REGIONAL METAMORPHISM WITHIN A CREATIONIST FRAMEWORK: WHAT GARNET COMPOSITIONS REVEAL
Andrew A. Snelling, Ph.D.
Creation Science Foundation
PO Box 6302
Acacia Ridge D.C., Qld
4110, Australia.
Creation Science Foundation
PO Box 6302
Acacia Ridge D.C., Qld
4110, Australia.
Presented at the Third International Conference on Creationism, Pittsburgh, PA, July 18-23, 1994.
Copyright 1994 by Creation Science Fellowship, Inc. Pittsburgh, PA, USA. All Rights Reserved.
Copyright 1994 by Creation Science Fellowship, Inc. Pittsburgh, PA, USA. All Rights Reserved.
KEYWORDS
Regional metamorphism, grade zones, garnets, compositional zoning, sedimentary precursors
ABSTRACT
The “classical” model for regional
metamorphic zones presupposes elevated temperatures and pressures due
to deep burial and deformation/tectonic forces over large areas over
millions of years — an apparent insurmountable hurdle for the
creationist framework. One diagnostic metamorphic mineral is garnet,
and variations in its composition have long been studied as an
indicator of metamorphic grade conditions. Such compositional
variations that have been detected between and within grains in the
same rock strata are usually explained in terms of cationic
fractionation with changing temperature during specific continuous
reactions involving elemental distribution patterns in the rock matrix
around the crystallizing garnet. Garnet compositions are also said to
correlate with their metamorphic grade.
However, contrary evidence has been
ignored. Compositional patterns preserved in garnets have been shown to
be a reflection of compositional zoning in the original precursor
minerals and sediments. Compositional variations between and within
garnet grains in schists that are typical metapelites at Koongarra in
the Northern Territory, Australia, support this minority viewpoint.
Both homogeneous and compositionally zoned garnets, even together in
the same hand specimen, display a range of compositions that would
normally reflect widely "different metamorphic grade" and temperature
conditions during their supposed growth. Thus the majority viewpoint
cannot explain the formation of these garnets. It has also been
demonstrated that the solid-solid transformation from a sedimentary
chlorite precursor to garnet needs only low to moderate temperatures,
while compositional patterns only reflect original depositional
features in sedimentary environments. Thus catastrophic sedimentation,
deep burial and rapid deformation/tectonics with accompanying low to
moderate temperatures and pressures during, for example, a global Flood
and its aftermath have potential as a model for explaining the
“classical” zones of progressive regional metamorphism.
INTRODUCTION
Of the two styles of metamorphism,
contact and regional, the latter is most often used to argue against
the young-earth Creation-Flood model. It is usually envisaged that
sedimentary strata over areas of hundreds of square kilometers were
subjected to elevated temperatures and pressures due to deep burial and
deformation/tectonic forces over millions of years. The resultant
mineralogical and textural transformations are said to be due to
mineral reactions in the original sediments under the prevailing
temperature-pressure conditions.
Often, mapping of metamorphic terrains
has outlined zones of strata containing mineral assemblages that are
believed to be diagnostic and confined to each zone respectively. It is
assumed that these mineral assemblages reflect the metamorphic
transformation conditions specific to each zone, so that by traversing
across these metamorphic zones higher metamorphic grades (due to former
higher temperature-pressure conditions) are progressively encountered.
Amongst the metamorphic mineral assemblages diagnostic of each zone are
certain minerals whose presence in the rocks is indicative of each
zone, and these are called index minerals. Garnet is one of these key
index minerals. Across a metamorphic terrain, the line along which
garnet first appears in rocks of similar composition is called the
garnet isograd ("same metamorphic grade") and represents one boundary
of the garnet zone. With increasing metamorphic grade and in other
zones garnet continues to be an important constituent of the mineral
assemblages.
GARNET COMPOSITIONS
Variation in garnet compositions,
particularly their MnO content, was for a long time used as an
estimator of regional metamorphic grade. Goldschmidt [14] first noted
an apparent systematic decrease in MnO content with increase in
metamorphic grade, a relationship which he attributed to the
incorporation of the major part of the rock MnO in the earliest formed
garnet. Miyashiro [24] and Engel and Engel [11] also followed this line
of thought, Miyashiro suggesting that the larger Mn2+ ions were readily incorporated in the garnet structure at the lower pressures, whereas at higher pressures smaller Fe2+ and Mg2+
were preferentially favored. Thus it was proposed that a decrease in
garnet MnO indicated an increase in grade of regional metamorphism.
