The Petrogenesis of Hornblende-mica-lamprophyre Dykes at South Hill, Jersey, C. I.

1964 ◽  
Vol 101 (4) ◽  
pp. 302-313 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. C. Bishop

AbstractAt South Hill, 1/2 mile south-east of St. Helier, two hornblende-mica-lamprophyre dykes cut the Fort Regent granophyre. They are themselves displaced by two gently dipping shear zones and a dolerite dyke belonging to the main Jersey dyke swarm cuts the granophyre, lamprophyres, and shears, Petrographically the lamprophyres are of the spessartite-kersantite type, but the presence of euhedral brown amphibole invites comparison with the camptonites. The genesis of the lamprophyres is discussed and a significant role is assigned to volatile constituents.

GFF ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 138 (1) ◽  
pp. 6-16 ◽  
Author(s):  
Victor Puchkov ◽  
Richard E. Ernst ◽  
Michael A. Hamilton ◽  
Ulf Söderlund ◽  
Nina Sergeeva

2000 ◽  
Vol 137 (4) ◽  
pp. 437-446 ◽  
Author(s):  
OLAF M. SVENNINGSEN

The Seve Nappe Complex in the Scandinavian Caledonides contains the fragmented late Precambrian continent–ocean transition between Baltica and the Iapetus Ocean. This passive margin was fragmented and thrust eastwards over the Baltic Shield during Caledonian orogenesis. The individual thrust sheets in the Seve Nappe Complex went through different P–T–t evolutions, resulting in dramatic metamorphic contrasts: eclogite-bearing nappes are juxtaposed with nappes showing no evidence of Caledonian deformation or metamorphism in their interiors. Strain localization to the marginal parts of the thrust sheets left records of both pre-orogenic (rift) and early orogenic (subduction and subsequent uplift) processes in the thrust sheets of the Seve Nappe Complex. Even though it has been transported several hundred kilometres, only the margins of the eastern part of the Sarektjåkkå Nappe are affected by penetrative Caledonian deformation. This part of the Sarektjåkkå Nappe is dominated by pristine tholeiitic dykes and cross-bedded sandstones. The dykes are 608±1 Ma old and make up 70–80% of the nappe. Widely spaced thin shear zones of the Ruopsok fault system represent the only Caledonian penetrative deformation in the interior of the nappe. Previously published Ar–Ar dates indicate cooling below the closure temperature of hornblende at c. 470 Ma, but numerous ages have been recorded. Ar dating of biotite and muscovite from a cross-laminated metapsammite in the Sarektjåkkå Nappe gave well-defined ages of 428.5±3.6 and 432.4±3.8 Ma, respectively. Muscovite from a shear zone in the Ruopsok Fault System gave 428.2±4.0 Ma, whereas hornblende from the same locality did not yield interpretable data. The results indicate that these rocks were completely degassed at some unknown time, presumably at the emplacement of the dyke swarm. No subsequent excess argon contamination can be detected. A likely candidate for the degassing event is the emplacement of the dykes at 608 Ma. The interior of the nappe, and thus the entire nappe complex, cooled below ∼ 350 °C at around 430 Ma. Cooling from more than 500 °C at c. 470 Ma to 350 °C at c. 430 Ma suggests an average cooling rate of [les ] 4 °C/Ma. A prolonged period of slow cooling (≈exhumation?) following the initial, rapid uplift of the eclogite-bearing nappes and Early Ordovician construction of the Seve Nappe Complex is suggested.


The Lewisian complex of northwest Scotland shows a pattern of evolution typical of a number of early Proterozoic provinces. During the period 2500-1600 Ma, deformation occurred along steeply dipping shear zones, resulting in both vertical and lateral movements. The largest of these shear zones, forming the northern boundary to the Scourian granulites (Archaean), must have penetrated to considerable depth, possibly to the mantle. Modal and chemical analysis of rocks from shear zones are presented and discussed in relation to rocks sampled outside shear zones. The mineralogy and composition of all rocks deformed in the shear zones have been considerably altered by synkinematic metasomatism. In the early stages, immediately prior to and during the intrusion of the regional doleritic dyke swarm, this metasomatic activity involved addition of H 2 O and Na to the rocks. Subsequently, more significant changes in rock chemistry occurred addition of H 2 O, K, Na, loss of Fe, Ca, Mg). These changes resulted from the interaction between large volumes of water and the rocks in the shear zones along which the fluid travelled. A combination of modal and chemical data allow general chemical reactions to be written which describe the evolution of the gneisses during reworking and retrogression from pyroxene bearing granulite facies rocks to hornblende and biotite bearing amphibolite facies rocks in shear zones. The reactions are written as ionic equilibria and suggest that the fluid phase in the shear zones had a low pH. Adiabatic transport of water upwards through the crust will result in moderate warming of the fluid, and can cause large temperature increases above the preexisting geothermal gradient in rocks through which the fluid travels. It is suggested that both deformation and metamorphism in these shear zones are related to transport of fluid by hydraulic fracturing. Grain size reduction by hydraulic fracturing increases the strain rate in the shear zones. Deformation may cease in a shear zone when the fluid pressure drops and hydraulic fracturing no longer occurs. Thus fluid transport, mineral reactions, chemical changes, grain size reduction and convective heat flow will cease. A close relation should exist between the intensity of deformation, the extent of metasomatism and the thermal history in these important shear belts.


2021 ◽  
pp. SP518-2021-46
Author(s):  
Arnab Dey ◽  
Sisir K. Mondal

AbstractDolerite dyke swarms are widespread within the Singhbhum Craton (eastern India) that emplaced from the Neoarchean to Paleoproterozoic era just after the stabilization of crust before c. 3 Ga. These dyke swarms are oriented in NE - SW to NNE - SSW, NW - SE to WNW - ESE, E - W, and N - S directions. The WNW - ESE trending c. 1.77 Ga Pipilia dyke swarm is sampled from the Satkosia area of the Orissa state. The dyke shows a noticeable disparity in terms of the modal proportion and grain size of pyroxenes, plagioclase, Fe-Ti-oxide minerals and texture across the trend. At places the primary silicates are altered to secondary hydrated mineral assemblages of amphibole, chlorite and sericite. Primary silicates are clinopyroxene (augite: Mg# = 65.7 - 82.6; En37-48Fs11-17Wo36-41), orthopyroxene (clinoenstatite: Mg# = 68.5 − 78; En63-70Fs20-29Wo4-5), plagioclase (An11-39Ab44-82Or1-7) and Fe-Ti oxides are titanomagnetite (FeO = 34.38 − 39.50 wt%, Fe2O3 = 48.26 − 56.21 wt%, TiO2 = 5.05 − 9.60 wt%) and ilmenite (FeO = 40.75 − 43.79 wt%, Fe2O3 = 3.54 − 10.03 wt%, TiO2 = 47.82 − 50.87 wt%). Application of two-pyroxene thermometry yields an equilibration temperature range of 1065oC to 978oC, and coexisting titanomagnetite-ilmenite pairs reveal 731.39oC to 573.37oC at the oxygen fugacity (fO2) condition NNO+0.3 to FMQ-1.03. The dyke contains disseminated sulfides at the interstices of Fe-Ti-oxides, and silicates. Major sulfide minerals are pyrite, chalcopyrite, and vaesite; Pyrite-vaesite assemblages occur in association with secondary silicate minerals. Pyrite grains contain variable concentration of Co = 0.01 − 5.70 wt% and Ni = 0.02 − 1.95 wt%. Coexisting vaesite contains Co = 2.42 − 10.44 wt%, Ni = 26.40 − 47.88 wt%, and Fe = 7.32 − 26.55 wt%. Texture, sulfide-silicate assemblage, and presence of low metal/S sulfides such as the pyrite-vaesite assemblage indicate primary Fe-Ni- sulfides (pyrrhotite-pentlandite) that segregated from immiscible sulfide liquid at high temperature is modified by late magmatic/hydrothermal fluid activities. Numerous sulfide-bearing deposits hosted in ultramafic-mafic intrusions of Paleoproterozoic age have been recorded globally and the occurrence of Fe-Ni-sulfides in the c. 1.77 Ga Pipilia dyke swarm in the Singhbhum Craton enhances the exploration potential of this craton in eastern India.Supplementary material at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.5643989


