Chemical Compositions and Tectonic Significance of Chrome‐Rich Spinels in the Tianba Flysch, Southern Tibet

2004 ◽  
Vol 112 (4) ◽  
pp. 417-434 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bin Zhu ◽  
William S. F. Kidd ◽  
David B. Rowley ◽  
Brian S. Currie
2006 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 55-64 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fang Aimin ◽  
Yan Zhen ◽  
Pan Yushen ◽  
Li Jiliang ◽  
Yu Liangjun ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuan-Yuan Jiang ◽  
et al.

The chemical compositions of minerals from the paragneisses (Tables S1–S3), the zircon and monazite age and trace element data of the paragneisses and leucosome (Tables S4–S5), and the zircon Lu-Hf isotope data of the paragneisses and leucosome (Table S6) from the eastern Gangdese magmatic arc.


1998 ◽  
Vol 135 (5) ◽  
pp. 669-683 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. B. KAMPUNZU ◽  
P. AKANYANG ◽  
R. B. M. MAPEO ◽  
B. N. MODIE ◽  
M. WENDORFF

The c. 1.1 Ga Kgwebe metavolcanic rocks exposed in the northwest of Botswana are late Kibaran rocks. They represent a bimodal suite of Within-Plate low titanium-phosphorus (LTP) continental tholeiites and post-orogenic Within-Plate high-K rhyolites. The chemical compositions of the Kgwebe mafic rocks are characterized by low values of Ce/Pb (<10) and high La/Nb ratios (average c. 2, maximum 4). Mid-ocean ridge basalts (MORB)-normalized spidergrams show marked enrichment in mobile elements (Sr, K, Rb, Ba) and negative anomalies in Nb. These features suggest they may have originated in a mantle, enriched during a previous subduction event. The Kgwebe metarhyolites are marked by Y>60 ppm, Sr/Y<1, Rb/Th>20 and high K-contents. They cannot therefore be the product of melting of sediments or a subducting slab. It is inferred that they represent felsic magmas resulting from melting of Mesoproterozoic (Kibaran) calcalkaline rocks underplated in the middle and/or lower crust. The Kgwebe bimodal metavolcanic rocks pre-date the Neoproterozoic Ghanzi Group rocks which are correlated with the lower part of the Damara sequence. The chemical composition and field relations suggest that these metavolcanic rocks were emplaced during a late orogenic collision-associated extensional collapse. This collapse affected a crust thickened during the Kibaran orogeny in the Namaqua-Natal Belt of southwest Africa.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuan-Yuan Jiang ◽  
et al.

The chemical compositions of minerals from the paragneisses (Tables S1–S3), the zircon and monazite age and trace element data of the paragneisses and leucosome (Tables S4–S5), and the zircon Lu-Hf isotope data of the paragneisses and leucosome (Table S6) from the eastern Gangdese magmatic arc.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zeming Zhang

Table S1: Major features of the reported Jurassic magmatic rocks of the eastern Gangdese arc; Table S2: Zircon U-Pb dating and trace element (in ppm) data of the studied Jurassic magmatic rocks of the eastern Gangdese arc; Table S3: Zircon Hf isotopic data of the studied Jurassic magmatic rocks of the eastern Gangdese arc; Table S4: Whole-rock chemical compositions of the studied Jurassic magmatic rocks of the eastern Gangdese arc; Table S5: Whole-rock chemical compositions of the Mesozoic magmatic rocks of the eastern Gangdese arc; Table S6: Whole-rock SiO2 and Cu concentrations of the Late Cretaceous magmatic rocks of the eastern Gangdese arc.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xuxuan Ma ◽  
Zhongbao Zhao ◽  
Wenrong Cao ◽  
He Huang ◽  
Fahui Xiong ◽  
...  

