High-temperature metamorphic rocks are the result of numerous chemical and physical processes that occur during a potentially long-lived thermal evolution. These rocks chart the sequence of events during an orogenic episode including heating, cooling, exhumation and melt interaction, all of which may be interpreted through the elemental and isotopic characteristics of accessory minerals such as zircon, monazite and rutile. Developments in imaging and in situ chemical analysis have resulted in an increasing amount of information being extracted from these accessory phases. The refractory nature of these minerals, combined with both their use as geochronometers and tracers of metamorphic mineral reactions, has made them the focus of many stud...
The Zr-in-rutile geothermometer is potentially a widely applicable tool to estimate peak metamorphic...
The definitive version may be found at www.wiley.comU-Pb age data collected from zircon and monazite...
The growth and dissolution behaviour of accessory phases (and especially those of geochronological i...
© 2016 Elsevier B.V. High-temperature metamorphic rocks are the result of numerous chemical and phys...
A mineral that forms under conditions as variable as diagenesis to deep subduction, melt crystalliza...
A mineral that forms under conditions as variable as diagenesis to deep subduction, melt crystalliza...
A mineral that forms under conditions as variable as diagenesis to deep subduction, melt crystalliza...
This Chemical Geology special issue stems from oral presentations given at two symposia held in 2007...
This Chemical Geology special issue stems from oral presentations given at two symposia held in 2007...
The formation, age and trace element composition of zircon and monazite were investigated across the...
The formation, age and trace element composition of zircon and monazite were investigated across the...
Accessory minerals such as zircon, apatite, rutile or titanite are widely used as powerful thermochr...
Metamorphic rocks encode a history of Earth geodynamics through growth of their constituent metamorp...
Metamorphic rocks encode a history of Earth geodynamics through growth of their constituent metamorp...
Metamorphic rocks encode a history of Earth geodynamics through growth of their constituent metamorp...
The Zr-in-rutile geothermometer is potentially a widely applicable tool to estimate peak metamorphic...
The definitive version may be found at www.wiley.comU-Pb age data collected from zircon and monazite...
The growth and dissolution behaviour of accessory phases (and especially those of geochronological i...
© 2016 Elsevier B.V. High-temperature metamorphic rocks are the result of numerous chemical and phys...
A mineral that forms under conditions as variable as diagenesis to deep subduction, melt crystalliza...
A mineral that forms under conditions as variable as diagenesis to deep subduction, melt crystalliza...
A mineral that forms under conditions as variable as diagenesis to deep subduction, melt crystalliza...
This Chemical Geology special issue stems from oral presentations given at two symposia held in 2007...
This Chemical Geology special issue stems from oral presentations given at two symposia held in 2007...
The formation, age and trace element composition of zircon and monazite were investigated across the...
The formation, age and trace element composition of zircon and monazite were investigated across the...
Accessory minerals such as zircon, apatite, rutile or titanite are widely used as powerful thermochr...
Metamorphic rocks encode a history of Earth geodynamics through growth of their constituent metamorp...
Metamorphic rocks encode a history of Earth geodynamics through growth of their constituent metamorp...
Metamorphic rocks encode a history of Earth geodynamics through growth of their constituent metamorp...
The Zr-in-rutile geothermometer is potentially a widely applicable tool to estimate peak metamorphic...
The definitive version may be found at www.wiley.comU-Pb age data collected from zircon and monazite...
The growth and dissolution behaviour of accessory phases (and especially those of geochronological i...