Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- To the memory of Dmitriy Sergeyevich Korzhinskiy
- List of symbols
- PART I General thermodynamics and mineral equilibria including geothermobarometry
- PART II Metamorphic and metasomatic processes
- 8 Macrokinetic model of origin and development of a monomineralic bimetasomatic zone
- 9 Experimental modelling of wall-rock metasomatism
- 10 The paragenesis of serendibite at Johnsburg, New York, USA: an example of boron enrichment in the granulite facies
- 11 The early history of the Adirondacks as an anorogenic magmatic complex
- 12 An essay on metamorphic path studies or Cassandra in P–T–τ space
- PART III The mantle and magmatic processes
12 - An essay on metamorphic path studies or Cassandra in P–T–τ space
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- To the memory of Dmitriy Sergeyevich Korzhinskiy
- List of symbols
- PART I General thermodynamics and mineral equilibria including geothermobarometry
- PART II Metamorphic and metasomatic processes
- 8 Macrokinetic model of origin and development of a monomineralic bimetasomatic zone
- 9 Experimental modelling of wall-rock metasomatism
- 10 The paragenesis of serendibite at Johnsburg, New York, USA: an example of boron enrichment in the granulite facies
- 11 The early history of the Adirondacks as an anorogenic magmatic complex
- 12 An essay on metamorphic path studies or Cassandra in P–T–τ space
- PART III The mantle and magmatic processes
Summary
Introduction: rocks as flight recorders
Metamorphic rocks can be thought of as flight recorders, black boxes recovered from the wreckage of an orogen that tell us something of that orogen's history – primarily the pressure or depth (P), temperatures (T), and times (τ) of the journey. P, T and τ are linked by the physics of heat transfer and the thermodynamics and kinetics of possible transformations in the rocks mass. For a simplified one-dimensional rock mass, this relation can be visualized as a surface in depth(= P)–T–τ space (Fig. 12.1 (A)). P–T–τ paths of rocks are lines on this surface. Tectonic histories (P–τ paths) studied by the structural geologist, P–T loops determined by the metamorphic petrologist, and the T–τ histories examined by the geochronologist are all projections of the P–T–τ path onto the appropriate surface (Fig. 12.1(B)).
Forward modelling of the thermal response to tectonism (for example, England & Thompson, 1984, Haugerud, 1986) illustrates the kinds of P–T–τ paths rocks must follow for certain tectonic scenarios and heat-transfer mechanisms. Much of metamorphic petrology addresses the inverse problem: determining P and T from rocks and from these data inferring tectonic history. When combined with radiometrically or kinetically determined τ, the resulting data set is directly comparable to a P–T–τ path obtained by forward modelling. Combining the forward and inverse approaches to metamorphic path studies promises to extend our understanding of orogenic history.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Progress in Metamorphic and Magmatic PetrologyA Memorial Volume in Honour of D. S. Korzhinskiy, pp. 323 - 348Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1991
- 4
- Cited by