Abstract
Crystal-structure modeling of experimental Ca-rich clinopyroxenes [Ca + Na > 0.5 apfu; Mg/(Mg + Fe2+) > 0.7] coexisting with basic and ultrabasic melts was utilized for calibration of geobarometers based on unit-cell volume (Vcell) vs M1-site volume (VM1). The clinopyroxene database includes over one hundred experiments from literature and sixteen previously unpublished experiments on basanite and picrobasalt starting materials. The coexisting melts span a wide range of petrologically relevant anhydrous and hydrous compositions (from quartz-normative basalt to nephelinite, excluding high-Al basalts and melts coexisting with garnet or melilite) at pressure conditions pertinent to the earth's crust and uppermost mantle (P= 0–24 kbar) in a variety of fO 2 conditions (from CCO-buffered to air-buffered) and mineral assemblages (Cpx ± Opx ± Pig ± Ol ± Plag ± Lc ± Ne ± Spl ± Amp ± Ilm). As previously found for near-liquidus products of basaltic melts, the experimental clinopyroxenes follow two distinct trends: (i) at a given P, Vcell is linearly and negatively correlated with VM1. This corresponds with the extent of Tschermak-type substitutions, which depends strongly on aSiO2 and a CaO; (ii) for a fixed melt composition, Vcell and VM1 decrease linearly as P increases, due to a combination of M1, M2 and T site exchanges. Despite the chemical complexity of these relationships, P could be modeled as a linear function of Vcell and VM1. A simplified solution for anhydrous magmas reproduced the experimental pressures with an uncertainty of 1.75 kbar (=1; max. dev. = 5.5 kbar; N = 135). An expanded T-dependent solution capable of recovering the measured pressures of both anhydrous and hydrous experiments with an uncertainty of 1.70 kbar (=1; max. dev. = 5.4 kbar; N = 157) was obtained by correcting unit-cell and M1-site volumes for thermal expansivity and compressibility. The corrected formulation is more resistant to the effects of temperature variations and is therefore recommended. Nevertheless, it requires an independent, accurate estimate of crystallization T. Underestimating T by 20 °C propagates into a 1-kbar increase of calculated P. The applicability of the T-dependent formulation was tested on hydrous ultramafic to gabbroic rocks of the southern Adamello batholith for which P-T evolution could independently be constrained by field observation, petrography and experimentally determined phase relations. The pressure estimates obtained by clinopyroxene structural geobarometry closely matched those predicted by phase equilibria of a picrobasaltic melt parental to the investigated magmatic rocks. To facilitate application of the present geobarometers, both anhydrous and corrected solutions were implemented as MS-DOS® and UNIX® software programs (CpxBar) designed to permit retrieval of the pressure of crystallization directly from a chemical analysis or from uncorrected unit-cell and M1-site volume X-ray data.
Article PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
Avoid common mistakes on your manuscript.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Additional information
Received: 20 October 1996 / Accepted: 18 March 1998
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Nimis, P., Ulmer, P. Clinopyroxene geobarometry of magmatic rocks Part 1: An expanded structural geobarometer for anhydrous and hydrous, basic and ultrabasic systems. Contrib Mineral Petrol 133, 122–135 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1007/s004100050442
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s004100050442