ABSTRACT
The Lake George Area belongs to the southeastern part of the Adirondack
Highlands. The rocks of this area show variations in mineral assemblages
which are caused by differences in bulk chemical composition. This makes
it unsuccessful to use a subdivision of the granulite facies which is suggested
by de Waard (1965).
The CFM diagram (Abbott, 1982) is used to show the relationship between
composition and paragenesis of the Lake George Area. In this study, a different
result has been found in the order of partitioning of Fe between coexisting
minerals, namely, garnet>hornblende>biotite>orthopyroxene>clinopyroxene.
The hornblende granitic gneiss belongs to a different subfacies from the
mafic granulite and charnockitic gneiss according to Abbott's subdivision
of the facies. But, following the order of XFe of the minerals from this
study, the typical mineral assemblage of this rock, hornblende-garnet-biotite,
may belong to the same subfacies as the other rock types of this area.
The study of biotites of metapelite in the Lake George Area indicates different
substitution mechanisms in different regions of the granulite facies.
From the garnet-orthopyroxene (clinopyroxene) thermometer, 710°C
was obtained for the highest estimate of the metamorphism. This temperature
condition appears to be consistent with the observed mineral assemblages
of a lower-grade part of the granulite facies and confirms the isotherm
pattern of Bohlen et al. (1985).
Cooling ages of 971±17 Ma, 882±7 Ma and 656±17
Ma were obtained for hornblende, biotite and microcline, respectively,
with 40Ar/39Ar dating method. With cooling ages of minerals and reasonable
closure temperatures for each mineral, average cooling rates are calculated:
2.7°C/Ma for the time interval of peak metamorphism-hornblende, 2.2°C/Ma
for hornblende-biotite, and 0.7°C/Ma for biotite-microcline.
Ree, B., 1991. Mineral paragenesis of the granulite facies in the Lake
George area, New York. Unpublished MSc. thesis, State University of New
York at Albany. 68 pp., +x
University at Albany Science Library call number: SCIENCE Oversize
(*) QE 40 Z899 1991 R65
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