The Quxu batholith of the Gangdese magmatic belt, southern Tibet, comprises predominantly Early Eocene calc-alkaline granitoids that feature a variety of types of magmatic microgranular enclaves and dikes. Previous studies have demonstrated that magma mixing played a crucial role in the formation of the Quxu batholith. However, the specific processes responsible for this mixing/hybridization have not been identified. The magmatic microgranular enclaves and dikes preserve a record of this magma mixing, and are therefore an excellent source of information about the processes involved. In this study, mesoscopic and microscopic magmatic structures have been investigated, in combination with analyses of mineral textures and chemical compositions. Texturally, most of the enclaves are microporphyritic, with large crystals such as clinopyroxene, hornblende, and plagioclase in a groundmass of hornblende, plagioclase, and biotite. Two types of enclave swarms can be distinguished: polygenic and monogenic swarms. Composite dikes are observed, and represent an intermediate stage between undisturbed mafic dike and dike-like monogenic enclave swarms. Our results reveal three distinct stages of magma mixing in the Quxu batholith, occurring at depth, during ascent and emplacement, and after emplacement, respectively. At depth, thorough and/or partial mixing occurred between mantle-derived mafic and crust-derived felsic magmas to produce hybrid magma. The mafic magma was generated from the primitive mantle, whereas the felsic end-member was produced by partial melting of the preexisting juvenile crust. Many types of enclaves and host granitoids are thus cogenetic, because all are hybrid products produced by the mixing of the two contrasting magmas in different proportions. In the second stage, segregation and differentiation of the hybrid magma led to the formation of the host granitoids as well as various types of magmatic microgranular enclaves. At this stage, mingling and/or local mixing happened during ascent and emplacement. In the final stage, mafic or hybrid magma was injected into early fractures in the crystallizing and cooling pluton to form dikes. Some dikes remained undisturbed, whereas others experienced local mingling and mixing to form composite dikes and eventually disturbed dike-like monogenic enclave swarms. In summary, our study demonstrates the coupling between magmatic texture and composition in an open-system batholith and highlights the potential of magmatic structures for understanding the magma mixing process.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zeming Zhang

Table S1: Major features of the reported Jurassic magmatic rocks of the eastern Gangdese arc; Table S2: Zircon U-Pb dating and trace element (in ppm) data of the studied Jurassic magmatic rocks of the eastern Gangdese arc; Table S3: Zircon Hf isotopic data of the studied Jurassic magmatic rocks of the eastern Gangdese arc; Table S4: Whole-rock chemical compositions of the studied Jurassic magmatic rocks of the eastern Gangdese arc; Table S5: Whole-rock chemical compositions of the Mesozoic magmatic rocks of the eastern Gangdese arc; Table S6: Whole-rock SiO2 and Cu concentrations of the Late Cretaceous magmatic rocks of the eastern Gangdese arc.


Author(s):  
D.I. Potter ◽  
M. Ahmed ◽  
K. Ruffing

Ion implantation, used extensively for the past decade in fabricating semiconductor devices, now provides a unique means for altering the near-surface chemical compositions and microstructures of metals. These alterations often significantly improve physical properties that depend on the surface of the material; for example, catalysis, corrosion, oxidation, hardness, friction and wear. Frequently the mechanisms causing these beneficial alterations and property changes remain obscure and much of the current research in the area of ion implantation metallurgy is aimed at identifying such mechanisms. Investigators thus confront two immediate questions: To what extent is the chemical composition changed by implantation? What is the resulting microstructure? These two questions can be investigated very fruitfully with analytical electron microscopy (AEM), as described below.


Author(s):  
Gejing Li ◽  
D. R. Peacor ◽  
D. S. Coombs ◽  
Y. Kawachi

Recent advances in transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and analytical electron microscopy (AEM) have led to many new insights into the structural and chemical characteristics of very finegrained, optically homogeneous mineral aggregates in sedimentary and very low-grade metamorphic rocks. Chemical compositions obtained by electron microprobe analysis (EMPA) on such materials have been shown by TEM/AEM to result from beam overlap on contaminant phases on a scale below resolution of EMPA, which in turn can lead to errors in interpretation and determination of formation conditions. Here we present an in-depth analysis of the relation between AEM and EMPA data, which leads also to the definition of new mineral phases, and demonstrate the resolution power of AEM relative to EMPA in investigations of very fine-grained mineral aggregates in sedimentary and very low-grade metamorphic rocks.Celadonite, having end-member composition KMgFe3+Si4O10(OH)2, and with minor substitution of Fe2+ for Mg and Al for Fe3+ on octahedral sites, is a fine-grained mica widespread in volcanic rocks and volcaniclastic sediments which have undergone low-temperature alteration in the oceanic crust and in burial metamorphic sequences.


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