylite in Dutch: Metasomatisme
propylite in Japanese: プロピライト
propylite in Slovak: Metasomatóza
(geológia)