Title of article :
Hydrothermal alteration of deep fractured granite: Effects of dissolution and precipitation
Author/Authors :
Shoji Nishimoto، نويسنده , , Hidekazu Yoshida، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages :
10
From page :
153
To page :
162
Abstract :
This paper investigates the mineralogical effects of hydrothermal alteration at depth in fractures in granite. A fracture accompanied by an alteration halo and filled with clay was found at a depth of 200 m in a drill core through Toki granite, Gifu, central Japan. Microscopic observation, XRD, XRF, EPMA and SXAM investigations revealed that the microcrystalline clays consist of illite, quartz and pyrite and that the halo round the fracture can be subdivided into a phyllic zone adjacent to the fracture, surrounded by a propylitic zone in which Fe-phyllosilicates are present, and a distinctive outer alteration front characterized by plagioclase breakdown. The processes that result in these changes took place in three successive stages: 1) partial dissolution of plagioclase with partial chloritization of biotite; 2) biotite dissolution and precipitation of Fe-phyllosilicate in the dissolution pores; 3) dissolution of K-feldspar and Fe-phyllosilicate, and illite precipitation associated with development of microcracks. These hydrothermal alterations of the granite proceed mainly by a dissolution–precipitation process resulting from the infiltration of hydrothermal fluid along microcracks. Such infiltration causes locally high mobility of Al and increases the ratio of fluid to rock in the alteration halo. These results contribute to an understanding of how granitic rock becomes altered in orogenic fields such as the Japanese island arc.
Keywords :
Orogenic belt , Hydrothermal alteration , Water–rock interaction , granite , fracture
Journal title :
lithos
Serial Year :
2010
Journal title :
lithos
Record number :
1287421
Link To Document :
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