6533b872fe1ef96bd12d4095

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Origin and crystallization history of Permian tholeiites from the Saar-Nahe trough, SW Germany

Ian A NichollsV. Lorenz

subject

PeridotiteBasaltGeophysicsSubductionGeochemistry and PetrologyContinental crustPartial meltingGeochemistryPhenocrystPyroxeneGeologyMantle (geology)

description

The Hirschberg and Rodern diatremes, within the Permian Saar-Nahe trough, SW Germany, are composed chiefly of basaltic tuffs, with associated small intrusions of K-rich tholeiites. Several tholeiite bodies carry 2–20 mm crystals of magnesian clinopyroxene and orthopyroxene, the latter containing up to 5.5% Al2O3 and often extensively resorbed and rimmed by fine-grained olivine and clinopyroxene. Experimental duplication of these pyroxenes has been achieved under conditions of Pload=6–10 kb, T=1280–1080° C and 2–4 wt.-% H2O, confirming that they represent a rare occurence of high pressure phenocrysts in tholeiitic basalts. These conditions of pyroxene crystallization also place constraints on processes of magma generation, indicating that the tholeiites originated by partial melting of unusually hydrous peridotite mantle (0.4–0.8% H2O) beneath a relatively thin continental crust (maximum thickness approximately 30 km). Water present in the mantle at the site of magma generation may have been derived from the dehydration of oceanic lithosphere prior to the formation of the Saar-Nahe trough. This lithosphere probably underwent subduction at the margin of the Palaeozoic European continent during the Hercynian cycle of sedimentation, andesitic volcanism and folding. The termination of this cycle was followed by a period of basin-range type tensional faulting, leading to the formation of the Permian basins of present-day Central Europe, and widespread bimodal basalt/rhyolite volcanism.

https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00371023