Serpentinised peridotites from an ultrahigh-pressure terrane in the Pohorje Mts. (Eastern Alps, Slovenia): Geochemical constraints on petrogenesis and tectonic setting

Cees-Jan De Hoog, M. Janák, M. Vrabec, N. Froitzheim

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The Slovenska Bistrica ultramafic complex (SBUC; Eastern Alps, Slovenia) occupies the south-easternmost part of the Pohorje Mountains, which represent an exhumed piece of continental crust subducted during the Cretaceous Eo-Alpine orogeny. The SBUC is composed of serpentinised harzburgites with local occurrences of garnet lherzolite, and is the only known occurrence of ultramafic rocks within the high- to ultrahigh-pressure nappe system apart from a few small dismembered pieces in the near vicinity. The harzburgites are highly depleted following melting within the spinel stability field, as exemplified by high whole-rock MgO contents (41.5-44.3 wt.%), low AlO (0.7-1.2 wt.%), low Lu (0.1-0.7), and high Cr# of Cr-spinel (ca. 0.5). Fluid-immobile incompatible trace elements (Ti, Sc, V, Zr, HREE, Th) correlate well with MgO, consistent with a melt depletion trend. Other incompatible elements (Ba, Sr, LREE) show little correlation and are probably modified by the serpentinisation process or later metamorphic overprint. However, comparable LREE enrichment of all samples and absence of negative Nb and Th anomalies suggests that this piece of mantle was already metasomatised by melts or fluids before serpentinisation. Garnet lherzolite in the SBUC recorded an UHP stage (4 GPa, 900 °C) not visible in the harzburgites. Because of the evidence of an earlier lower pressure stage within the spinel stability field, the SBUC represents a piece of subducted mantle. The protolith of the harzburgites is probably oceanic mantle, considering the high degree of melt depletion yet the lack of a subduction-zone signature. It therefore most likely represents a part of previously subducted Meliata oceanic mantle, which was part of a deeper section of the hanging wall along which subduction of the continental crust that is now exposed in Pohorje took place. Alternatively, it may represent mantle depleted and metasomatised in a continental rift zone, which was later incorporated in the hanging wall of the subduction zone and subsequently dragged down to UHP conditions. Crown
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)209-222
Number of pages14
JournalLithos
Volume109
Issue number3-4
Early online date3 Jun 2008
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 May 2009

Keywords

  • Pohorje
  • Serpentinite
  • Harzburgite
  • Mantle melting
  • Metasomatism
  • Continental subduction

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Serpentinised peridotites from an ultrahigh-pressure terrane in the Pohorje Mts. (Eastern Alps, Slovenia): Geochemical constraints on petrogenesis and tectonic setting'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this