2002 ◽  
Vol 66 (1) ◽  
pp. 93-119 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. A. Miller ◽  
I. S. Buick ◽  
I. Cartwright ◽  
A. Barnicoat

AbstractFluids can play a direct role in exhumation by influencing exhumation mechanisms and the driving processes for these mechanisms. In addition, the process of exhumation leads to the development of fluid-related features that in themselves may not drive exhumation. Fluids involved in exhumation are generally derived from dehydration reactions occurring during decompression, but at shallower crustal levels may also involve the introduction of exotic fluids. The composition of fluids attending exhumation are generally saline – CO2 mixtures, but N2, CH4, H2O mixtures have also been recorded. Studies of fluid features related to exhumation have found that fluids may contribute to density changes and the initiation of partial melting during decompression, as well as the development of extensive vein systems. However, the preservation of geochemical signatures related to fluid processes occurring prior to high-P and ultrahigh-P metamorphism indicates that large-scale pervasive fluid flow systems, in general, do not operate at any stage during the exhumation history. Large-scale channelled fluid flow may have operated in detachment faults and shear zones related to exhumation, and this requires further study. The most significant role of fluids during exhumation appears to be their controlling influence on the preservation of high-P or ultrahigh-P rocks.


The Proterozoic North Atlantic dyke swarm occurs in Scotland, East and West Greenland, and Labrador, over an area of at least 250000 km2, and includes two dominant dyke sets which in West Greenland strike NNE-SSW, and ESE-WNW. The intrusive relations of the two sets, and their association with ductile shear zones and other lateral displacements of country rocks, show the dykes to represent a conjugate swarm emplaced along shear fractures, rather than along tensional openings. The mechanical behaviour of the Proterozoic lithosphere is considered in the context of the regional fracture system.


1998 ◽  
Vol 135 (4) ◽  
pp. 509-517 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. J. H. OLIVER ◽  
R. R. McALPINE

A sheeted dolerite dyke swarm has been discovered at Duniewick Fort, Ballantrae. It forms part of the Early Ordovician Ballantrae Complex of Ayrshire, southwest Scotland. Asymmetric chilled margins, parallel to sub-parallel dykes and multiple dykes (dykes within dykes) are found. Although the mineralogy has been altered by metamorphism, the geochemistry is comparable with modern day back-arc marginal basin basalt. Cross-cutting sills have the chemistry of within-plate basalt. The regional geological setting suggests that an ophiolite sequence has been dismembered and incorporated into a serpentinite mélange. This is the first description of a 100% sheeted dyke complex (senso stricto) from the Ballantrae ophiolite.


1970 ◽  
Vol 85 ◽  
pp. 1-115
Author(s):  
C.H Emeleus ◽  
W.T Harry

The Igaliko Nepheline Syenite Complex is in the Julianehåb District of Southern Greenland, at about 61°N and 45°W. The syenites and related rocks cover an area of about 450 square kilometres in the country between Tunugdliarfik and Igaliko Fjord on the west, and the Inland lce to the east. The Complex belongs to the group of Precambrian igneous intrusions, comprising the Gardar 19neous Province, exposed in the country around Ivigtut and Julianehåb. The Complex comprises four distinct intrusive centres, termed, in order of decreasing age, the Motzfeldt Centre, the North Qoroq Centre, the South Qoroq Centre and the Igdlerfigssalik Centre. With these are associated a number of small satellitic syenites which generally pre-date the rocks of the main centres of activity and numerous alkali trachyte and Big Feldspar Dykes, which, for the most part, belong to the regional Mid-Gardar swarms. The satellitic syenites and the three earlier syenite centres are earlier than the Mid-Gardar dykes swarms. Three members of the Igdlerfigssalik Centre are also earlier than the dykes but the four late intrusions in this centre cut the majority of the dykes. Each centre is made up of several intrusive members; including satellitic intrusions, the Complex consists of 28 separate units as well as several small dykelike bodies of syenogabbro and alkali gabbro. Within each centre the individual intrusions have arcuate, steep-sided outcrops with discordant, intrusive relations towards earlier members although, occasionally, there is evidence that petrographically and texturally distinct syenites were intruded at only short intervals thus possibly representing rapid pulses of magma from the same source. The mineralogy of the syenites is usually simple: perthitic alkali feldspar, nepheline and alkali pyroxene are the dominant minerals; these are accompanied by fayalitic olivine, alkali amphibole, biotite, magnetite-rich opaques, analcite, natrolite and apatite. Pegmatites are not numerous, but the Complex does contain the celebrated Narssârssuk pegmatite which lies within the outer member of the later group of syenites in the Igdlerfigssalik Centre. Except where locally contaminated by assimilation of country rocks, the Igaliko syenites are all nepheline bearing; the commonest type is foyaite. The quartz syenite – alkali gabbro intrusive of Klokken, about 5 km south of the Complex, is not regarded as a satellite. Igneous layering and mineral lamination are common internal structures in the syenites. These generally define concentric, inward-dipping structures within individual intrusions; the frequency with which the well-developed internal structures in one syenite may be sharply truncated by a later syenite indicates that, in some instances, an appreciable amount of time must have elapsed between successive intrusions. The structures found in the Igaliko syenites are identical with those described from other layered alkaline, basic and ultrabasic intrusions. 19neous activity within the Complex began at least as early as the Mid-Gardar. Syenites of the earliest centre intrude sediments, agglomerates and lavas belonging to the Eriksfjord Formation and also cut a dolerite dyke which may belong to the relatively early Gardar dyke swarm. The early Østfjordsdal Syenite (pre-South Qôroq Centre) cuts a small swarm of nepheline porphyry dykes. The dykes of the Mid-Gardar swarms maintain their regional WSW-ENE strike throughout most of the Complex except near Qôroq where there is a marked swing into a more northerly direction. Two major sinistral faults, striking ESE and east-west, displace the earlier centres of the Complex and the dykes. The faults are members of a regional set developed throughout southern Greenland. Since no alkaline dyke cuts the younger of the two faults, it is considered likely that the 2 km sinistral transcurrent movement of this fault post-dates the late syenites in the Igdlerfigssalik Centre; the late syenites are cut by a number of alkaline dykes petrographically identical with those displaced by the sinistral faults. Thus, the latest syenites at Igaliko may be of slightly earlier date than the later members of the Ilímaussaq Intrusion and the Central Complex of Tugtutôq, although still belonging to the Late-Gardar group of intrusions.


2000 ◽  
Vol 663 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lena Zetterström ◽  
Torbjörn Sunde

ABSTRACTGalena in the ca. 1950 Ma old natural fossil fission reactors in Gabon crystallized sometime between 980 Ma and 750 Ma during a period of regional extension and the intrusion of a dolerite dyke swarm. The S isotopic composition of galena, containing radiogenic Pb from uraninite, gives information about the origin of the S. Results from ion microprobe analyses of galena from the reactor zones indicate that S mainly originates from the surrounding sediment. Galena in a thin, altered dolerite dyke also contains non-magmatic S. The presented data gives no positive evidence for the involvement of magmatic S during the ca. 900 Ma galena crystallisation, however, the possibility cannot be ruled out.


2017 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Oumarou Faarouk Nkouandou ◽  
Jacques-Marie Bardintzeff ◽  
Oumar Mahamat ◽  
Aminatou Fagny Mefire ◽  
Alembert Alexandre Ganwa

AbstractDolerite dykes are widespread in the Mongo area within the granitic Guéra Massif (Chad, Central Africa). Dykes are several hundred metres to several kilometres long, a metre to decametre thick, and vertical, crosscutting the Pan-African granitic basement rocks. They are controlled by major Pan-African NNE-SSW, NE-SW and ENE-WSW faults. Rocks constituting the dykes exhibit typical doleritic textures (


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