U-Pb Geochronology and Geochemistry of Zircon From the Saima-Bailinchuan Alkaline Intrusion in Eastern Liaoning, China

2014 ◽  
Vol 88 (s2) ◽  
pp. 959-962
Author(s):  
Xihui CHENG ◽  
Jiuhua XU ◽  
Hui ZHANG ◽  
Bo HE
Keyword(s):  
1993 ◽  
Vol 40 ◽  
pp. 288-299
Author(s):  
J., C Bailey ◽  
H. Bohse ◽  
R. Gwozdz ◽  
J. Rose-Hansen

Li was analysed by instrumental neutron activation analysis and Cerenkov counting in 120 mineral samples (30 species) from the Ilfmaussaq alkaline intrusion, South Greenland. More than 0.23 wt.% Li (0.5 wt.% Li2O) is found in polylithionite, neptunite, riebeckite, Na-cookeite, ephesite, arfvedsonite, gerasimovskite and astro­phyllite. Arfvedsonite (200-2500 ppm Li) carries the bulk of Li in most of the highly alkaline rocks. Li-Mg and Li-F relations indicate that the distribution of Li is con­trolled by the structure of minerals, their absolute contents of Mg and F and the fractionation stage within the intrusion. Li is probably linked with Fin the fluid state and this linkage continues into crystallising phases where Li occupies sites which also accommodate Mg. Li/Mg and Li/F ratios of Ilfmaussaq rocks and minerals are higher than in equivalent materials from the Lovozero intrusion (Kola, Russia). The Li­Mg-Fe2+ geochemical association at Ilfmaussaq (Fe2+>>Mg) and Lovozero (Fe2+>Mg) contrasts with the commercially important Li-rich but Mg-Fe2+-poor association found in certain granite pegmatites and greisenised granites.


1974 ◽  
Vol 60 ◽  
pp. 1-54
Author(s):  
H Sørensen ◽  
J Rose-Hansen ◽  
B.L Nielsen ◽  
L Løvborg ◽  
E Sørensen ◽  
...  

The uranium-thorium deposit is located in part of an alkaline intrusion consisting of peralkaline, agpaitic nepheline syenites. The radioactive minerals are steenstrupine, uranium-rich monazite, thorite and pigmentary material. The radio-element content varies from 100 to 3000 ppm U and 300 to 15000 ppm Th. Reasonably assured ore in the main area with a grade of 310 ppm is calculated to 5800 metric tons of uranium in 18.6 million metric tons of ore. Estimated additional reserves with a grade of 292 ppm U are 29.4 million tons of ore with 8700 tons of uranium and 3.5 million tons of ore with a grade of 350 ppm yielding 1200 tons of uranium. Estimates of amounts of thorium ore are 2.6 times those of uranium. A method of recovery of the uranium based on sulphating roasting and subsequent leaching with water is described.


1968 ◽  
Vol 76 ◽  
pp. 1-51
Author(s):  
J Hansen

Radioactive veins containing the rare-earth minerals monazite and bastnaesite are found in tension joints in Precambrian sandstone, granite, lavas and dykes on the eastern side of the alkaline Ilímaussaq intrusion in South Greenland. The veins were formed in several phases. First, small cracks were mineralized with hematite, fluorite, quartz and radioactive material. This was followed by emplacement of brown albititic veins in which albite and opaque material predominate, green veins with a high content of ægirine, white albititic veins, carbonate veins and finally quartz veins. All the vein minerals may be coated by a late iron-manganese oxide. Most often the veins are separate, but they may also occur composite. The veins are from a few millimetres to about three metres wide; most commonly they are one to ten centimetres wide. The radioactivity is mostly due to thorium, but a few veins have a uranium content higher than that of thorium. The thorium content ranges from 60 to 4500 ppm, the uranium from 17 to 1500 ppm. The ratio thorium/uranium ranges from 0.1 to 57.2. The radioactivity is predominantly connected with pigmentary material, thorite, thorianite, monazite and bastnäsite. Other minerals identified in the vein are ægirine, acmite, albite, arfvedsonite, apatite, biotite, calcite, chlorite, eudialyte, fluorite, hematite, lithium mica, mesodialyte, microcline, neptunite, pyrite, quartz and sphalerite. The following constants were calculated from X-ray powder diagrams made with a Guinier-Hagg camera.Bastnäsite: a0 = 7.120 ± 7 x 10-3 Å; C0 = 9.77 ± 2 x 10-2 Å; c0/a0 = 1.372; V0 = 428.96 Å3. Monazite: a0 = 6.780 ± 5 x 10-3 Å; b0 = 7.025 ± 4 x 10-3 Å; C


Lithos ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 112 ◽  
pp. 419-428 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erin Matchan ◽  
Janet Hergt ◽  
David Phillips ◽  
Simon Shee

2006 ◽  
Vol 70 (18) ◽  
pp. A402
Author(s):  
D.I. Matukov ◽  
E.N. Lepekhina ◽  
E.A. Bagdasarov ◽  
A.V. Antonov ◽  
S.A. Sergeev
Keyword(s):  

2011 ◽  
Vol 75 (6) ◽  
pp. 2833-2846 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. V. Rozhdestvenskaya ◽  
E. Mugnaioli ◽  
M. Czank ◽  
W. Depmeier ◽  
U. Kolb ◽  
...  

AbstractCharoite, ideally (K,Sr,Ba,Mn)15–16(Ca,Na)32[(Si70(O,OH)180)](OH,F)4·nH20, is a rock-forming mineral from the Murun massif in Yakutia, Sakha Republic, Siberia, Russia, where it occurs in a unique alkaline intrusion. Charoite occurs as four different polytypes, which are commonly intergrown in nanocrystallme fibres. We report the structure of charoite-96 (a = 32.11(6), b = 19.77(4), c = 7.23(1) Å, β = 95.85(9)°, V = 4565(24) Å3, space group P21/m), which was solved ab initio by direct methods on the basis of 2676 unique electron diffraction reflections collected by automated diffraction tomography and refined to R1/wR2 = 0.34/0.37. The structure of charoite-96 is related to that of the charoite-90, which was also solved recently. Both structures are composed of three different types of dreier silicate chains running along [001] and separated by ribbons of edge-sharing Ca- and Na-centred octahedra. In the structure of charoite-96, adjacent blocks formed by three different silicate chains and stacked along the x axis, are shifted by a translation of 1/2 c. The shifts involve a hybrid dreier quadruple chain, [Si17O43]18– and a double dreier chain, [Si6O17]10–. In charoite-90 adjacent blocks are stacked without shifts.


1982 ◽  
Vol 19 (9) ◽  
pp. 1796-1801 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Garth Platt ◽  
Roger H. Mitchell

The Coldwell Complex of Northwestern Ontario is North America's largest structurally and petrologically complex alkaline intrusion. Situated on the north shore of Lake Superior, it consists of at least three intrusive centres and is cross-cut by a diverse suite of coeval–cogenetic dikes. The main intrusive rocks range from gabbros to ferroaugite syenites, nepheline syenites, and quartz syenites. The dikes are predominantly lamprophyric. A seventeen point whole rock Rb–Sr isochron (MSWD 2.22) gives an age of 1044.5 ± 6.2 Ma (2σ) and an initial ratio of 0.70354 ± 0.00016 (2σ). The age is late Neohelikian and is younger than the bulk of igneous activity (Keweenawan activity) prevalent in the Lake Superior Basin during the Neohelikian. The low initial ratio indicates an upper mantle origin for the parental magma of the complex.


Author(s):  
Vojtěch Janoušek ◽  
D. R. Bowes ◽  
Colin J. R. Braithwaite ◽  
Graeme Rogers

Textural and mineralogical features in the high-K calc-alkaline Kozárovice granodiorite (Hercynian Central Bohemian Pluton, Bohemian Massif) and associated small quartz monzonite masses imply that mixing between acid (granodioritic) and basic (monzonitic/monzogabbroic) magmas was locally petrogenetically significant.Net veining, with acicular apatite and numerous lath-shaped plagioclase crystals present in the quartz monzonite, and abundant mafic microgranular enclaves (MME) in the granodiorite, indicate that as the monzonitic magma was injected into the granodioritic magma chamber, it rapidly cooled and was partly disintegrated by the melt already present. Evidence from cathodoluminescence suggests that the two magmas exchanged early-formed plagioclase crystals. In the quartz monzonite, granodiorite-derived crystals were overgrown by narrow calcic zones, followed by broad, normally zoned sodic rims. In the granodiorite, plagioclase crystals with calcic cores overgrown by normally zoned sodic rims are interpreted as xenocrysts from the monzonite. After thermal adjustment, crystallisation of the monzonitic magma ceased relatively slowly, forming quartz and K-feldspar oikocrysts.Although the whole-rock geochemistry of the quartz monzonite and the MME support magma mixing, major- and trace-element based modelling of the host granodiorite has previously indicated an origin dominated by assimilation and fractional crystallisation. Magma mixing therefore seems to represent a local modifying influence rather than the primary petrogenetic process.


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