Native iron in the continental lower crust: Petrological and geophysical implications Article

Haggerty, SE, Toft, PB. (1985). Native iron in the continental lower crust: Petrological and geophysical implications . SCIENCE, 229(4714), 647-649. 10.1126/science.229.4714.647

cited authors

  • Haggerty, SE; Toft, PB

abstract

  • Lower crustal granulite xenoliths recovered from a kimberlite pipe in western Africa contain native iron (Fe0) as a decomposition product of garnet and ilmenite. Magnetic measurements show that less than 0.1 percent (by volume) of iron metal is present. Data from geothermometry and oxygen geobarometry indicate that the oxide and metal phases equilibrated between iron-wüstite and magnetite-wüstite buffers, which may represent the oxidation state of the continental lower crust, and the depleted lithospheric upper mantle. Ferromagnetic native iron could be stable to a depth of ≃95 kilometers and should be considered in the interpretation of long-wavelength static magnetic anomalies.

publication date

  • January 1, 1985

published in

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • 647

end page

  • 649

volume

  • 229

issue

  • 4714