Mr. Lee et al., EXSOLUTION AND ALTERATION MICROTEXTURES IN ALKALI FELDSPAR PHENOCRYSTS FROM THE SHAP GRANITE, Mineralogical Magazine, 59(394), 1995, pp. 63-78
Alkali feldspar phenocrysts (bulk composition Or(75.0)Ab(24.6)An(0.4))
in the subsolvus Shap granite comprise a line-scale mixture of subreg
ular pristine crypto- and micro-perthites with altered, micropore-rich
feldspar with irregular microstructures. The regular perthites are st
rain-controlled intergrowths of Albite and/or Pericline-twinned albite
exsolution lamellae within tweed orthoclase. The microperthites forme
d at less than or equal to 590 degrees C by heterogeneous nucleation o
f thin albite films which coarsened to > 1 mu m length. Cryptoperthite
s developed at < 400 degrees C by homogeneous nucleation of sub-mu m l
ong platelets between films. Platelets are coherent, but the coarser m
icroperthite lamellae are semi-coherent, with pairs of misfit dislocat
ions sub-regularly spaced along the albite-orthoclase interface. As mu
ch as 30% of any one feldspar crystal is turbid, a result of the forma
tion of numerous mu m to sub-mu m sized micropores during deuteric alt
eration. In some areas, deuteric fluids gained access to the interior
of feldspar crystals by exploiting semi-coherent film lamellae. Albite
was selectively dissolved and micropore-rich irregular microcline was
reprecipitated in its place. In other parts of the feldspars deuteric
recrystallization completely cross-cuts the pristine microtextures an
d patch perthites have formed. These are coarse, incoherent to semi-co
herent intergrowths of irregular microcline (replacing tweed orthoclas
e) and Albite-twinned albite. The deuteric reactions occurred at < 400
degrees C; the main driving force for dissolution and reprecipitation
was decrease in the elastic strain energy at the coherent interfaces
of crypto- and micro-perthite lamellae, and the recrystallization of t
weed orthoclase to irregular microcline.