6533b858fe1ef96bd12b5892

RESEARCH PRODUCT

On equilibrium in non-hydrostatic metamorphic systems

Richard WhiteKaty EvansEleanor C. R. GreenRoger Powell

subject

Mineral010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesMetamorphic rockNon-hydrostatic stressT-NDASNon hydrostaticMetamorphismGeologyCrust010502 geochemistry & geophysicsQD Chemistry01 natural sciencesElastic solidsQE GeologyLattice constraintEquilibrium thermodynamicsGeochemistry and PetrologyQEQDPetrologyMetamorphic faciesGeologyEquilibrium thermodynamics0105 earth and related environmental sciencesSimple (philosophy)

description

Metamorphic geology has accumulated a huge body of observation on mineral assemblages that reveal strong patterns in occurrence, summarised for example in the idea of metamorphic facies. On the realisation that such patterns needed a simple explanation, there has been considerable a posteriori success from adopting the idea that equilibrium thermodynamics can be used on mineral assemblages to make sense of the patterns in terms of, for example, the pressure and temperature of formation of mineral assemblages. In doing so, a particularly simple implicit assumption is made, that mineral assemblages operate essentially hydrostatically. Structural geologists have studied the same rocks for different ends, but, remarkably, the phenomena they are interested in depend on non-hydrostatic stress. We look at the effect of such behaviour on mineral equilibria. With adoption of some plausible assumptions about how metamorphism in the crust works, the consequence of minerals being non-hydrostatically stressed is commonly second order in equilibrium calculations. Postprint Peer reviewed

10.1111/jmg.12298https://hdl.handle.net/10023/16847