Water in granulites: implications for the nature and evolution of the lower continental crust

2007 
Abstract The lower continental crust is one of the most important sphere-layers in the deep earth and is the direct place where the crust-mantle interactions occur. Granulites are the dominated rocks in the lower crust and have critical implications for the knowledge of the composition, nature and evolution of the deep crust fluids are important mediums influencing many geochemical, geophysical and geodynamical characteristics of the lower crust and may also play a fundamental role in the petrogenesis of granulites and the formation of the lower crusts. In this paper we review recent advances involved with the deep continental crust granulites and fluids and some longstanding debates. Combined with the Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR analysis performed on the mineral assemblages (cpx, opx, plag and grt) in lower crustal granulite xenoliths and terrains (exposed section) from east China, it is suggested that structural water dominated by OH in these nominally anhydrous phases may constitute t...
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