Lambert [21] produced corresponding evidence for a decrease in garnet
CaO with increasing metamorphic grade. Sturt [45] demonstrated in
somewhat pragmatic fashion what appeared to be a general inverse
relationship between (MnO + CaO) content of garnet and overall grade of
metamorphism, a scheme which was taken up and reinforced by Nandi [27].
Not all investigators, however, agreed
with this line of thinking. Kretz [20] demonstrated the possible
influence of coexisting minerals on the composition of another given
mineral. Variation in garnet composition was seen to depend not only on
pressure-temperature variation but also to changes in the compositions
of the different components within its matrix as these responded to
changing metamorphic grade. Albee [1], like Kretz [20] and Frost [13],
examined elemental distribution coefficients in garnet-biotite pairs as
possible grade indicators, but concluded that results were complex and
equivocal, and suggested that metamorphic equilibrium was frequently
not attained. Similarly, Evans [12] suggested caution in the
interpretation of increasing garnet MgO as indicating increasingly
higher pressures of metamorphism. He pointed out that the volume
behavior of Mg-Fe exchange relations between garnet and other common
silicates indicates that, for given bulk compositions, the Mg-Fe ratios
in garnet will decrease with pressure.
With the advent of the electron probe
microanalyser it became possible to detect compositional variations
even within mineral grains including garnet, where often it was found
that traversing from cores to rims of grains the MnO and CaO contents
decreased with a concomitant increase in FeO and MgO [15]. Hollister
[16] concluded that this zoning arose by partitioning of MnO in
accordance with the Rayleigh fractionation model between garnet and its
matrix as the former grew. Perhaps more importantly he drew attention
to the preservation of such zones, that remained unaffected by
diffusion, and hence unequilibrated, throughout the later stages of the
metamorphism that was presumed to have induced their growth.
Concurrently, Atherton and Edmunds [5] suggested that the zoning
patterns reflected changing garnet-matrix equilibrium conditions during
growth and/or polyphase metamorphism, but that once formed garnet and
its zones behaved as closed systems unaffected by changes in conditions
at the periphery of the growing grain.
Through his own work, and that of Chinner
[8] and Hutton [17], Atherton [3] drew attention to the presence of
garnets of quite different compositions in rocks of similar grade, and
sometimes in virtual juxtaposition. His conclusion was that the MnO
content, and indeed the whole divalent cation component, of garnet was
substantially a reflection of host rock composition and that any simple
tie between garnet composition and metamorphic grade was unlikely.
Subsequently Atherton [4] suggested that zoning and progressive changes
in garnet compositions were due to changes in distribution coefficients
of the divalent cations with increase in grade, and considered that
“anomalies in the sequence (were) explicable in terms of variations in
the compositions of the host rock”.
Müller and Schneider [26] found that the
MnO content of garnet reflected not only metamorphic grade and
chemistry of the host rocks, but also their oxygen fugacity. They
rejected Hollister's Rayleigh fractionation model and concluded that
decrease in Mn, and concomitant increase in Fe, in garnet with
increasing grade stemmed from a progressive reduction in oxygen
fugacity. Hsu [18], in his investigation of phase relations in the
Al-Mn-Fe-Si-O-H system, had found that the stability of the almandine
end-member is strongly dependent on oxygen fugacity, and is favored by
assemblages characterized by high activity of divalent Fe. In contrast,
the activity of divalent Mn is less influenced by higher oxygen
fugacity. Thus Müller and Schneider [26] concluded that the observed
decrease in Mn in garnet with increasing metamorphic grade is due to
the buffering capacity of graphite present near nucleating garnets.
With increasing grade the graphite buffer increasingly stabilizes
minerals dependent on low oxygen fugacity, that is, almandine is
increasingly formed instead of spessartine. MülIer and Schneider also
noted that some of their garnets were not zoned, but exhibited
inhomogeneities distributed in irregular domains throughout the garnet
grains.
Miyashiro and Shido [25], in a
substantially theoretical treatment, concluded that the principal
factor controlling successive garnet compositions is the amount and
composition of the garnet already crystallized, since the matrix will
be correspondingly depleted in the oxides present in the earlier formed
garnet. Also using a theoretical approach, Anderson and Buckley [2]
showed that for “reasonable diffusion coefficients and boundary
conditions” observed zoning profiles in garnets could be explained
quite adequately by diffusion principles: that given original
homogeneities in the parent rock, the interplay of diffusion phenomena
could explain variation of zoning profiles in separate grains of an
individual mineral species in domains as small as that of a hand
specimen.
