Compressed and Heated: A Path from Plagioclase to Diaplectic Glass and Maskelynite

ORAL

Abstract

Plagioclase is one of the most abundant minerals in the crust of the Earth, the Moon and Mars. Under high pressures and temperatures produced by shock wave from hypervelocity impact events, the phase changes of plagioclase play a key role in the evolution of planetary surfaces. Diaplectic glass and maskelynite in shocked plagioclase serve as diagnostic features for high grade of shock metamorphism in terrestrial impact craters and meteorites. However, their formation mechanisms remain unclear mainly due to lack of a reliable phase diagram for plagioclase with extended pressure-temperature conditions. We studied intermediate plagioclase labradorite and Ca-rich endmember anorthite at pressure up to 65 GPa and temperature up to 4000 K, using laser-heating diamond anvil cells at GSECARS, Advanced Photon Source. Our experimental results reveal the amorphization, decomposition, and melting of labradorite and anorthite, and new phase diagrams were constructed. The new amorphization boundaries outline the temperature conditions for pressure-induced amorphization of plagioclase to form diaplectic glass, which can be up to 1300-1500 K. We also determined the first melting curve for labradorite and anorthite at high pressures and suggest that maskelynite could be a solid form of melted plagioclase generated at temperature >3000 K. The combination of previous shock Hogoniot data and our new phase diagrams will advance the understanding of the bombardment history on rocky planetary bodies in the solar system.

*This research was partially support by NSERC grant (RGPIN-2019-06818 and RGPIN-2024-05644) to SRS and used resources of the Advanced Photon Source, a U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science User Facility operated for the DOE Office of Science by Argonne National Laboratory under Contract No. DE-AC02-06CH11357. We acknowledge the support of GeoSoilEnviroCARS (Sector 13), which is supported by the National Science Foundation - Earth Sciences (EAR-1634415). We are grateful for the help from beamline scientists with the use of the GSECARS beamline facility.

Publication: Submitted: Plagioclase under compression: A path to diaplectic glass and maskelynite

Presenters

  • Tianqi Xie

    • University of Saskatchewan

Authors

  • Tianqi Xie

    • University of Saskatchewan
  • Sean R Shieh

    • University of Western Ontario
  • Stella Chariton

    • The University of Chicago (GSECARS)
    • GSECARS, University of Chicago, Lemont, IL, US
    • University of Chicago
  • Mauritz van Zyl

    • University of Western Ontario
  • Ricardo D Rodriguez

    • University of Western Ontario
  • Vitali Prakapenka

    • The University of Chicago (GSECARS)
    • The University of Chicago
    • GSECARS, University of Chicago, Lemont, IL, US
    • University of Chicago
  • Dongzhou Zhang

    • The University of Chicago (GSECARS)
    • The University of Chicago
    • CARS, University of Chicago