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Origin of granulite terranes and the formation of the lowermost continental crust

January 1, 1989

Differences in composition and pressures of equilibration between exposed, regional granulite terranes and suites of granulite xenoliths of crustal origin indicate that granulite terranes do not represent exhumed lowermost crust, as had been thought, but rather middle and lower-middle crustal levels. Application of well-calibrated barometers indicate that exposed granulites record equilibration pressures of 0.6 to 0.8 gigapascal (20 to 30 kilometers depth of burial), whereas granulite xenoliths, which also tend to be more mafic, record pressures of at least 1.0 to 1.5 gigapascals (35 to 50 kilometers depth of burial). Thickening of the crust by the crystalliztion of mafic magmas at the crust-mantle boundary may account for both the formation of regional granulite terranes at shallower depths and the formation of deep-seated mafic crust represented by many xenolith suites.

Publication Year 1989
Title Origin of granulite terranes and the formation of the lowermost continental crust
Authors S.R. Bohlen, K. Mezger
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Science
Index ID 70015175
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse