Mafic microgranular enclaves (MMEs) are widespread in granitic plutons and provide valuable insights into mush–magma mixing processes in crustal magma reservoirs. In this study, we characterize chemical zoning and Sr isotopic compositions of plagioclase in the MMEs, gabbro and host monzogranite from the Late Triassic Xiuyan pluton in East China, to constrain the origin of MMEs and the role of crystal mushes in magma mixing. The MMEs in the Xiuyan pluton are angular and range from centimeters to several meters in size. They exhibit sharp contacts with the host monzogranite and show diverse disequilibrium textures. Plagioclase in MMEs occurs as fine-grained antecryst with normal zoning (An46–66 in the core and An17–29 in the rim). The cores are commonly characterized by coarse sieve textures, patchy zoning, and resorption surfaces at core–rim boundaries. In situ Sr isotopic compositions show subtle but systematic core–rim variations, with (87Sr/86Sr)i increasing slightly from cores (~0.70639) to rims (~0.70664), and rim values overlapping the whole-rock (87Sr/86Sr)i of MMEs. These features suggest that the rim was crystallized from locally hybridized melts produced by interaction between interstitial melts in a basaltic mush and granitic magma. Plagioclase in the gabbro occurs as medium-grained phenocryst with normal zoning (An46–65 in the core and An18–27 in the rim) but shows nearly homogeneous (87Sr/86Sr)i across individual grains (0.70612–0.70637), comparable to whole-rock gabbro values of 0.70623. The plagioclase cores in gabbro also show coarse sieve texture and patchy zoning with the resorption surface in the margin of the core and rim. We interpret the sieve textures in plagioclase cores from both MMEs and gabbro to record partial dissolution during rapid ascent and decompression of an initially H2O-undersaturated, crystal-bearing basaltic magma, during which increased effective water activity reduced plagioclase stability prior to the growth of the rim. Plagioclase in the host monzogranite is medium- to coarse-grained, compositionally homogeneous, and characterized by low An contents (An12–24) and elevated (87Sr/86Sr)i of ~0.70828. We propose that MMEs in the Xiuyan pluton formed when semi-consolidated mafic mush was mechanically disaggregated into angular fragments and subsequently entrained into coexisting granitic melt. This study reveals that MMEs formed by mechanical disaggregation of a semi-consolidated mafic mush into angular fragments, followed by their entrainment into the granitic melts.
Zhao et al. (Tue,) studied this question.