Tracy et al. [47] noted that
garnets from metamorphosed pelitic assemblages show, in different
metamorphic zones, “element distribution patterns that are complex
functions of rock bulk composition, specific continuous reactions in
which garnet is involved, P-T history of the rock, homogeneous
diffusion rates with garnet, and possibly also the availability of
metamorphic fluids at the various stages of garnet development”. They
applied preliminary calibrations of garnet-biotite and
garnet-cordierite Fe-Mg exchange reactions and several Fe-Mg-Mn
continuous mineral reactions to the results of very detailed studies of
zoned garnets in order to evaluate changing P-T conditions during
prograde and retrograde metamorphism in central Massachusetts (USA).
Stanton [38--41], in his studies of
Broken Hill (New South Wales, Australia) banded iron formations,
suggested that the garnets represented in situ transformation
of somewhat manganiferous chamositic septachlorite, and that any zoning
reflected the original oolitic structure of the sedimentary chamosite.
In a further study, Stanton and Williams [44] concluded that, because
compositional differences occur on a fine (1-2mm) scale in garnets
within a simple one-component matrix (quartz), garnet compositions must
faithfully reflect original compositional variations within the
chemical sediments, and not represent variations in metamorphic grade.
McAteer [23] demonstrated the presence in
a garnet-mica schist of two compositionally and texturally distinct
garnet types, which she attributed to a sequence of mineral reactions
that proceeded with changing thermal history of the rock. Of the two
types, one was coarse grained and zoned (MnO and CaO decreasing towards
grain margins), while the other was fine-grained and essentially
uniform in composition. Attainment of chemical equilibrium between all
garnets and their rock matrix, but maintenance of disequilibrium within
large garnets, appears to have been assumed.
In a review of research on compositional
zoning in metamorphic minerals, Tracy [46] ignored Stanton's
demonstration that the compositional zoning in garnets can only be
explained in some metamorphic rocks as faithful reflections of original
compositional variations within the precursor minerals and sediments,
and not as a function of variations in metamorphic grade or cationic
supply during crystal growth. Instead, Tracy summarized the various
models already proposed — cationic fractionation particularly of Mn
(resulting in variations in the supply of cations) with changing
temperatures during progressive metamorphism, and reaction partitioning
of cations which depends upon the exact mineralogical composition of
the reservoir or matrix surrounding any one garnet grain, especially
relative proportions of matrix minerals that are in direct reaction
relation with a garnet grain. These models both correlate changes in
garnet composition with increasing metamorphic grade, relying on
mineral reactions and diffusion of cations to explain compositional
zoning trends, which it is envisaged change as mineral reactions and
temperatures change.
This is still the consensus viewpoint. Loomis [22], Spear [35], and Spear et al.
[36], for example, insist that metamorphic garnets undergo a form of
fractional crystallization which involves fractionation of material
into the interior of a crystallizing garnet grain with consequent
change in the effective bulk composition, the zoning profile preserved
in the garnet being a function of the total amount of material that has
fractionated. Furthermore, Spear [35] insists that because
intracrystalline diffusion is so slow at these conditions, the interior
of the garnet is effectively isolated from chemical equilibrium with
the matrix. Spear then points to the work of Yardley [50] to insist
that with increasing temperatures intracrystalline diffusion within
garnet grains becomes more rapid until eventually all chemical zoning
is erased. Indeed, Yardley claimed to have found that at the
temperatures of staurolite and sillimanite grade metamorphism internal
diffusion of cations within garnet grains is sufficient to eliminate
the zoning that developed during earlier growth.
Yardley also rightly pointed out that the
fractionation models for garnet zoning assume that that diffusion is
negligible at lower metamorphic grades. That there is negligible
cationic diffusion in garnet at lower grades is amply demonstrated in
the garnets described by Olympic and Anderson [31], whose pattern of
chemical zoning coincided with textural (optical) zones, clearly
representing distinct presumed growth stages. Nevertheless, even where
textural (optical) zones are not evident there may still be chemical
zoning, as found by Tuccillo et al. [48]. Indeed, confusing the picture somewhat, Tuccillo et al. found
that the chemical zoning in their garnets under study, though from a
high grade metamorphic terrain, was not only preserved but was the
reverse in terms of cations to that normally expected, and this they
attributed to a diffusional retrograde effect.
