Heliyon (Apr 2021)

K-Ar geochronology for hydrothermal K-feldspar within plagioclase in a granitic pluton: constraints on timing and thermal condition for hydrothermal alteration

  • Takashi Yuguchi,
  • Koshi Yagi,
  • Eiji Sasao,
  • Tadao Nishiyama

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 4
p. e06750

Abstract

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This study presents the K-Ar geochronology for hydrothermal K-feldspar in plagioclase alteration, including methodology and application to the Toki granite, in central Japan. Borehole samples from the Toki granite were collected and mechanically and chemically processed to separate plagioclase from the rock and remove bulk impurities. The sample fraction of cleaned plagioclase powder was further processed to a smaller size fraction, allowing separation of the altered K-feldspar from the plagioclase host. The resulting K-feldspar represented the hydrothermal alteration product and was characterized crystallographically as microcline, and its K-Ar ages were measured. The results of the K-Ar dating and petrographic characterization indicated that in this setting, plagioclase alteration occurred through a combination of solid-state replacement and dissolution–precipitation processes. The K-feldspathization age enables constraint of the temporal conditions of the solid-state replacement process to 62.2 ± 1.4 Ma. The time-temperature (t-T) path of the sampling site is an effective tool for determining both the timing and thermal conditions of the hydrothermal microcline formation in plagioclase alteration. The combination of the t-T path and the microcline K-Ar age provides formation temperatures of about 307–325 °C. The timing and thermal conditions of solid-state replacement (62.2 ± 1.4 Ma and 325–307 °C) indicate an older age and a higher temperature than those of dissolution–precipitation (59.2 ± 1.4 Ma and 305–290 °C: Yuguchi et al., 2019A). The plagioclase alteration consists of serial processes from solid-state replacement to dissolution–precipitation. Addition of the thermal conditions and timing into petrography have implications for the sequential phenomenal variation in granite.

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