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    A Study Of the Petrography, phase Chemistry, Volatile Inclusions And Intrinsic Oxygen Fugacity Of Composite Group II Ultramafic Xenoliths From San Carlos Arizona

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    Weiss-Thesis-1984.pdf
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    Genre
    Thesis/Dissertation
    Date
    1984
    Author
    Weiss, David S.
    Advisor
    Ulmer, Gene Carleton, 1937-2015
    Department
    Earth and Environmental Science
    Subject
    Geology
    Geoscience
    Environmental science
    Permanent link to this record
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12613/8630
    
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    DOI
    http://dx.doi.org/10.34944/dspace/8594
    Abstract
    Composite ultramafic xenoliths were collected at Peridot Mesa, San Carlos, Arizona. These nodules were analyzed petrographically, by electron microprobe, and for intrinsic oxygen fugacity (IOF). Textures proved to be transitional between those of igneous and those of metamorphic petrogenetic environments. Phase chemistry interpretations were not totally consistent with either igneous or metamorphic models of formation. IOF data could not be used to unravel equilibrium relationships between solid phases, but were overprinted by reactions with volatiles contained in the minerals, chiefly CO2. These results indicate that the nodules were derived from a complex upper-mantle source region characterized by multi-phase igneous events with important intervening, probably sub-solidus, i.e. metamorphic, reactions between phases.
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