However, the work of Stanton and Williams
[44], who found marked compositional changes from one garnet to the
next on a scale of 1-2mm in finely bedded banded iron formations in the
high grade metamorphic terrain at Broken Hill (New South Wales,
Australia), has been ignored. They found that
in view of the
minuteness of the domains involved it appears evident that
compositional variation cannot be attributed to variations in
metamorphic pressures, temperatures or oxygen fugacities. Neither can
they be attributed to variation in garnet-matrix partition functions,
as most of the garnets occur in one simple matrix — quartz.
They therefore concluded
that
in spite of the high (sillimanite) grade of the relevant metamorphism,
any equilibration of garnet compositions, and hence any associated
inter-grain metamorphic diffusion, has been restricted to a scale of
less than 1mm; that garnet compositions here reflect original rock
compositions on an ultra-fine scale, and have no connotations
concerning metamorphic grade; that, hence, the garnets must arrive from
a single precursor material, earlier suggested to be a manganiferous
chamositic septachlorite; and that the between-bed variation:
within-bed uniformity of garnet composition reflects an original
pattern of chemical sedimentation — a pattern preserved with the utmost
delicacy through a period of approximately 1800 x 106 years and a metamorphic episode of sillimanite grade. [44, p. 514]
These findings are clearly at odds with
the claims of other investigators, yet Stanton [42,43] has amassed more
evidence to substantiate his earlier work. To test these competing
claims, therefore, a suitable area of metamorphic terrain with schists
containing garnet porphyblasts was chosen for study.
THE KOONGARRA AREA
The Koongarra area is 250km east of
Darwin (Northern Territory, Australia) at latitude 12°52'S and
longitude 132°50'E. The regional geology has been described in detail
by Needham and Stuart-Smith [30] and by Needham [28,29], while Snelling
[33] describes the local Koongarra area geology.
The Archaean basement to this metamorphic
terrain consists of domes of granitoids and granitic gneisses (the
Nanambu Complex), the nearest outcrop being 5km to the north. Some of
the lowermost overlying Lower Proterozoic metasediments were accreted
to these domes during amphibolite grade regional metamorphism
(estimated to represent conditions of 5-8kb and 550-630°C) at
1800-1870Ma. Multiple isoclinal recumbent folding accompanied
metamorphism. The Lower Proterozoic Cahill Formation flanking the
Nanambu Complex has been divided into two members. The lower member is
dominated by a thick basal dolomite and passes transitionally upwards
into the psammitic upper member, which is largely feldspathic schist
and quartzite. The uranium mineralization at Koongarra is associated
with graphitic horizons within chloritized quartz-mica (±feldspar
±garnet) schists overlying the basal dolomite in the lower member.
Owing to the isoclinal recumbent folding
of metasedimentary units of the Cahill Formation, the typical rock
sequence encountered at Koongarra is probably a tectono-stratigraphy
(from youngest to oldest):
— muscovite-biotite-quartz-feldspar schist (at least 180m thick)
— garnet-muscovite-biotite-quartz schist (90-1 00m thick)
— sulphide-rich graphite-mica-quartz schist (±garnet) (about 25m thick)
— distinctive graphite-quartz-chlorite schist marker unit (5-8m thick)
— quartz-chlorite schist (±illite, garnet, sillimanite, muscovite) (50m thick) — contains the mineralized zone
— muscovite-biotite-quartz-feldspar schist (at least 180m thick)
— garnet-muscovite-biotite-quartz schist (90-1 00m thick)
— sulphide-rich graphite-mica-quartz schist (±garnet) (about 25m thick)
— distinctive graphite-quartz-chlorite schist marker unit (5-8m thick)
— quartz-chlorite schist (±illite, garnet, sillimanite, muscovite) (50m thick) — contains the mineralized zone
Polyphase deformation accompanied
metamorphism of the original sediments, that were probably dolomite,
shales and siltstones. Johnston [19] identified a D2, event as responsible for the dominant S, foliation of the schist sequence, which dips at 55° to the south-east at Koongarra.
Superimposed on the primary prograde
metamorphic mineral assemblages is a distinct and extensive primary
alteration halo associated with the uranium mineralization at
Koongarra. This alteration extends for up to 1.5km from the ore in a
direction perpendicular to the disposition of the host quartz-chlorite
schist unit, because the mineralization is essentially stratabound. The
outer zone of the alteration halo is most extensively developed in the
semi-pelitic schists and is manifested by the pseudomorphous
replacement of biotite by chlorite, rutile and quartz, and feldspar by
sericite. Metamorphic muscovite, garnet, tourmaline, magnetite, pyrite
and apatite are preserved. In the inner alteration zone, less than 50m
from ore, the metamorphic rock fabric is disrupted, and quartz is
replaced by pervasive chlorite and phengitic mica, and garnet by
chlorite. Relict metamorphic phases, mainly muscovitic mica, preserve
the S2 foliation. Coarse chlorite after biotite may also be preserved.
