“…Felsic veins including anorthosite, diorite, quartz diorites, tonalities, and trondhjemites, also termed oceanic plagiogranites, are ubiquitous in abyssal gabbros in oceanic core complexes (OCCs) at slow‐spreading and ultraslow spreading ridges, and ophiolites (Blackman et al, 2006; Coleman & Peterman, 1975; Robinson et al, 1989). They are products of late‐stage magmatic evolution in the lower crust, generated by differentiation of mid‐ocean ridge basalt (MORB) (Berndt et al, 2005; Chen et al, 2019; Coleman & Peterman, 1975; Feig et al, 2006; Grimes et al, 2011; Nguyen et al, 2018; Niu et al, 2002), partial melting of hydrated gabbros (Dick, Meyer, et al, 1991; Flagler & Spray, 1991; Koepke et al, 2004, 2005, 2007), or liquid immiscibility (Dixon & Rutherford, 1979; Natland et al, 1991). As such, they can provide critical information on the evolution of the lower ocean crust, constraining the final stages of its accretion and emplacement, reflecting the relationship between the late‐stage magmatic and internal structural evolution of the lower ocean crust.…”