Low-pressure fractionation of the Nyiragongo volcanic rocks, Virunga Province, D.R. Congo

2004 ◽  
Vol 136 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 269-295 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Platz ◽  
Stephen F. Foley ◽  
Luc André
1981 ◽  
Vol 18 (9) ◽  
pp. 1478-1491 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas E. Ewing

The Kamloops Group is an alkali-rich calc-alkaline volcanic suite of Early to Middle Eocene age, widespread in south-central British Columbia. Rock types in the suite range from high-K basalt through andesite to rhyolite. The suite is characterized by relatively high K2O, Sr, and Ba, but low Zr, Ti, and Ni concentrations, only moderate Ce enrichment, and little or no Fe enrichment. Initial ratios 87Sr/86Sr are about 0.7040 in the western half, and about 0.7060 in the eastern half of the study area. No difference in chemistry or mineralogy marks this sharp transition. Chemically similar suites include the Absaroka–Gallatin suite in Wyoming and the lower San Juan (Summer Coon) suite in Colorado. The content of K2O at 60% SiO2 increases regularly eastward across southern British Columbia. The chemical data support the subduction-related continental arc origin of the Kamloops Group volcanics.The volcanic rocks consist in the main of augite–pigeonite andesites ranging from 52 to 62% silica, with subordinate quantities of olivine–augite–pigeonite basalt and biotite rhyodacite and rhyolite. The andesites and basalts were derived by a combination of low-pressure fractional crystallization, higher pressure fractional crystallization, and variable parental magmas, whereas low-pressure fractional crystallization of plagioclase, biotite, and apatite from parental basalt and andesite produced the rhyolites. The parental magmas were basalts and basaltic andesites with high K, Sr, and Ba. The primary source of these magmas is inferred to have been an alkali-enriched hydrous peridotite with neither plagioclase nor garnet present in the residuum.


1972 ◽  
Vol 47 ◽  
pp. 129-164
Author(s):  
G. M. Biggar ◽  
M. J. O'hara ◽  
D. J. Humphries ◽  
A. Peckett

Experimental data show Apollo 11 and 12 lava compositions to be controlled by fractional crystallization close to the lunar surface, in a process which yields achondrite-like igneous rocks as underlying complementary crystal accumulates. Volatilization losses during eruption can account for most other chemical differences between lunar lavas and common terrestrial magmas. No specific hypotheses of the composition, mineralogy, or origin of lunar interior can be sustained until the extent of these processes is known. A terrestrial upper-mantle-type lunar interior cannot yet be excluded. The assumption that maria surface lavas are primary partial melts is unjustified and leads to a postulated lunar interior with too low Mg/Mg+Fe to serve as a source for Apollo 14 and other igneous liquids. Other workers' uncontrolled visual estimates of crystallinity in experimental charges, purporting to show that maria lavas were not modified by low pressure fractionation, are irreconcilable with the chemistry of the residual liquids developed in our ‘reversed’ equilibrium experiments. The undesirability of using glass as a starting material for this type of experiment is re-emphasized.


1982 ◽  
Vol 46 (340) ◽  
pp. 379-386 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul M. Holm

SynopsisThe Vulsinian district is the largest and northernmost of the Roman Provinces. There is very little modern mineralogical data on the Italian Pliocene to Recent perpotassic alkaline volcanic rocks and this account deals with the compositions of the phenocrysts in the Vulsinian lavas.The lavas comprise two suites: a leueite-bearing undersaturated series of leucitites, leueite tephrites, leucite phonolites, and trachytes; and a subordinate hy-normative series of mainly trachytes and latites. All lavas are porphyritic with mostly 1–15 vol. % phenoerysts. No cumulates were found. Major elements, and Cr and Ni were determined in the phenocrysts by microprobe analysis and more than 20 trace elements were determined on mineral separates by PIXE.The undersaturated suite. Ubiquitous clinopyroxene phenoerysts belong to the Di-Hedss series and range from Di97 to Di46. Important amounts of Fe3+ are always present. In the mafic rocks the diopside is chromian, but Ti is low. AI mainly substitutes in the Z positions in all lavas. Only minor Na enrichment occurs with increasing total Fe (0–7 mole % acmite) and thus Ca ferri-Tschermak's component is important. In many of the maric lavas diopside mantles green cores of salite, which has a composition very like the salite of felsic lavas. Leucites contain 5–22 mole % orthoelase in solid solution, but show no systematic variation. Plagioclase, mostly An93-An72, occurs in the felsie lavas, and alkali feldspar only in some phonolites. They both have exceptionally high concentrations of Sr and Ba, with a maximum of 1.3 wt. % SrO and 5.6 wt. % BaO in hyalophanes. Olivine, Fo92-Fo66, occurs in some leucititic lavas in mostly accessory amounts. Phlognpite, magnetite and nepheline are accessory phases of the felsic lavas. Apatite only occur as micro-phenocrysts of the fclsic lavas. Haüyne in trace amounts is found in a few phonolites. Pargasitic amphibole microphenocrysts are found in one lava.In most marie members diopside ±leuctie ±olivine were liquidus phases. This study does not confirm that these rocks are related by crystal fractionation. In more felsie lavas clinopyroxene (salite-ferrosalite) and leucite are joined by: plagioclase, magnetite ±phlogopite, and Ba-rich alkali feldspar ±haüyne. The felsic rocks are thought to be related by crystal fractionation.Salitic green cores of phenocrystic pyroxene, mantled by diopside in rocks which also carry normally-zoned diopside, are relicts which provide evidence of either a relatively high PH2O, prior to the crystallization of diopside or magma mixing in the earlier life of these lavas. Pyroxene chemistry points towards low-pressure crystallization (2 kbar), generally in a dry environment.The hy-normative suite. All lavas have phenocrysts of augite, sanidine, plagioclase, magnetite, biotite, and olivine. The pyroxene is less calcic and has less alumina, but is otherwise rather similar to the salites of the undersaturated suite. Compared to the undersaturated suite, feldspars do not have high Sr and Ba, magnetite has higher TiO2 and olivine crystallized from even the felsic lavas. The pyroxenes show the signs of low-pressure crystallization.