KOONGARRA GARNETS
Garnets are fairly common in the
garnet-muscovite-biotite-quartz schist unit at Koongarra, being usually
fresh and present in large quantities, often grouped, within various
macroscopic layers. Within the inner alteration halo and the
quartz-chlorite schist hosting the mineralization most of the garnets
have largely been pseudomorphously replaced by chlorite. Occasionally
garnet remnants remain within the pseudomorphous chlorite knots, or the
common boxwork textures within these pseudomorphous chlorite knots
confirm that the chlorite is pseudomorphously replacing garnets.
The garnets are always porphyroblastic,
and sometimes idioblastic, indicative of pre-kinematic growth. They may
be up to 2cm in diameter, but meet are typically about 0.5cm across.
Often, the garnets also show some degree of rolling and sygmoidal
traces of inclusions. These features are usually regarded as evidence
for syn-kinematic growth [37]. In a few of these cases rolling is
minimal and inclusion traces pass out uninterrupted into the
surrounding schist. The schistosity is often draped around these garnet
porphryblasts and sometimes the latter are slightly flattened. Thus the
last stages of garnet growth occurred during the final stages of the D2 deformation of the prograde metamorphic layering S1, that is, during the development of the predominant S2
schistosity. This, in turn, implies that garnet development and growth
took place before and during the deformation of the earlier S1 schistosity, that is, pre- and syn-kinematic to the S2 schistosity and D2 deformation.
Thirteen garnet-containing samples
were chosen from three of the schist units — the ore-hosting quartz-chlorite
schist (three samples), the sulphide-rich graphite-mica-quartz
schist (five samples), and the garnet-muscovite- biotite-quartz
schist (five samples). These 13 samples contained a total of 33
garnets that were all analyzed using an electron probe microanalyzer.
Composite point analyses were made where garnets were of uniform
composition, while traverses revealed compositional zoning when
present. All results are listed in Snelling [32].
All the garnets are
essentially almandine, the Fe2+ end-member, with varying
amounts of spessartine (Mn2+), pyrope (Mg2+)
and grossularite (Ca2+) structural units/end-members
substituting in the crystal lattices. Tucker [49] reported an
analysis of a Koongarra Fe-rich garnet with an Fe203
content of 6.22%, implying that the substitution of the andradite
(Fe3+) end-member may be quite substantial. The compositional
variations in Fe, Mn, Ca and Mg both between and within the analyzed
garnets were plotted in ternary diagrams, and from these it was
determined that two principal substitutions have occurred — Mn
for Fe and Mg for Ca, though the latter is very minor compared
to the former. Nevertheless, these Koongarra garnets revealed
the general inverse relationship between (CaO + MnO) and (FeO
+ MgO), which can be seen clearly in Figure 1.
Of the 33 garnets analyzed, 22 had
homogeneous compositions and only 11 were compositionally zoned. In the
three samples from the ore-hosting quartz-chlorite schist unit five
garnets were analyzed and all were compositionally homogeneous, whereas
in the overlying sulphide-rich graphite-mica-quartz schist unit the
five selected samples contained 16 garnets, analyses of which revealed
that 11 were compositionally homogeneous and the other five were
compositionally zoned. Furthermore, four of the 10 samples from the two
garnet-bearing schist units overlying the ore-hosting quartz-chlorite
schist contain both compositionally homogeneous and zoned garnets in a
ratio of six zoned to eight homogeneous, without any textural evidence
to distinguish between the two. The other samples in these schist units
either had all compositionally homogeneous garnets or all
compositionally zoned garnets.
Traverses of point analyses across the
compositionally zoned garnets enabled the compositional zoning to be
quantified. The most pronounced zoning is with respect to MnO, with
cores generally having higher MnO relative to rims, and as FeO
substitutes for MnO, FeO follows an inverse trend (Figures 2 and 3).
