Abstract
Mineralogical, experimental, geochemical and stable-isotope data give evidence for an aqueous late-stage fluid which develops increasingly from the less to the more highly evolved granites of the Fichtelgebirge (G1-G4). In less-evolved granites (particularly G1) only minor chloritization and sericitization, minor hydration and corrosion of zircons, low leachable fractions of Sr and Zr, the nearly chondritic ratios of Zr/Hf and Y/Ho, and rare-earth-element (REE) patterns lacking the tetrad effect provide evidence of a less-differentiated granitic melt system, poor in complexing agents and water, with insignificant late magmatic fluid-rock interaction. The subsequent low-temperature alteration, which is suggested by oxygen-isotope composition of quartz and biotite, did not affect the whole-rock chemical composition. In the highly evolved granites (particularly G4), albitization, sericitization and fluoritization, ubiquitous hydration and corrosion of zircons, high leachable fractions of Sr and Zr, Zr/Hf and Y/Ho ratios very different from the chondritic ratios, and REE patterns showing a marked tetrad effect point to the presence of a highly specialized fluid system, rich in water and complexing agents, such as fluorine, leading to a marked magmatic-hydrothermal alteration. The oxygen isotopes also indicate alteration by high-temperature fluids which were likely exsolved during the final stage of crystallization.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | S110-S124 |
Journal | International Journal of Earth Sciences |
Volume | 86 |
Issue number | SUPPL. 1 |
State | Published - 1997 |
Keywords
- Cation exchange resin
- Greisenization
- Leaching experiments
- Magmatic-hydrothermal alteration
- Metamictization
- Rare earth elements
- S-type granites
- Tetrad effect
- Tin granites
- Variscan granites
- Y/Ho
- Zr, Sr, Trace element fractionation
- Zr/Hf