Apatite-hosted melt inclusions from the Panzhihua gabbroic-layered intrusion associated with a giant Fe–Ti oxide deposit in SW China: insights for magma unmixing within a crystal mush

Author(s):  
Kun Wang ◽  
Christina Yan Wang ◽  
Zhong-Yuan Ren
1977 ◽  
Vol 114 (5) ◽  
pp. 365-374 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. D. T. Goode

SummaryThe Ewarara Intrusion of central Australia contains two vertical fine-banded horizons within a sequence of sub-horizontal ultramafic cumulates. The horizons are arranged in an en échelon pattern adjacent to a steep intrusional contact, and consist of an alternation of two layer types which correspond to the two major lithologies present in the horizontal sequence. The horizons are up to 5 m thick. A number of possible origins, including folding of originally horizontal cumulates, flow differentiation and multiple injection, do not satisfactorily explain the formation of the layering. The most likely origin appears to involve differential viscous flow along the steep contact of an inhomogeneous crystal mush derived from the horizontal layered sequence. This mobilization is related to fresh injections along a feeder zone trending 060µ, the only such zone recognized in the Giles Complex.


2000 ◽  
Vol 64 (3) ◽  
pp. 481-496 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Fulignati ◽  
P. Marianelli ◽  
A. Sbrana

AbstractIn the 1944 Vesuvius eruption, the shallow magma chamber was disrupted during the highly energetic explosive phases. Abundant cognate xenoliths such as subvolcanic fergusites and cumulates, hornfels, skarns and rare marbles occur in tephra deposits.Mineral chemistry, melt inclusions in minerals and glassy matrix compositions show that fergusites (highly crystalline rocks made of leucite, clinopyroxene, plagioclase, olivine, apatite, oxides and glass) do not correspond to melt compositions but result from combined sidewall accumulation of crystals, formed from K-tephriphonolitic magma resident in the chamber, and in situ crystallization of the intercumulus melt. Very low H2O contents in the intercumulus glass are revealed by FTIR and apatite composition. Whole rock compositions are essentially determined by the bulk mineral assemblages.Glass–bearing fergusites constitute the outer shell of the magma chamber consisting of a highly viscous crystal mush with a melt content in the range 20–50 wt.%. The leucite/(clinopyroxene+olivine) modal ratio, varies with the extraction order of magmas from the chamber, decreasing upwards in the stratigraphic sequence. This reflects a vertical mineralogical zonation of the crystal mush. These data contribute to the interpretation of the subvolcanic low–pressure crystallization processes at the magma chamber sidewalls affecting alkaline potassic magmas.


2015 ◽  
Vol 89 (s2) ◽  
pp. 56-56
Author(s):  
Pingping LIU ◽  
Meifu ZHOU ◽  
Weiterry CHEN ◽  
Marijn BOONE ◽  
Veerle CNUDDE
Keyword(s):  
Sw China ◽  

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