4.6 Article

Titanite-bearing calc-silicate rocks constrain timing, duration and magnitude of metamorphic CO2 degassing in the Himalayan belt

Journal

LITHOS
Volume 292, Issue -, Pages 364-378

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.lithos.2017.09.024

Keywords

Calc-silicate rock; Metamorphic CO2 production; Himalayan orogeny; Zrn-in-titanite thermometry; U-Pb geochronology; Non-volcanic carbon fluxes

Funding

  1. University of Torino (Ricerca Locale) [ROLF_RILO_15_01, GROC_RILO_16_01]
  2. Compagnia di San Paolo (University of Torino) [TO_Call1_2012_0068]
  3. Italian Ministry of University and Research [PRIN: 2010PMICZX7]
  4. Ev-K2-CNR (SHARE Project)
  5. European Research Council [ERC-2013-383 CoG, 612776]
  6. Compagnia di San Paolo, Torino

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The pressure, temperature, and timing (P-T-t) conditions at which CO2 was produced during the Himalayan pro grade metamorphism have been constrained, focusing on the most abundant calc-silicate rock type in the Himalaya. A detailed petrological modeling of a clinopyroxene + scapolite + K-feldspar + plagioclase + quartz +/- calcite calc-silicate rock allowed the identification and full characterization - for the first time - of - different metamorphic reactions leading to the simultaneous growth of titanite and CO2 production. The results of thermometric determinations (Zr-in-Ttn thermometry) and U-Pb geochronological analyses suggest that, in the studied lithology, most titanite grains grew during two nearly consecutive episodes of titanite formation: a near-peak event at 730-740 degrees C, 10 kbar, 30-26 Ma, and a peak event at 740-765 degrees C, 10.5 kbar, 25-20 Ma. Both episodes of titanite growth are correlated with specific CO2-producing reactions and constrain the timing, duration and P-T conditions of the main CO2-producing events, as well as the amounts of CO2 produced (1.4-1.8 wa of CO2). A first-order extrapolation of such CO2 amounts to the orogen scale provides metamorphic CO2 fluxes ranging between 1.4 and 19.4 Mt/yr; these values are of the same order of magnitude as the present-day CO2 fluxes degassed from spring waters located along the Main Central Thrust. We suggest that these metamorphic CO2 fluxes should be considered in any future attempts of estimating the global budget of non-volcanic carbon fluxes from the lithosphere. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available