Metamorphic facies
A metamorphic facies is a set of mineral assemblages in metamorphic rocks formed under similar pressures and temperatures. The assemblage is typical of what is formed in conditions corresponding to an area on the two dimensional graph of temperature vs. pressure. Rocks which contain certain minerals can therefore be linked to certain tectonic settings, times and places in the geological history of the area. The boundaries between facies are wide because they are gradational and approximate. The area on the graph corresponding to rock formation at the lowest values of temperature and pressure is the range of formation of sedimentary rocks, as opposed to metamorphic rocks, in a process called diagenesis.
Historic definition
The name facies was first used for specific sedimentary environments in sedimentary rocks by Swiss geologist Amanz Gressly in 1838. Analogous with these sedimentary facies a number of metamorphic facies were proposed in 1920 by Finnish petrologist Pentti Eskola. Eskola's classification was refined by New-Zealand geologist Francis John Turner throughout his career. A classic work of Turner's was the book he published in 1948 titled Mineralogical and Structural Evolution of Metamorphic Rocks. Turner continued to work in the field, refining the metamorphic facies classifications through the end of his career in the early 1970s.Image:ACF triangles EN.svg|thumb|350px|Triangular diagrams showing the aluminium, calcium and iron content of the main phases in metamorphic rocks in various facies. Thin grey lines are stable phase equilibria.
Image:AFM triangles EN.svg|thumb|350px|Triangular diagrams showing the aluminium, iron and magnesium content of the main phases. Thin grey lines represent equilibria between phases.
Underlying principles
The different metamorphic facies are defined by the mineralogical composition of a rock. When the temperature or pressure in a rock body change, the rock can cross into a different facies and some minerals become stable while others become unstable or metastable. Whether minerals really react depends on the reaction kinetics, the activation energy of the reaction and how much fluid is present in the rock.The minerals in a metamorphic rock and their age relations can be studied by optical microscopy or scanning electron microscopy of thin sections of the rock. Apart from the metamorphic facies of a rock, a whole terrane can be described by the abbreviations LT, MT, HT, LP, MP, HP. Since the 1980s the term UHP has been used for rocks that experienced extreme pressures.
Which minerals grow in a rock is also dependent upon the original composition of the protolith. Carbonate rocks have a different composition than a basalt lava, the minerals that can grow in them are different too. Therefore, a metapsammite and a metapelite will have different mineralogical compositions even though they are in the same metamorphic facies.
Index minerals
Every metamorphic facies has some index minerals by which it can be recognized. That does not mean these minerals will necessarily be visible with the naked eye, or even exist in the rock; if the rock does not have the right chemical composition, they will not crystallize.Very typical index minerals are the polymorphs of aluminosilicate. Andalusite is stable at low pressure, kyanite is stable at high pressure but relatively low temperature and sillimanite is stable at high temperature.
Mineral assemblages
Zeolite facies
The zeolite facies is the metamorphic facies with the lowest metamorphic grade. At lower temperature and pressure processes in the rock are called diagenesis. The facies is named for zeolites, strongly hydrated tectosilicates. It can have the following mineral assemblages:In meta-igneous rocks and greywackes:
In metapelites:
- muscovite + chlorite + albite + quartz
Prehnite-pumpellyite facies
In meta-igneous rocks and greywackes:
- prehnite + pumpellyite + chlorite + albite + quartz
- pumpellyite + chlorite + epidote + albite + quartz
- pumpellyite + epidote + stilpnomelane + muscovite + albite + quartz
- muscovite + chlorite + albite + quartz
Greenschist facies
In metabasites:
- chlorite + albite + epidote ± actinolite, quartz
- albite + quartz + epidote + muscovite ± stilpnomelane
- muscovite + chlorite + albite + quartz
- chloritoid + chlorite + muscovite + quartz ± paragonite
- biotite + muscovite + chlorite + albite + quartz + Mn-garnet
- dolomite + quartz
Epidote-amphibolite facies
Amphibolite facies
The amphibolite facies is a facies of medium pressure and average to high temperature. It is named after amphiboles that form under such circumstances. It has the following mineral assemblages:In metabasites:
- hornblende + plagioclase ± epidote, garnet, cummingtonite, diopside, biotite
- muscovite + biotite + quartz + plagioclase ± garnet, staurolite, kyanite/sillimanite
- dolomite + calcite + tremolite ± talc
- dolomite + calcite + diopside ± forsterite
Granulite facies
In metabasites:
- orthopyroxene + clinopyroxene + hornblende + plagioclase ± biotite
- orthopyroxene + clinopyroxene + plagioclase ± quartz
- clinopyroxene + plagioclase + garnet ± orthopyroxene
- garnet + cordierite + sillimanite + K-feldspar + quartz ± biotite
- sapphirine + orthopyroxene + K-feldspar + quartz ± osumilite
Ultra-high-temperature facies
Blueschist facies
The blueschist facies is at relatively low temperature but high pressure, such as occurs in rocks in a subduction zone. The facies is named after the schistose character of the rocks and the blue minerals glaucophane and lawsonite. The blueschist facies forms the following mineral assemblages:In metabasites:
In metagreywackes:
- quartz + jadeite + lawsonite ± phengite, glaucophane, chlorite
- phengite + paragonite + carpholite + chlorite + quartz
- aragonite
Eclogite facies
In metabasites:
- omphacite + garnet ± kyanite, quartz, hornblende, zoisite
- quartz + phengite + jadeite/omphacite + garnet
- phengite + garnet + kyanite + chloritoid + quartz
- phengite + kyanite + talc + quartz ± jadeite
Albite-epidote-hornfels facies
In metabasites:
- albite + epidote + actinolite + chlorite + quartz
- muscovite + biotite + chlorite + quartz
Calcite + talc + quartz
Hornblende-hornfels facies
The hornblende-hornfels facies is a facies with the same low pressures but slightly higher temperatures as the albite-epidote facies. Though it is named for the mineral hornblende, the appearance of that mineral is not constrained to this facies. The hornblende-hornfels facies has the following mineral assemblages:In metabasites:
- hornblende + plagioclase ± diopside, anthophyllite/cummingtonite, quartz
- muscovite + biotite + andalusite + cordierite + quartz + plagioclase
- cordierite + anthophyllite + biotite + plagioclase + quartz
- dolomite + calcite + tremolite ± talc
Pyroxene-hornfels facies
In metabasites:
- orthopyroxene + clinopyroxene + plagioclase ± olivine or quartz
- cordierite + quartz + sillimanite + K-feldspar ± biotite ± garnet
- cordierite + orthopyroxene + plagioclase ± garnet, spinel
- calcite + forsterite ± diopside, periclase
- diopside + grossular + wollastonite ± vesuvianite
Sanidinite facies
In metapelites:
In carbonates: