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Chapter 24.

Stable Mineral
Assemblages in Metamorphic Rocks
• Equilibrium Mineral Assemblages
• At equilibrium, the mineralogy (and the
composition of each mineral) is determined by
T, P, and X
• “Mineral paragenesis” refers to such an
equilibrium mineral assemblage
• Relict minerals or later alteration products are
thereby excluded from consideration unless
specifically stated
The Phase Rule in Metamorphic Systems
• Phase rule, as applied to systems at equilibrium:
F=C-f+2 the phase rule (6-1)

f is the number of phases in the system


C is the number of components: the minimum
number of chemical constituents required to
specify every phase in the system
F is the number of degrees of freedom: the
number of independently variable intensive
parameters of state (such as temperature,
pressure, the composition of each phase, etc.)
The Phase Rule in Metamorphic Systems
• A typical sample from a metamorphic terrane
 Likely select a sample from within a zone, and

not from right on an isograd


• Alternatively, pick a random point anywhere on a
phase diagram
 Likely point will be within a divariant field

and not on a univariant curve or invariant point


• The most common situation is divariant (F = 2),
meaning that P and T are independently variable
without affecting the mineral assemblage
The Phase Rule in Metamorphic Systems
If F  2 is the most common situation, then the
phase rule may be adjusted accordingly:
F=C-f+2 2
f C (24-1)
• Goldschmidt’s mineralogical phase rule, or
simply the mineralogical phase rule
The Phase Rule in Metamorphic Systems
Suppose we have determined C for a rock
Consider the following three scenarios:

a) f=C
 The standard divariant situation in metamorphic
rocks
 The rock probably represents an equilibrium mineral
assemblage from within a metamorphic zone
The Phase Rule in Metamorphic Systems
b) f<C
 Common with mineral systems
that exhibit solid solution

Liquid

Plagioclase

plus

Liquid

Plagioclase
The Phase Rule in Metamorphic Systems
c) f>C
 A more interesting situation, and at least one of three
situations must be responsible:
1) F < 2
 The sample is collected from a location right on a

univariant reaction curve (isograd) or invariant point


The Phase Rule in Metamorphic Systems
Consider the following three scenarios:
C=1
 f = 1 common

 f = 2 rare

 f = 3 only at the

specific P-T
conditions of the
invariant point
(~ 0.37 GPa and
500oC)
Figure 21-9. The P-T phase diagram for the system Al2SiO5
calculated using the program TWQ (Berman, 1988, 1990,
1991). Winter (2001) An Introduction to Igneous and
Metamorphic Petrology. Prentice Hall.
The Phase Rule in Metamorphic Systems
2) Equilibrium has not been attained
 The phase rule applies only to systems at
equilibrium, and there could be any number of
minerals coexisting if equilibrium is not attained
The Phase Rule in Metamorphic Systems
3) We didn’t choose the # of components correctly
• Some guidelines for an appropriate choice of C
 Begin with a 1-component system, such as CaAl2Si2O8
(anorthite), there are 3 common types of major/minor components
that we can add
a) Components that generate a new phase
 Adding a component such as CaMgSi2O6 (diopside), results
in an additional phase: in the binary Di-An system diopside
coexists with anorthite below the solidus
The Phase Rule in Metamorphic Systems
3) We didn’t choose the # of components correctly
b) Components that substitute for other components
 Adding a component such as NaAlSi3O8 (albite) to the 1-C
anorthite system would dissolve in the anorthite structure,
resulting in a single solid-solution mineral (plagioclase)
below the solidus
 Fe and Mn commonly substitute for Mg
 Al may substitute for Si
 Na may substitute for K
The Phase Rule in Metamorphic Systems
3) We didn’t choose the # of components correctly
c) “Perfectly mobile” components

 Mobile components are either a freely mobile fluid


component or a component that dissolves readily in a fluid
phase and can be transported easily
 The chemical activity of such components is commonly
controlled by factors external to the local rock system
 They are commonly ignored in deriving C for metamorphic
systems
The Phase Rule in Metamorphic Systems
Consider the very simple metamorphic system, MgO-H2O
 Possible natural phases in this system are periclase
(MgO), aqueous fluid (H2O), and brucite (Mg(OH)2)
 How we deal with H2O depends upon whether water is

perfectly mobile or not


 A reaction can occur between the potential phases in this

system:
MgO + H2O  Mg(OH)2 Per + Fluid = Bru
retrograde reaction as written (occurs as the rock cools and
hydrates)
The Phase Rule in Metamorphic Systems
Cool to the temperature of the reaction curve, periclase reacts with
water to form brucite: MgO + H2O  Mg(OH)2
The System MgO-H2O

Figure 24-1. P-T phase diagram illustrating


the reaction brucite = periclase + water,
calculated using the program TWQ of
Berman (1988, 1990, 1991). From Winter
(2001). An Introduction to Igneous and
Metamorphic Petrology. Prentice Hall.
The Phase Rule in Metamorphic Systems
Reaction: periclase coexists
with brucite:
f=C+1 The System MgO-H2O
F = 1 (#2 reason to
violate the mineral-
ogical phase rule)
To leave the curve, all the
periclase must be
consumed by the reaction,
and brucite is the solitary
remaining phase
f = 1 and C = 1 again
Figure 24-1. P-T phase diagram illustrating
the reaction brucite = periclase + water. From
Winter (2001). An Introduction to Igneous
and Metamorphic Petrology. Prentice Hall.
The Phase Rule in Metamorphic Systems
Periclase + H2O react to
form brucite
MgO + H2O  Mg(OH)2 The System MgO-H2O

Figure 24-1. P-T phase diagram illustrating


the reaction brucite = periclase + water. From
Winter (2001). An Introduction to Igneous
and Metamorphic Petrology. Prentice Hall.
The Phase Rule in Metamorphic Systems
Once the water is gone, the
excess periclase remains
stable as conditions change The System MgO-H2O
into the brucite stability
field

Figure 24-1. P-T phase diagram illustrating


the reaction brucite = periclase + water. From
Winter (2001). An Introduction to Igneous
and Metamorphic Petrology. Prentice Hall.
The Phase Rule in Metamorphic Systems
We can now conclude that periclase can be stable anywhere on the
whole diagram, if water is present in insufficient quantities to
permit the reaction to brucite to go to completion

Figure 24-1. P-T phase diagram illustrating


the reaction brucite = periclase + water. From
Winter (2001). An Introduction to Igneous
and Metamorphic Petrology. Prentice Hall.
The Phase Rule in Metamorphic Systems
At any point (other than
on the univariant curve
itself) we would expect to
find two phases, not one
f = brucite + periclase
below the reaction curve
(if water is limited), or
periclase + water above
the curve

Figure 24-1. P-T phase diagram illustrating


the reaction brucite = periclase + water. From
Winter (2001). An Introduction to Igneous
and Metamorphic Petrology. Prentice Hall.
The Phase Rule in Metamorphic Systems
How do you know which way is correct?
• The rocks should tell you
 The phase rule is an interpretive tool, not a predictive tool,
and does not tell the rocks how to behave
 If you only see low-f assemblages (e.g. Per or Bru in the
MgO-H2O system), then some components may be mobile
 If you often observe assemblages that have many phases
in an area (e.g. periclase + brucite), it is unlikely that so
much of the area is right on a univariant curve, and may
require the number of components to include otherwise
mobile phases, such as H2O or CO2, in order to apply the
phase rule correctly
Chemographic Diagrams
Chemographics refers to the graphical representation
of the chemistry of mineral assemblages

A simple example: the olivine system as a linear


C = 2 plot:

= Mg/(Mg+Fe)
Chemographic Diagrams
3-C mineral compositions are plotted on a triangular
chemographic diagram as shown in Fig. 24-2

x, y, z, xz, xyz, and yz2


Suppose that the rocks in our
area have the following 5
assemblages:
 x-xy-x2z
 xy-xyz-x2z
 xy-xyz-y
 xyz-z-x2z
 y-z-xyz

Figure 24-2. Hypothetical three-component


chemographic compatibility diagram
illustrating the positions of various stable
minerals. Minerals that coexist compatibly
under the range of P-T conditions specific to
the diagram are connected by tie-lines. After
Best (1982) Igneous and Metamorphic
Petrology. W. H. Freeman.
Note that this subdivides the chemographic diagram into 5
sub-triangles, labeled (A)-(E)

A diagram like this is a compatibility


diagram, a type of phase diagram
commonly employed by
metamorphic petrologists

Xbulk point within the sub-


triangle (E), the
corresponding mineral
assemblage corresponds to
the corners = y - z - xyz
Any common point corresponds to 3 phases,
thus f = C, in accordance with the common
case for the mineralogical phase rule

Figure 24-2. Hypothetical three-component


chemographic compatibility diagram
illustrating the positions of various stable
minerals. Minerals that coexist compatibly
under the range of P-T conditions specific to
the diagram are connected by tie-lines. After
Best (1982) Igneous and Metamorphic
Petrology. W. H. Freeman.
What happens if you pick a composition that falls directly on
a tie-line, such as point (f)?

Figure 24-2. Hypothetical three-component


chemographic compatibility diagram
illustrating the positions of various stable
minerals. Minerals that coexist compatibly
under the range of P-T conditions specific to
the diagram are connected by tie-lines. After
Best (1982) Igneous and Metamorphic
Petrology. W. H. Freeman.
In the unlikely event that the bulk
composition equals that of a single
mineral, such as xyz, then f = 1, but
C = 1 as well

Such special
situations, requiring
fewer components
than normal, have
been described by
the intriguing term
compositionally
degenerate
Chemographic Diagrams
Valid compatibility diagram must be referenced to a
specific range of P-T conditions, such as a zone in
some metamorphic terrane, because the stability of
the minerals and their groupings vary as P and T vary
• The previous diagram refers to a P-T range in
which the fictitious minerals x, y, z, xy, xyz, and
x2z are all stable and occur in the groups shown
• At different grades the diagrams change
 Other minerals become stable
 Different arrangements of the same minerals (different
tie-lines connect different coexisting phases)
A diagram in which some minerals exhibit solid solution
Minerals x(y,z) and x2(y,z) show
limited solid solution of components
y and z on one type of lattice site.
Mineral x(y,z) allows more y in the
lattice than does mineral x2(y,z)

Minerals (xyz)ss and zss (the


subscript denotes solid
solution) show limited solid
solution of all three
components
Figure 24-2. Hypothetical three-component
chemographic compatibility diagram
illustrating the positions of various stable
minerals, many of which exhibit solid
solution. After Best (1982) Igneous and
Metamorphic Petrology. W. H. Freeman.
Suppose a bulk rock composition is in the shaded field of the
mineral (xyz)ss
f = 1, but the system is not degenerate
Due to the variable nature of the
composition of the phase, C must still
equal 3 and the phase rule tells us
that F = C - f + 2 = 4
Thus P, T, and any 2 of the 3
components in the phase are
independently variable

Figure 24-2. Hypothetical three-component


chemographic compatibility diagram
illustrating the positions of various stable
minerals, many of which exhibit solid
solution. After Best (1982) Igneous and
Metamorphic Petrology. W. H. Freeman.
Xbulk (f) is represented by the yellow spot on a tie-line.
As in the previous example, there are two coexisting phases
(xyz)ss and zss
Since f = 2 and C is still 3, F = 3 - 2
+2=3

Figure 24-2. Hypothetical three-component


chemographic compatibility diagram
illustrating the positions of various stable
minerals, many of which exhibit solid
solution. After Best (1982) Igneous and
Metamorphic Petrology. W. H. Freeman.
The composition of the two minerals that correspond to bulk
rock composition (f) are indicated by the two shaded dots at
the ends of the tie-line through (f)
Such a 2-phase situation occurs for
any rock composition in the tie-line
striped area between (xyz)ss and zss
Only a few of the infinite
number of possible tie-lines
are illustrated
The same is true for any of
the tie-line dominated 2-
phase fields
Any bulk composition that falls within one of the 3-phase
triangles (A)-(E) acts as in Fig. 24-2
In such situations f = 3, and C = 3, as predicted by the
mineralogical phase rule
Since F = 2 and corresponds to P and
T the phase rule tells us that all of the
compositional variables for each
phase are fixed

Figure 24-2. Hypothetical three-component


chemographic compatibility diagram
illustrating the positions of various stable
minerals, many of which exhibit solid
solution. After Best (1982) Igneous and
Metamorphic Petrology. W. H. Freeman.
Chemographic Diagrams for
Metamorphic Rocks
• Most common natural rocks contain the major
elements: SiO2, Al2O3, K2O, CaO, Na2O, FeO,
MgO, MnO and H2O such that C = 9
• Three components is the maximum number that
we can easily deal with in two dimensions
• What is the “right” choice of components?
• We turn to the following simplifying methods:
1)Simply “ignore” components
 Trace elements
 Elements that enter only a single phase

(we can drop both the component and the


phase without violating the phase rule)
 Perfectly mobile components
2) Combine components
 Components that substitute for one

another in a solid solution: (Fe + Mg)


3) Limit the types of rocks to be shown
 Only deal with a sub-set of rock types

for which a simplified system works


4) Use projections
 I’ll explain this shortly
The phase rule and compatibility diagrams are rigorously
correct when applied to complete systems

• A triangular diagram thus applies rigorously only to true


(but rare) 3-component systems
• If drop components and phases, combine components, or
project from phases, we face the same dilemma we faced
using simplified systems in Chapters 6 and 7
 Gain by being able to graphically display the simplified

system, and many aspects of the system’s behavior


become apparent
 Lose a rigorous correlation between the behavior of the

simplified system and reality


The ACF Diagram
• Illustrate metamorphic mineral assemblages in mafic rocks
on a simplified 3-C triangular diagram
• Concentrate only on the minerals that appeared or
disappeared during metamorphism, thus acting as
indicators of metamorphic grade
Figure 24-4. After Ehlers and Blatt
(1982). Petrology. Freeman. And
Miyashiro (1994) Metamorphic
Petrology. Oxford.
The ACF Diagram
• The three pseudo-components are all
calculated on an atomic basis:
A = Al2O3 + Fe2O3 - Na2O - K2O
C = CaO - 3.3 P2O5
F = FeO + MgO + MnO
The ACF Diagram
A = Al2O3 + Fe2O3 - Na2O - K2O Why the subtraction?

• Na and K in the average mafic rock are typically


combined with Al to produce Kfs and Albite
• In the ACF diagram, we are interested only in the other K-
bearing metamorphic minerals, and thus only in the
amount of Al2O3 that occurs in excess of that combined
with Na2O and K2O (in albite and K-feldspar)
• Since the ratio of Al2O3 to Na2O or K2O in feldspars is
1:1, we subtract from Al2O3 an amount equivalent to Na2O
and K2O in the same 1:1 ratio
The ACF Diagram

C = CaO - 3.3 P2O5

F = FeO + MgO + MnO


The ACF Diagram
By creating these three pseudo-components, Eskola reduced
the number of components in mafic rocks from 8 to 3
• Water is omitted under the assumption that it is perfectly
mobile
• Note that SiO2 is simply ignored
 We shall see that this is equivalent to projecting from quartz
• In order for a projected phase diagram to be truly valid,
the phase from which it is projected must be present in the
mineral assemblages represented
The ACF Diagram
An example:
• Anorthite CaAl2Si2O8
• A = 1 + 0 - 0 - 0 = 1, C = 1 - 0 = 1, and F = 0
• Provisional values sum to 2, so we can normalize
to 1.0 by multiplying each value by ½, resulting in
A = 0.5
C = 0.5
F=0
Figure 24-4. After Ehlers and Blatt
(1982). Petrology. Freeman. And
Miyashiro (1994) Metamorphic
Petrology. Oxford.
A typical ACF compatibility diagram, referring to a specific
range of P and T (the kyanite zone in the Scottish Highlands)

Figure 24-5. After


Turner (1981).
Metamorphic Petrology.
McGraw Hill.
The AKF Diagram
Because pelitic sediments are high in Al2O3 and K2O,
and low in CaO, Eskola proposed a different diagram
that included K2O to depict the mineral assemblages
that develop in them
• In the AKF diagram, the pseudo-components
are:
A = Al2O3 + Fe2O3 - Na2O - K2O - CaO
K = K2O
F = FeO + MgO + MnO
Figure 24-6. After Ehlers and
Blatt (1982). Petrology.
Freeman.
AKF compatibility diagram (Eskola, 1915) illustrating
paragenesis of pelitic hornfelses, Orijärvi region Finland
Figure 24-7. After
Eskola (1915) and
Turner (1981)
Metamorphic Petrology.
McGraw Hill.
Notice that three of the most common minerals in metapelites
andalusite, muscovite, and microcline, all plot as distinct
points in the AKF diagram
Figure 24-7. After Ehlers and Blatt
• Andalusite and (1982). Petrology. Freeman.

muscovite plot as the


same point in the ACF
diagram, and
microcline wouldn’t
plot at all, making the
ACF diagram much
less useful for pelitic
rocks that are rich in K
and Al
Projections in Chemographic Diagrams
When we explore the methods of chemographic
projection we will discover:
• Why we ignored SiO2 in the ACF and AKF
diagrams
• What that subtraction was all about in calculating
A and C
• It will also help you to better understand the AFM
diagram in the next section and some of the
shortcomings of projected metamorphic phase
diagrams
Projection from Apical Phases
Example- the ternary system: CaO-MgO-SiO2 (“CMS”)

• Straightforward: C = CaO, M = MgO, and S = SiO2…


none of that fancy subtracting business! Let’s plot the
following minerals:
Fo - Mg2SiO4 Per - MgO
En - MgSiO3 Qtz - SiO2
Di - CaMgSi2O6 Cc - CaCO3
Projection from Apical Phases
Fo - Mg2SiO4 Per - MgO En - MgSiO3
Qtz - SiO2 Di - CaMgSi2O6 Cc - CaCO3
The line intersects Note that any point on
the M-S the side at a the dashed line from C
point equivalent to through Di to the M-S
33% MgO side has a constant
67% SiO2 ratio of Mg:Si = 1:2
Figure 24-8. Winter
(2001) An Introduction to
Igneous and
Metamorphic Petrology.
Prentice Hall.
Projection from Apical Phases
Fo - Mg2SiO4 Per - MgO En - MgSiO3
Qtz - SiO2 Di - CaMgSi2O6 Cc - CaCO3
• Pseudo-binary Mg-Si diagram in which Di is
projected to a 33 Mg - 66 Si

MgO SiO2
Per Fo En Di' Q
Projection from Apical Phases
• Could project Di
from SiO2 and get
C = 0.5, M = 0.5

MgO CaO
Per, Fo, En Di' Cal
Projection from Apical Phases

MgO SiO2
Per Fo En Di' Q

• In accordance with the mineralogical phase rule


(f = C) get any of the following 2-phase mineral
assemblages in our 2-component system:
Per + Fo Fo + En
En + Di Di + Q
Projection from Apical Phases
What’s wrong?

Figure 24-11. Winter


(2001) An Introduction to
Igneous and
Metamorphic Petrology.
Prentice Hall.

MgO SiO2
Per Fo En Di' Q
Projection from Apical Phases
• ACF and AKF diagrams eliminate SiO2 by projecting
from quartz
• Math is easy: projecting from an apex component is like
ignoring the component in formulas
• The shortcoming is that these projections compress the
true relationships as a dimension is lost
Projection from Apical Phases
Two compounds plot within the ABCQ compositional tetrahedron,
 X (formula ABCQ)

 Y (formula A2B2CQ)

Figure 24-12. Winter


(2001) An Introduction to
Igneous and
Metamorphic Petrology.
Prentice Hall.
Projection from Apical Phases

Figure 24-12. Winter


(2001) An Introduction to
Igneous and
Metamorphic Petrology.
Prentice Hall.
Projection from Apical Phases

Figure 24-12. Winter


(2001) An Introduction to
Igneous and
Metamorphic Petrology.
Prentice Hall.
Projection from Apical Phases
X plots as X' since A:B:C = 1:1:1 = 33:33:33
Y plots as Y' since A:B:C = 2:2:1 = 40:40:20

Figure 24-13. Winter


(2001) An Introduction to
Igneous and
Metamorphic Petrology.
Prentice Hall.
Projection from Apical Phases
If we remember our projection
point (Q), we conclude from this
diagram that the following
assemblages are possible:
(Q)-B-X-C
Fig. 24-13
(Q)-A-X-Y
(Q)-B-X-Y
(Q)-A-B-Y
(Q)-A-X-C
The assemblage A+B+C
appears to be impossible
Projection from Apical Phases

Figure 24-12. Winter


(2001) An Introduction to
Igneous and
Metamorphic Petrology.
Prentice Hall.
Projection from Apical Phases
J.B. Thompson’s A(K)FM Diagram
An alternative to the AKF diagram for metamorphosed
pelitic rocks
• Although the AKF is useful in this capacity, J.B.
Thompson (1957) noted that Fe and Mg do not
partition themselves equally between the various
mafic minerals in most rocks
J.B. Thompson’s A(K)FM Diagram

Figure 24-17. Partitioning of


Mg/Fe in minerals in ultramafic
rocks, Bergell aureole, Italy
After Trommsdorff and Evans
(1972). A J Sci 272, 423-437.
J.B. Thompson’s A(K)FM Diagram

A = Al2O3
K = K2O
F = FeO
M = MgO
J.B. Thompson’s
A(K)FM
Diagram
Project from a phase that is
present in the mineral
assemblages to be studied

Figure 24-18. AKFM Projection


from Mu. After Thompson (1957).
Am. Min. 22, 842-858.
J.B. Thompson’s A(K)FM Diagram
• At high grades muscovite
dehydrates to K-feldspar as the
common high-K phase
• Then the AFM diagram should
be projected from K-feldspar
• When projected from Kfs,
biotite projects within the F-M
base of the AFM triangle

Figure 24-18. AKFM Projection


from Kfs. After Thompson (1957).
Am. Min. 22, 842-858.
J.B. Thompson’s A(K)FM Diagram
 A = Al2O3 - 3K2O (if projected from Ms)
= Al2O3 - K2O (if projected from Kfs)
 F = FeO
 M = MgO
J.B. Thompson’s A(K)FM Diagram
Biotite (from Ms):
KMg2FeSi3AlO10(OH)2
A = 0.5 - 3 (0.5) = - 1
F =1
M =2
To normalize we multiply
each by 1.0/(2 + 1 - 1) =
1.0/2 = 0.5
Thus A = -0.5
F = 0.5
M=1
J.B. Thompson’s A(K)FM Diagram
Figure 24-20. AFM Projection from
Ms for mineral assemblages
developed in metapelitic rocks in
the lower sillimanite zone, New
Hampshire After Thompson (1957).
Am. Min. 22, 842-858.

Mg-enrichment
typically in the
order: cordierite >
chlorite > biotite >
staurolite > garnet
Choosing the Appropriate Chemographic Diagram

• Example, suppose we have a series of pelitic rocks in


an area. The pelitic system consists of the 9 principal
components: SiO2, Al2O3, FeO, MgO, MnO, CaO,
Na2O, K2O, and H2O
• How do we lump those 9 components to get a
meaningful and useful diagram?
Choosing the Appropriate Chemographic Diagram

Each simplifying step makes the resulting system easier to


visualize, but may overlook some aspect of the rocks in
question
 MnO is commonly lumped with FeO + MgO, or

ignored, as it usually occurs in low concentrations and


enters solid solutions along with FeO and MgO
 In metapelites Na2O is usually significant only in

plagioclase, so we may often ignore it, or project from


albite
 As a rule, H2O is sufficiently mobile to be ignored as

well
Choosing the Appropriate Chemographic Diagram
• Common high-grade mineral assemblage:
Sil-St-Mu-Bt-Qtz-Plag

Figure 24-20. AFM Projection from


Ms for mineral assemblages
developed in metapelitic rocks in
the lower sillimanite zone, New
Hampshire After Thompson (1957).
Am. Min. 22, 842-858.
Choosing the Appropriate
Chemographic Diagram
Figure 24-21. After Ehlers and
Blatt (1982). Petrology. Freeman.
Choosing the Appropriate Chemographic Diagram

 We don’t have equilibrium


 There is a reaction taking
place (F = 1)
 We haven’t chosen our
components correctly and
we do not really have 3
components in terms of AKF

Figure 24-21. After Ehlers and


Blatt (1982). Petrology. Freeman.
Choosing the Appropriate Chemographic Diagram

Figure 24-21. After Ehlers and


Blatt (1982). Petrology. Freeman.
Choosing the Appropriate Chemographic Diagram
• In summary, myriad chemographic diagrams have been
proposed to analyze paragenetic relationships in various
metamorphic rock types
• Most such diagrams are triangular, since this is the
maximum number that can be represented easily and
accurately in two dimensions
• In some cases a natural system may conform to a
simple 3-component system, and the resulting
metamorphic phase diagram is rigorous in terms of the
mineral assemblages that develop
• Other diagrams are simplified by combining
components or projecting
Choosing the Appropriate Chemographic Diagram
• Variations in the mineral assemblage that develops in
metamorphic rocks result from
1) Differences in bulk chemistry
2) differences in intensive variables, such as T, P, PH2O,
etc (metamorphic grade)
• A good chemographic diagram permits easy
visualization of the first situation
• The second can be determined by a balanced reaction in
which one rock’s mineral assemblage contains the
reactants and another the products
• These differences can often be visualized by comparing
separate chemographic diagrams, one for each grade

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