Zonation with respect to CaO and MgO is not pronounced, but generally
CaO follows the MnO trend and MgO follows FeO. This is understandable
in terms of the ionic radii for the ions involved [24]. Figure 4 shows
the geochemical trends of all the analyzed zoned garnets from cores to
rims, the strong compositional differences following the same inverse
relationship between (CaO + MnO) and (FeO + MgO) as the compositionally
homogeneous garnets.
DISCUSSION
Garnets analyzed in the Koongarra schists
are typical of garnets from metapelites, the compositional trends
between and within garnet grains being almost identical to those
obtained from garnets in metapelites in metamorphic terrains in other
parts of the world [26]. The (CaO + MnO) versus (FeO + MgO) plot in
Figure 1 has marked on it the line of best fit and compositional
subdivisions based on the typical zones of progressive regional
metamorphic grade as determined by Nandi [27]. The Koongarra data are
distributed along their own line of best fit and straddle the garnet,
kyanite and sillimanite zones of Nandi's data.
Nandi's
contention was that (CaO + MnO) content of garnets decreased with
increasing metamorphic grade, as originally proposed by Sturt
[45] but challenged by Bahnemann [7]. Bahnemann studied garnet
compositions in granulite facies gneisses of the Messina district
in the Limpopo Folded Belt of Northern Transvaal and found compositional
variations which were comparable to those found by Nandi, but
which scattered across the metamorphic zones of Nandi's diagram.
However, Bahnemann was able to show, from earlier work on the
same rocks [6,9] and by using Currie's cordierite-garnet geothermometer
[10], that whatever the precise temperature-pressure conditions
may have been during the formation of the garnets, they were high
and uniform over much of the Messina district. Thus Bahnemann
concluded that the (CaO + MnO) versus (FeO + MgO) trends on the
plot reflected host rock chemistry, and that metamorphic isograds
cannot be inferred from the position of points on such a line.
Bahnemann nevertheless noted that his line of best fit differed
slightly from that of Nandi and suggested that his own line may
be characteristic for the garnets from the area he had studied.
The
(CaO + MnO) versus (FeO + MgO) plots of the garnets at Koongarra
(Figures 1 and 4) also define a line of best fit that differs
from that of Nandi. The Koongarra schists contain some graphite,
which could be an additional factor in the growth of the zoned
garnets, the iron-rich rims presumably being produced by graphite
buffering as the temperature of metamorphism increased. However,
in four of the 13 samples there are both homogeneous and compositionally
zoned garnets side-by-side. Furthermore, in one instance (sample
173) there is a compositionally zoned garnet with a core that
has almost three times the (CaO + MnO) content of its rim, yet
the latter's composition is very similar to the two other adjoining
homogeneous garnet grains. If the presence of graphite buffering
the metamorphic reactions was needed to produce the zoned garnet,
then why the adjoining homogeneous garnets? A far more logical
explanation is that the zonation and compositional variations
are due to chemical variations in the original precursor minerals
and sedimentary rocks, as suggested by Stanton [42, 43].
When Nandi produced his original plot, he used compositional data of
84 samples of garnets belonging to different grades of regionally
metamorphosed pelitic rocks which he compiled from six papers
in the then current literature. One of these, Sturt [45], drew
on some of the same data, which comes from metamorphic terrains
such as the Stavanger area of Norway, the Gosaisyo-Takanuki area
of Japan, the Adirondacks of the USA, and the Moine and Dalradian
of Scotland. When garnet porpyroblasts of quite different compositions
from the different metamorphic terrains were plotted on a (CaO
+ MnO) versus (FeO + MgO) diagram Nandi found that they grouped
along a line of best fit in subdivisions that reflected the different
metamorphic grade zones from which they came — garnet, kyanite
and sillimanite (see Figures 1 and 4). Nandi showed virtually
no overlap in the compositions of garnets from different grades
at the boundaries he drew across his line of best fit, yet on
Sturt's similar plot with garnet data from the same and other
metamorphic terrains there was considerable overlap of compositions
between garnets from the different metamorphic grades. Furthermore,
those garnets that Sturt recorded as coming from garnet grade
metapelites almost exclusively plotted in Nandi's kyanite grade
grouping, so the picture is far from being clear-cut as Nandi
originally reported it. In other words, these data do not show
that garnet compositions systematically change with increasing
metamorphic grade.
