A melt evolution model for Kerimasi volcano, Tanzania: Evidence from carbonate melt inclusions in jacupirangite

Lithos ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 238 ◽  
pp. 101-119 ◽  
Author(s):  
Réka Káldos ◽  
Tibor Guzmics ◽  
Roger H. Mitchell ◽  
John Barry Dawson ◽  
Ralf Milke ◽  
...  
Lithos ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 324-325 ◽  
pp. 716-732 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emanuela Gennaro ◽  
Giada Iacono-Marziano ◽  
Antonio Paonita ◽  
Silvio G. Rotolo ◽  
Caroline Martel ◽  
...  

2022 ◽  
Vol 165 ◽  
pp. 108642
Author(s):  
Ruiyu Sun ◽  
Liangpeng Wu ◽  
Wen Ding ◽  
Ronghua Chen ◽  
Wenxi Tian ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maya Kopylova ◽  
Anna Nosova ◽  
Ludmila Sazonova ◽  
Alexey Vozniak ◽  
Alexey Kargin ◽  
...  

<p>The study reports petrography, bulk major and trace element compositions of lamprophyric Devonian dykes in three areas of the Kola Alkaline Carbonatite Province (N Europe). Dykes in one of these areas, Kandalaksha, are not associated with a massif, while dykes in Kandaguba and Turij Mys occur adjacent (< 5 km) to coeval central multiphase ultramafic alkaline-carbonatitic massifs. Kandalaksha dyke series consists of aillikites - phlogopite carbonatites and monchiquites. Kandaguba dykes range from monchiquites to nephelinites and phonolites; Turij Mys dykes represent alnoites, monchiquites, foidites, turjaites and carbonatites. Some dykes show extreme mineralogical and textural heterogeneity and layering we ascribe to fluid separation. The crystallization and melt evolution of the dykes were modelled with Rhyolite-MELTS and compared with the observed order and products of crystallization. Our results suggest that the studied rocks were related by fractional crystallization and liquid immiscibility. Primitive melts of alkaline picrites or olivine melanephelinites initially evolved at P=1.5-0.8 GPa without a SiO<sub>2</sub> increase due to abundant clinopyroxene crystallization controlled by the CO<sub>2</sub>-rich fluid. At 1-1.1 GPa the Turij Mys melts separated immiscible carbonate melt, which subsequently exsolved carbothermal melts extremely rich in trace elements. Kandaguba and Turij Mys melts continued to fractionate at lower pressures in the presence of hydrous fluid to the more evolved nephelinite and phonolite melts. The studied dykes highlight the critical role of the parent magma chamber in crystal fractionation and magma diversification. The Kandalaksha dykes may represent a carbonatite - ultramafic lamprophyres association, which fractionated at 45- 20 km in narrow dykes on ascent to the surface and could not get more evolved than monchiquite. In contrast, connections of Kandaguba and Turij Mys dykes to their massif magma chambers ensured the sufficient time for fractionation, ascent and a polybaric evolution. This longevity generated more evolved rock types with the higher alkalinity and an immiscible separation of carbonatites.</p>


2010 ◽  
Vol 161 (2) ◽  
pp. 177-196 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tibor Guzmics ◽  
Roger H. Mitchell ◽  
Csaba Szabó ◽  
Márta Berkesi ◽  
Ralf Milke ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 57 (5) ◽  
pp. 583-604 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dirk Schumann ◽  
Robert F. Martin ◽  
Sebastian Fuchs ◽  
Jeffrey de Fourestier

Abstract We have investigated a locality very well known to mineral collectors, the Yates U-Th prospect near Otter Lake, Québec. There, dikes of orange to pink calcite enclose euhedral prisms of fluorapatite, locally aligned. Early investigators pointed out the importance of micro-inclusions in the prisms. We describe and image the micro-inclusions in two polished sections of fluorapatite prisms, one of them with a millimetric globule of orange calcite similar to that in the matrix. We interpret the globule to have been an inclusion of melt trapped during growth. Micro-globules disseminated in the fluorapatite are interpreted to have crystallized in situ from aliquots of the boundary-layer melt enriched in constituents rejected by the fluorapatite; the micro-globules contain a complex jigsawed assemblage of carbonate, silicate, and sulfate minerals. Early minerals to crystallize are commonly partly dissolved and partly replaced by lower-temperature phases. Such jigsawed assemblages seem to be absent in the carbonate matrix sampled away from the fluorapatite prisms. The pressure and temperature attained at the Rigolet stage of the Grenville collisional orogeny were conducive to the anatexis of marble in the presence of H2O. The carbonate melt is considered to have become silicocarbonatitic by assimilation of the enclosing gneisses, which were also close to their melting point. Degassing was important, and the melt froze quickly. The evidence points to a magmatic origin for the carbonate dikes and the associated clinopyroxenite, rather than a skarn-related association.


2006 ◽  
Vol 153 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 221-240 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zachary D. Atlas ◽  
Jacqueline E. Dixon ◽  
Gautam Sen ◽  
Michael Finny ◽  
Ana Lillian Martin-Del Pozzo

2012 ◽  
Vol 76 (2) ◽  
pp. 411-439 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. P. Solovova ◽  
A. V. Girnis

AbstractThis paper reports an investigation of the crystallization products of K-rich silicate and carbonate melts trapped as melt inclusions in clinopyroxene phenocrysts from the Dunkeldyk alkaline igneous complex in the Tajik Republic. Heating experiments on the melt inclusions suggest that the carbonate melt was formed by liquid immiscibility at 1180°C and ∼0.5 GPa. The carbonate-rich inclusions are dominated by Sr-bearing calcite, and rich in incompatible elements. Most of the silicate minerals are SiO2-poor and rich in K, Ba and Ti. Leucite, kalsilite and aegirine are the earliest magmatic minerals. High Ba and Ti contents in the melt resulted in the crystallization of Ba-rich K-feldspar, titanite, perovskite and Ti-bearing garnet, and the rare Ba-Ti silicates fresnoite and delindeite. The last minerals to crystallize from volatile-rich melts and fluids were aegirine, götzenite, K-Ba- and Ca-Sr-bearing zeolites, fluorite and strontium-rich baryte. Interaction of the early minerals with residual melts and fluids produced Ba-rich phlogopite and Sr-rich apatite.


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