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Journal of Petrology Advance Access published online on November 24, 2008

Journal of Petrology, doi:10.1093/petrology/egn056
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© The Author 2008. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Formation of Igneous Layering in Granodiorite by Gravity Flow: a Field, Microstructure and Geochemical Study of the Tuolumne Intrusive Suite at Sawmill Canyon, California

F. Solgadi and E. W. Sawyer

Département Des Sciences Appliquées, Université Du Québec À Chicoutimi, Chicoutimi, Québec G7H 2B1, Canada

Received May 30, 2008; Revised typescript accepted October 13, 2008


   Abstract

Layered granites and granodiorites occur in many plutons. They occur, together with non-layered granodiorites, at the margin of the Tuolumne Intrusive Suite, one of the largest late Cretaceous intrusions in the Sierra Nevada. Results from field observations, quantitative microstructural analysis and whole-rock compositions from the non-layered Kuna Crest, Half Dome and Cathedral Peak granodiorites and layered granodiorites from the Sawmill Canyon area are compared to determine which processes contributed to the formation of the layering. The non-layered granodiorites have foliated but homogeneous microstructures, which are attributed to the orientation of crystals with high aspect ratios when the magma flowed before solidification; their compositions are consistent with magma mixing and fractional crystallization. The microstructure in the layered granodiorite is heterogeneous, and shows normal gradation of the dense, primocryst minerals magnetite, hornblende and titanite at the base, and inverse size gradation with large crystals of the less dense primocryst phases plagioclase and biotite at the top, and a systematic change in the preferred orientation of minerals from base to top. Macroscopic structures in the layers indicate erosion and the action of traction currents when the layers formed, and the sinking of the dense minerals and rise of interstitial melt immediately afterwards. The layered rocks have similar grain size and mineral compositions to the non-layered granodiorites, and thus could be derived from the same magmas as the Kuna Crest, Half Dome and Cathedral Peak non-layered granodiorites. The major and trace element variations in the layered rocks are very different from those in the non-layered rocks and indicate a strong segregation of crystals during formation of the layers. However, the separation process did not fractionate the main rare earth element-bearing phases from one another. The macrostructure and microstructural features in the layers resemble those from hyper-concentrated sediment gravity flows. The layering is interpreted to have formed from gravity flows of melt and crystals initiated by syn-magmatic tectonic deformation and seismic shaking. Two types of layering are identified; one, called normal layering, represents material derived from a single granodiorite magma and deposited from a relatively low-energy gravity flow, whereas the other, called melanocratic layering, incorporated mafic minerals eroded from the substrate, had the felsic tops of layers eroded off by subsequent flows, incorporated crystals from more than one magma source and formed from gravity flows that had higher energy.

KEY WORDS: igneous layering; granodiorite; gravity flow; microstructure; Sierra Nevada


Corresponding author. Telephone: (418) 545 5011 poste 2505. E-mail: fabien_solgadi{at}uqac.ca


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