As Bahnemann found in the Limpopo Folded
Belt, where garnets from a number of different granulite facies
host-rocks showed a wide range of composition yet reflected the same
general pressure-temperature conditions of metamorphism, the data here
from the Koongarra schists show widely divergent garnet compositions,
even within individual grains, yet the schists are typical metapelites
of a classical garnet zone within an amphibolite grade metamorphic
terrain. The presence of garnet in these schists without either kyanite
and/or sillimanite confirms that these schists fall within the garnet
zone, although kyanite has been observed with staurolite in equivalent
Cahill Formation schists to the south [30]. Nevertheless, it is
inconceivable that there would be any appreciable variation in
metamorphic temperature-pressure conditions over the approximate 370m
of strike length and 90m of stratigraphic range from which the studied
samples came. Indeed, even in the stratigraphically lowermost
ore-hosting quartz-chlorite schist unit the five compositionally
homogeneous garnets in the three samples at that stratigraphic level
almost spanned the complete compositional range in Figure 1, from
extremely high (CaO + MnO) content in the supposedly lower temperature
end of the garnet zone to a lower (CaO + MnO) and high (FeO + MgO)
content at the supposedly high temperature end of the kyanite zone.
Yet if any of these schist units at
Koongarra should have been at a higher prograde metamorphic temperature
it would have been this quartz-chlorite schist unit, because it is
stratigraphically closer to the Nanambu Complex basement towards which
the metamorphic grade increased, causing some of the metasediments
closest to it to be accreted to it. Similarly, one of the samples from
the sulphide-rich graphite-mica-quartz schist unit (sample 101) has in
it a garnet whose core could be regarded as being of garnet zone
composition, while its rim is supposedly indicative of the sillimanite
zone.
These numerous “anomalies” must indicate
that garnet compositions are substantially a reflection of
compositional domains within the precursor sediments and/or minerals,
and not metamorphic grade. Stanton [42,43] has shown that
diffusion during regional metamorphism has been restricted to
relatively minute distances (<lmm) and that there is no clear,
direct evidence of prograde metamorphic mineral reactions, so that
metamorphic equilibrium does not appear to have been attained through
even very small domains. Even though the majority of researchers
maintain that compositional zoning in garnets has been due to mineral
reactions and cationic fractionation, and that at higher grades the
compositional zoning is homogenized by diffusion, Stanton and Williams
[44] have clearly shown at Broken Hill that at the highest grades of
metamorphism the compositional zoning in garnets is neither homogenized
nor the result of either mineral reactions or cationic fractionation,
but an accurate preservation of compositional zoning in the original
precursor oolites in the precursor sediment. Nevertheless, while their
conclusion is not questioned, their timescale is, because it strains
credulity to suppose that the original pattern of chemical
sedimentation could have been preserved with the “utmost delicacy”
through a presumed period of 1.8 billion years.
What is equally amazing is the discovery
by Stanton [43] of distinctly hydrous “quartz” in well-bedded quartz-
muscovite-biotite-almandine-spinel rocks also in the Broken Hill
metamorphic terrain. He comments that it seems “remarkable” that this
silica should still retain such a notably hydrous nature after 1.8
billion years that included relatively high-grade (i.e. high
temperature-pressure) metamorphism! Not only does this discovery
confirm that metamorphic quartz has been produced by dehydration and
transformation in situ of precursor silica gel and/or chert,
but that the temperatures, pressures and timescales normally postulated
are not necessarily required.
Stanton [43] maintains that it has long
been recognized that particular clays and zeolites derive in many
instances from specific precursors. Likewise, it is self-evident and
unavoidable that many metamorphosed bedded oxides (including quartz),
together with carbonates and authigenic silicates such as the
feldspars, have derived from sedimentary/diagenitic precursors, and the
establishment thereby of this precursor derivation for at least some
regional metamorphic minerals is a principle, not an hypothesis. What
Stanton then proceeds to show is how this principle applies to the
broader spectrum of metamorphic silicates, including almandine garnet.
He points to his earlier evidence [39,42]
that almandine has derived directly from a chamositic chlorite
containing very finely dispersed chemical SiO2, and suggests that dehydration and incorporation of this silica into the chlorite structure induces in situ transformation
to the garnet structure. Furthermore, instability induced by Mn, and
perhaps small quantities of Ca, in the structure may predispose the
chlorite to such transformation. Any silica in excess of the
requirements of this process aggregates into small rounded particles
within the garnet grain — the quartz “inclusions” that are almost a
characteristic feature of the garnets of metapelites, including the
garnets at Koongarra. Stanton then supports his contention with
electron microprobe analyses of several hundred chlorites, from
metamorphosed stratiform sulphide deposits in Canada and Australia, and
of almandine garnets immediately associated with the chlorites. These
analyses plot side-by-side on ternary diagrams, graphically showing the
compositional similarities of the chlorites in these original chemical
sediments to the garnets in the same rock that have been produced by
metamorphism. This strongly suggests that the process was one of a
solid-solid transformation, with excess silica producing quartz
“inclusions”. As Stanton insists, why should these inclusions be
exclusively quartz if these garnets had grown from mineral reactions
within the rock matrix, because the latter contains abundant muscovite,
biotite and other minerals in addition to quartz, minerals that should
also have been ”included” in the growing garnet grains?
