C, O, Sr and Nd isotope systematics of carbonates of Papaghni sub-basin, Andhra Pradesh, India: Implications for genesis of carbonate-hosted stratiform uranium mineralisation and geodynamic evolution of the Cuddapah basin

Lithos ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 263 ◽  
pp. 88-100 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nurul Absar ◽  
B.M. Nizamudheen ◽  
Sminto Augustine ◽  
Shreyas Managave ◽  
S. Balakrishnan
Author(s):  
James Flinders ◽  
John D. Clemens

ABSTRACT:Most natural systems display non-linear dynamic behaviour. This should be true for magma mingling and mixing processes, which may be chaotic. The equations that most nearly represent how a chaotic natural system behaves are insoluble, so modelling involves linearisation. The difference between the solution of the linearised and ‘true’ equation is assumed to be small because the discarded terms are assumed to be unimportant. This may be very misleading because the importance of such terms is both unknown and unknowable. Linearised equations are generally poor descriptors of nature and are incapable of either predicting or retrodicting the evolution of most natural systems. Viewed in two dimensions, the mixing of two or more visually contrasting fluids produces patterns by folding and stretching. This increases the interfacial area and reduces striation thickness. This provides visual analogues of the deterministic chaos within a dynamic magma system, in which an enclave magma is mingling and mixing with a host magma. Here, two initially adjacent enclave blobs may be driven arbitrarily and exponentially far apart, while undergoing independent (and possibly dissimilar) changes in their composition. Examples are given of the wildly different morphologies, chemical characteristics and Nd isotope systematics of microgranitoid enclaves within individual felsic magmas, and it is concluded that these contrasts represent different stages in the temporal evolution of a complex magma system driven by nonlinear dynamics. If this is true, there are major implications for the interpretation of the parts played by enclaves in the genesis and evolution of granitoid magmas.


2008 ◽  
Vol 461 (1-4) ◽  
pp. 202-214 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rafael López-Guijarro ◽  
Maider Armendáriz ◽  
Cecilio Quesada ◽  
Javier Fernández-Suárez ◽  
J. Brendan Murphy ◽  
...  

Lithos ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 290-291 ◽  
pp. 48-59 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marco G. Malusà ◽  
Jiangang Wang ◽  
Eduardo Garzanti ◽  
Zhi-Chao Liu ◽  
Igor M. Villa ◽  
...  

1989 ◽  
Vol 26 (5) ◽  
pp. 956-968 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. B. Clarke ◽  
B. I. Cameron ◽  
G. K. Muecke ◽  
J. L. Bates

Fine- to medium-grained, phyric and aphyric basalt samples from ODP Leg 105, site 647A, in the Labrador Sea show little evidence of alteration. Chemically, these rocks are low-potassium (0.01–0.09 wt.% K2O), olivine- to quartz-normative tholeiites that compare closely with the very depleted terrestrial Paleocene volcanic rocks in the Davis Strait region of Baffin Island and West Greenland. However, differences exist in the Sr–Nd isotope systematics of the two suites; the Labrador Sea samples have ε Nd values (+9.3) indicative of a more depleted source, and are higher in 87Sr/86Sr (0.7040), relative to the Davis Strait basalts (ε Nd +2.54 to +8.97; mean 87Sr/86Sr 0.7034). The higher 87Sr/86Sr in the Labrador Sea samples may reflect seawater exchange despite no petrographic evidence for significant alteration. The Labrador Sea and early Davis Strait basalts may have been derived from a similar depleted mantle source composition; however, the later Davis Strait magmas were generated from a different mantle. None of the Baffin Island, West Greenland, or Labrador Sea samples show unequivocal geochemical evidence for contamination with continental crust.


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