2020 ◽  
Vol 50 (1) ◽  
pp. 131-153 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karin Högdahl ◽  
Stefan Bergman

AbstractDuctile shear zones with dextral transpressive deformation separate the Ljusdal lithotectonic unit from the neighbouring units (Bothnia–Skellefteå and Bergslagen) in the 2.0–1.8 Ga Svecokarelian orogen. Sedimentation steered by regional crustal extension at c. 1.86–1.83 Ga was sandwiched between two separate phases of ductile strain with crustal shortening and predominantly high-grade metamorphism with plutonic activity. Metamorphism occurred under low-pressure, medium- to high-temperature conditions that locally reached granulite facies. The earlier shortening event resulted in the accretion of outboard sedimentary and c. 1.89 Ga volcanic rocks (formed in back- or inter-arc basin and volcanic arc settings, respectively) to a continental margin. Fabric development (D1), the earlier phase of low-pressure and variable temperature metamorphism (M1) and the intrusion of a predominantly granitic to granodioritic batholith with rather high εNd values (the Ljusdal batholith) occurred along this active margin at 1.87–1.84 Ga. Thrusting with westerly vergence, regional folding and ductile shearing (D2–3), the later phase of low-pressure and variable temperature metamorphism (M2), and the subsequent minor shear-related intrusion of granite, again with relatively high εNd values, prevailed at 1.83–1.80 Ga. Mineral deposits include epithermal Au–Cu deposits hosted by supracrustal rocks, V–Fe–Ti mineralization in subordinate gabbro and norite bodies inside the Ljusdal batholith, and graphite in metasedimentary rocks.


1948 ◽  
Vol 26b (2) ◽  
pp. 202-214 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. H. Boomer ◽  
A. Gillies ◽  
J. T. Hugill

A simple inexpensive apparatus was devised that could be used to carry out routine analyses of small samples of natural gas, or similar mixtures of lower boiling hydrocarbons, with an accuracy of 0.1% or better. The apparatus operates at low temperatures and pressures and can fractionate as little as 60 cc. A complete analysis takes about two and one-half hours and consumes 3 lb. of liquid air.


1998 ◽  
Vol 62 (3) ◽  
pp. 325-332 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. S. Bottrill

AbstractUnusual corundum-bearing rocks occur in the Bond Range, northern Tasmania, in a hydrothermally altered Cambrian quartz porphyry. The assemblage exhibits quartz and corundum in mutual contact, a rare phenomenon, in association with andalusite, pyrophyllite, diaspore and other minerals. This metastable assemblage apparently resulted from advanced argillic alteration at moderate temperature and low pressure, followed by rapid depressurisation accompanying boiling of hydrothermal, granite-derived fluids. This corundum occurrence appears to be unrelated to the sapphires in placer deposits in Tasmania.


1982 ◽  
Vol 19 (9) ◽  
pp. 1817-1835 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lee H. Fairchild ◽  
Darrel S. Cowan

The Leech River complex 45 km northwest of Victoria consists of metamorphosed pelitic rocks, sandstone, and minor volcanic rocks, chert, and conglomerate of probable Late Jurassic to Cretaceous age. The assemblage experienced two similar deformational events during which regional shortening induced macroscopic east-plunging folds and related coaxial, mesoscopic linear structures, parasitic folds, and axial-plane cleavages. Fragmentation along the developing cleavages disrupted layering and eventually led to transposition during both events. Regional, progressive, low-pressure greenschist- to amphibolite-facies (andalusite–staurolite–biotite) metamorphism began during the first deformation and extended into the waning stages of the second. Intrusion of composite felsic sills was synchronous with deformation and metamorphism, which concluded about 39–41 Ma, according to K–Ar data. The Leech River fault, which forms the southern boundary of the complex, is a zone of two to four subparallel faults. All are relatively straight, narrow faults that appear to dip steeply. This structure is interpreted to be a left-lateral strike-slip fault, active exclusively after the 39–41 Ma conclusion of metamorphism and deformation.The Leech River complex originally may have accumulated somewhere along a late Mesozoic convergent margin, but there is no evidence that it either constitutes a subduction complex per se or was metamorphosed in such a setting in early Tertiary time. The Leech River complex is interpreted to be allochthonous with respect to the bulk of Vancouver Island, since neither older rocks of the Insular Belt (Wrangellia) to the north nor coeval rocks in northwestern Washington record the early Tertiary deformations and synkinematic low-pressure metamorphism. The complex apparently was derived from a cryptic terrane to the west and emplaced against Vancouver Island by left-lateral slip on the San Juan fault after 39–41 Ma.


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