Stanton and Williams [44] have
conclusively demonstrated that the compositional zones within
individual garnet porphyroblasts reflect compositional zoning in
precursor sedimentary mineral grains. Thus, if primary (depositional)
compositional features have led to a mimicking of metamorphic grade
[39,42], then it has been shown [34,42,43] that the classical zones of
regional metamorphic mineral assemblages may instead reflect facies of
clay and clay-chlorite mineral sedimentation, rather than variations in
pressure-temperature conditions in subsequent metamorphism. Stanton
[43] goes on to say that if regional metamorphic silicates do develop
principally by transformation and grain growth, the problem of the
elusive metamorphic reaction in the natural milieu is resolved.
There is no destabilizing of large chemical domains leading to
extensive diffusion, no widespread reaction tending to new equilibria
among minerals. Traditionally it has been supposed that as metamorphism
progressed each rock unit passed through each successive grade, but the
common lack of evidence that “high-grade” zones have passed through all
the mineral assemblages of the “lower-grade” zones can now be accounted
for. The real metamorphic grade indicators are then not the
hypothetical intermineral reactions usually postulated, but the
relevant precursor transformations, which may be solid-solid or in some
cases gel-solid. Stanton concludes that it would be going too far to
maintain that there was no such thing as a regional metamorphic mineral
reaction, or that regional metamorphic equilibrium was never attained,
but the role of metamorphic reactions in generating the bulk of
regional metamorphic mineral matter is “probably, quite contrary to
present belief, almost vanishingly small.”
The other key factor in elucidating
regional metamorphic grades, zones and mineral compositions besides
precursor mineral/sediment compositions would be the temperatures of
precursor transformations, rather than the temperatures of presumed
“classical” metamorphic mineral reactions. It is thus highly
significant that dehydration and incorporation of silica into the
chlorite structure induces in situ transformation to garnet at
only low to moderate temperatures and pressures that are conceivable
over short time-scales during catastrophic sedimentation, burial and
tectonic activities. Indeed, the realization that the “classical” zones
of progressive regional metamorphism are potentially only a reflection
of variations in original sedimentation, as can be demonstrated in
continental shelf depositional facies today, provides creationists with
a potential scientifically satisfying explanation of regional
metamorphism within their time framework, which includes catastrophic
sedimentation, deep burial and rapid deformation/tectonics with
accompanying low to moderate temperatures and pressures during, for
example, the global Flood and its aftermath [34].
CONCLUSIONS
Garnets in the amphibolite grade schists
at Koongarra show wide compositional variations both within and between
grains, even at the thin section scale, a pattern which is not
consistent with the current consensus on the formation of metamorphic
garnets. Rather than elevated temperatures and pressures being
required, along with fractionational crystallization, elemental
partitioning and garnet-matrix reaction partitioning, the evidence at
Koongarra and in other metamorphic terrains is consistent with
solid-solid transformation at moderate temperatures of precursor
sedimentary chlorite, complete with compositional variations due to
precursor oolites, into garnet such that the compositional variations
in the precursor chlorite are preserved without redistribution via
diffusion. These compositional variations in garnets contradict the
“classical” view that particular compositions represent different
metamorphic grade zones, since at Koongarra the compositional
variations even in single garnets span wide ranges of presumed
metamorphic temperatures and grades. Thus the “classical” explanation
for progressive regional metamorphism, different grade zones being
imposed on original sedimentary strata over hundreds of square
kilometers due to elevated temperatures and pressures resulting from
deep burial and deformation/tectonic forces over millions of years, has
to be seriously questioned. A feasible alternative is that these zones
represent patterns of original precursor sedimentation, such as we see
on continental shelves today. Creationists may thus be able to explain
regional metamorphism within their time framework on the basis of
catastrophic sedimentation, deep burial and rapid
deformation/tectonics, with accompanying low to moderate temperatures
and pressures, during, for example, the global Flood and its aftermath.
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