Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Publication

Formation of topaz-enriched gneiss in the east-central Colorado Front Range via crystallization of Mesoproterozoic halogen-rich granitic magmas

Cayes, Hannah
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Embargo Expires
Abstract
Metamorphic rocks enriched in economically valuable minerals occur in all mountain belts worldwide, yet their processes of formation are often incompletely understood. Topaz [Al2SiO4(F,OH)2] is a naturally occurring nesosilicate of great economic and industrial value, and is most commonly found in silica-rich igneous rocks. However, conspicuous 70-ft-thick bands of topaz-, sillimanite-, rutile-, and quartz-rich (TSRQ) metamorphic gneiss occur in the Evergreen region of the east-central Front Range, Colorado, immediately adjacent to “normal” amphibolite and pelitic schist horizons. Bulk-rock geochemistry and isocon analysis shows that all mobile elements (e.g. Na, K, Mg, Ca) have been leached from these TSRQ rocks when compared to adjacent F-poor lithologies, indicating that the TSRQ gneiss must have interacted at some point with halogen-rich fluids. In addition, thermobarometry conducted via conventional and phase diagram-based techniques suggests pressure–temperature conditions of equilibration of ~720 °C and ~6.0 kbar, defining isotherms consistent with metamorphism in the middle continental crust during active mountain building. In-situ U–Pb dating of monazite within TSRQ units produced concordant ages mostly between c. 1.70 Ga, recording burial and prograde metamorphism associated with the Yapavai and/or Matatzal orogeny, and c. 1.65 Ga representing the timing of later F-rich fluid metasomatism. Together, these data are interpreted as recording metasomatic alteration in the middle crust by F-rich fluids released due to crystallization of nearby plutons, such as the Boulder Creek granodiorite at c. 1.71 Ga. As such, these topaz-rich horizons are interpreted to represent in-situ transformation of an older metamorphic assemblage, and not the metamorphosed products of weathered, pre-orogenic high-F tuffs or lava flows that were subsequently buried, as suggested by some previous studies. These results have far-reaching implications for constraining the behavior of halogens in the geological environment and for defining best-practices for future exploration of F-rich metamorphic rocks and ore deposits.
Associated Publications
Rights
Copyright of the original work is retained by the author.
Embedded videos