Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2122/14462
Authors: Mikhailenko, Denis S* 
Stagno, Vincenzo* 
Korsakov, Anton Vyacheslavovich* 
Andreozzi, Giovanni B.* 
Marras, G* 
Cerantola, Valerio* 
Malygina, E. V.* 
Title: Redox state determination of eclogite xenoliths from Udachnaya kimberlite pipe (Siberian craton), with some implications for the graphite/diamond formation
Journal: Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 
Series/Report no.: /175 (2020)
Publisher: Springer
Issue Date: 2020
DOI: 10.1007/s00410-020-01748-3
Keywords: redox, eclogite, diamond, magmas
Subject Classification04.01. Earth Interior 
Abstract: The formation of diamonds within eclogitic rocks has been widely linked to the fate of carbon during subduction and, therefore, referred to conditions of pressure, temperature, and oxygen fugacity (fo2). Mantle-derived eclogite xenoliths from Udachnaya kimberlite pipes represent a unique window to investigate the formation of carbon-free, graphite–diamondbearing and diamond-bearing rocks from the Siberian craton. With this aim, we exploited oxy-thermobarometers to retrieve information on the P–T–fo2 at which mantle eclogites from the Siberian craton equilibrated along with elemental carbon. The chemical analyses of coupled garnet and omphacitic clinopyroxene were integrated with data on their iron oxidation state, determined both by conventional and synchrotron 57Fe Mössbauer spectroscopy. The calculated fo2s largely vary for each suite of eclogite samples from 0.10 to − 2.43 log units (ΔFMQ) for C-free eclogites, from − 0.01 to − 2.91 (ΔFMQ) for graphite–diamond-bearing eclogites, and from − 2.08 to − 3.58 log units (ΔFMQ) for diamond-bearing eclogites. All eclogite samples mostly fall in the fo2 range typical of diamond coexisting with CO2- rich water-bearing melts and gaseous fluids, with diamondiferous eclogites being more reduced at fo2 conditions where circulating fluids can include some methane. When uncertainties on the calculated fo2 are taken into account, all samples essentially fall within the stability field of diamonds coexisting with CO2- bearing melts. Therefore, our results provide evidence of the potential role of CO2- bearing melts as growth medium on the formation of coexisting diamond and graphite in mantle eclogites during subduction of the oceanic crust.
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