Carbonatite-metasomatism signatures hidden in silicate-metasomatized mantle xenoliths from NE China

2017 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 682-691 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ben-Xun Su ◽  
Xin-Hua Zhou ◽  
Yang Sun ◽  
Ji-Feng Ying ◽  
Patrick Asamoah Sakyi
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luisa Braga ◽  
Fernanda Gervasoni ◽  
Maurizio Mazzucchelli ◽  
Tommaso Giovanardi ◽  
Eduardo Novais Rodrigues ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 104 (9) ◽  
pp. 1336-1344
Author(s):  
Chiara Anzolini ◽  
Fei Wang ◽  
Garrett A. Harris ◽  
Andrew J. Locock ◽  
Dongzhou Zhang ◽  
...  

Abstract Nixonite (IMA 2018-133), ideally Na2Ti6O13, is a new mineral found within a heavily metasomatized pyroxenite xenolith from the Darby kimberlite field, beneath the west-central Rae Craton, Canada. It occurs as microcrystalline aggregates, 15 to 40 μm in length. Nixonite is isostructural with jeppeite, K2Ti6O13, with a structure consisting of edge- and corner-shared titanium-centered octahedra that enclose alkali-metal ions. The Mohs hardness is estimated to be between 5 and 6 by comparison to jeppeite, and the calculated density is 3.51(1) g/cm3. Electron microprobe wavelength-dispersive spectroscopic analysis (average of 6 points) yielded: Na2O 6.87, K2O 5.67, CaO 0.57, TiO2 84.99, V2O3 0.31, Cr2O3 0.04, MnO 0.01, Fe2O3 0.26, SrO 0.07, total 98.79 wt%. The empirical formula, based on 13 O atoms, is: (Na1.24K0.67Ca0.06)Σ1.97(Ti5.96V0.023Fe0.018)Σ6.00O13 with minor amounts of Cr and Mn. Nixonite is monoclinic, space group C2/m, with unit-cell parameters a = 15.3632(26) Å, b = 3.7782(7) Å, c = 9.1266(15) Å, β = 99.35(15)°, and V = 522.72(1) Å3, Z = 2. Based on the average of seven integrated multi-grain diffraction images, the strongest diffraction lines are [dobs in Å (I in %) (hkl)]: 3.02 (100) (310), 3.66 (75) (110), 7.57 (73) (200), 6.31 (68) (201), 2.96 (63) (311), 2.96 (63) (203), and 2.71 (62) (402). The five main Raman peaks of nixonite, in order of decreasing intensity, are at 863, 280, 664, 135, and 113 cm–1. Nixonite is named after Peter H. Nixon, a renowned scientist in the field of kimberlites and mantle xenoliths. Nixonite occurs within a pyroxenite xenolith in a kimberlite, in association with rutile, priderite, perovskite, freudenbergite, and ilmenite. This complex Na-K-Ti-rich metasomatic mineral assemblage may have been produced by a fractionated Na-rich kimberlitic melt that infiltrated a mantle-derived garnet pyroxenite and reacted with rutile during kimberlite crystallization.


2016 ◽  
Vol 430 ◽  
pp. 90-107 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yulia V. Kochergina ◽  
Lukáš Ackerman ◽  
Vojtěch Erban ◽  
Magdalena Matusiak-Małek ◽  
Jacek Puziewicz ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Igor V. Ashchepkov ◽  
Theodoros Ntaflos ◽  
Nikolai Medvedev ◽  
Nikolay Vladykin ◽  
Hilary Downes ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
pp. SP510-2020-28
Author(s):  
Ni Li ◽  
Yong-Wei Zhao ◽  
Li-Wen Gong ◽  
Jia-Long Wang

AbstractDuring the late Cenozoic, the extensional tectonic setting in northeastern China caused large-scale block uplifts and depressions, and thus a large amount of magma erupted along structural fractures in the eastern Inner Mongolia, NE China. The Abaga, Beilike, Dalinor and Wulanhada (ABDW) volcanic rocks along the Daxing'anling-Taihangshan Gravity Lineament in the southern section of the Daxing'anling are characterized by their extensive distribution, numerous volcanic cones and various eruption types. Each volcanic group has distinctive volcanic landforms and geochemical characteristics. The geochronological data have revealed that the volcanism spanned Miocene to late Pleistocene. The ABDW volcanic rocks contain primary alkaline basalts and subordinate tholeiites. The trace element curve pattern is similar to that of OIB, but completely different from that of MORB, while the LREE are more enriched than HREE. The geochemical features of the volcanic rocks and the entrained mantle xenoliths reveal the broad heterogeneities of the lithospheric mantle and varieties of the volcanic rock evolution in the south Daxing'anling. The Cenozoic volcanism in eastern Inner Mongolia, and even within the east Asian plate, is attributed to the westward subduction and rolling backward of the Pacific slab as well as the trench retreat.


2016 ◽  
Vol 57 (2) ◽  
pp. 345-382 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.-A. Kaczmarek ◽  
J.-L. Bodinier ◽  
D. Bosch ◽  
A. Tommasi ◽  
J.-M. Dautria ◽  
...  

1989 ◽  
Vol 53 (371) ◽  
pp. 305-309 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter H. Nixon ◽  
Eric Condliffe

AbstractThis second recorded occurrence of yimengite, K(Cr, Ti, Fe, Mg, Al)12O19, is in a Precambrian kimberlitic sill in the Guaniamo District of Bolivar Province, Venezuela. The paragenesis is similar to that of the type area in Shandong Province, China, where the mineral is in kimberlite dykes. At both localities the yimengite is a K, Ti-bearing metasomatic product of chromium-rich spinel. In the Venezuela rocks the spinels are of the type occurring both as diamond inclusions and as a component of diamond-related Cr-rich garnet harzburgite mantle xenoliths. Yimengite contains significant amounts of barium (up to 3.4wt.% BaO) and is thus transitional to the recently described mineral hawthorneite, Ba(Cr, Ti, Fe, Mg)12O19. Both members are part of a suite of titanate minerals found in kimberlites and their inclusions which has been described by Haggerty and coworkers; they formed as a result of mantle metasomatism generated by K- and Ba-rich fluids. In Venezuela, metasomatism of this type would appear to be deeper than that usually recorded, namely in the basal lithosphere. The metasomatizing fluids are derived from the underlying, more oxygenated asthenosphere. The host kimberlitic rocks are not significantly enriched in K and Ba, but these elements are concentrated in later micaceous dykes which are conjectured to have been generated within similar metasomatized mantle.


Lithos ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 154 ◽  
pp. 296-314 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guillaume Delpech ◽  
Jean-Pierre Lorand ◽  
Michel Grégoire ◽  
Jean-Yves Cottin ◽  
Suzanne Y. O'Reilly

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