4.5 Article

New Magmatic Oxybarometer Using Trace Elements in Zircon

Journal

JOURNAL OF PETROLOGY
Volume 61, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/petrology/egaa034

Keywords

zircon; magmatic oxygen fugacity; oxybarometer; trace element; zircon thermometer

Funding

  1. Rio Tinto Exploration
  2. ARC Centre of Excellence for Core to Crust Fluid Systems grant [CE110001017]
  3. Australian Research Council through the Future Fellowship grant scheme [FT110100241]
  4. Australian Research Council [LP120100668]
  5. BHP

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We derive a novel method for determining the oxidation state of a magma as zircon crystallized, with a standard error of +/- 0.6 log unit integral O-2, using ratios of Ce, U, and Ti in zircon, without explicit determination of the ionic charge of any of them, and without independent determination of crystallization temperature or pressure or parental melt composition. It yields results in good agreement with oxybarometry on Fe-Ti oxide phenocrysts and hornblende phenocrysts quenched in eruptive I- and A-type dacites and rhyolites, but our zircon oxybarometer is also applicable to slowly cooled plutonic rocks and applicable to detrital and xenocrystic zircons. Zircon/melt partition coefficients of Ce and U vary oppositely with integral O-2 variation in the silicate melt. The Ce/U ratio in zircon also varies with the Ce/U element ratio in the silicate melt. During mafic-to-felsic magmatic differentiation, Ce and U are incorporated mainly in calcium-dominated lattice sites of clinopyroxene, hornblende, apatite, and occasionally titanite and/or allanite, all of which have a similar degree of preference for Ce over U. We employ the U/Ti ratio in zircon and in silicate melt as a magmatic differentiation index. Convergent- and divergent-plate-margin differentiation series consistently follow the relation log (Ce/U) approximate to -0.5 log (U/Ti) + C' in silicate melts of basaltic to rhyolitic composition. That correlation permits thermodynamic derivation of the oxybarometry relation among those elements in zircon: logfO(2(sample))-fogfO(2(FMQ))approximate to 42n+1log[Ce/root(UixTi)z]+C, wherein U-i denotes age-corrected initial U content, FMQ represents the reference buffer fayalite + magnetite + quartz, superscript z denotes zircon, and n varies with the average valence of uranium in the zircon's parental silicate melt. We empirically calibrate this relation, using 1042 analysed zircons in 85 natural populations having independently constrained log integral O-2 in the range FMQ - 4.9 to FMQ+2.9, to obtain the equation logfO(2(sample))-logfO(2)(FMQ)=3.998(+/- 0.124)log[Ce/root(UixTi)z]+2.284(+/- 0.101) with a correlation coefficient R=0.96(3) and standard error of 0.6 log unit integral O-2 in calc-alkalic, tholeiitic, adakitic, and shoshonitic, metaluminous to mildly peraluminous and mildly peralkaline melts in the composition range from kimberlite to rhyolite. Thermodynamic assessment and empirical tests indicate that our formulation is insensitive to varying crystallization temperature and pressure at lithospheric conditions. We present a revised equation for Ti-in-zircon thermometry that accounts appropriately for pressure as well as reduced activity of TiO2 and SiO2 in rutile- and quartz-undersaturated melts. It can be used to retrieve absolute values of integral O-2 from values of Delta FMQ obtained from a zircon analysis.

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