Affiliation:
1. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, American Museum of Natural History, New York, NY 10024-5192;
2. Pheasant Memorial Laboratory, Institute for Study of the Earth's Interior, Okayama University, Misasa, Tottori 682-0193, Japan;
3. Department of Mineral Sciences, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC 20013-7012;
Abstract
Jadeitite is a relatively rare, very tough rock composed predominantly of jadeite and typically found associated with tectonic blocks of high-pressure/low-temperature metabasaltic rocks (e.g., eclogite, blueschist) in exhumed serpentinite-matrix mélanges. Studies over the past ∼20 years have interpreted jadeitite either as the direct hydrous fluid precipitate from subduction channel dewatering into the overlying mantle wedge or as the metasomatic replacement by such fluids of oceanic plagiogranite, graywacke, or metabasite along the channel margin. Thus, jadeitites directly sample and record fluid transport in the subduction factory and provide a window into this geochemical process that is critical to a major process in the Earth system. They record the remarkable transport of large ion lithophile elements, such as Li, Ba, Sr, and Pb, as well as elements generally considered more refractory, such as U, Th, Zr, and Hf. Jadeitite is also the precious form of jade, utilized since antiquity in the form of tools, adornments, and symbols of prestige.
Subject
Space and Planetary Science,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Astronomy and Astrophysics
Cited by
90 articles.
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