The Geochemistry of the Granitic Rocks of Halifax County, Nova Scotia

1974 ◽  
Vol 11 (5) ◽  
pp. 650-657 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. E. Smith

Studies of part of a large batholith in southwest Nova Scotia show that granitic rocks of two different ages penetrate the Lower Palaeozoic metasediments of the Meguma Group. They are distinguished by their field relationships, mineralogy, and petrology from an older series, varying from biotite granodiorite through quartz monzonite to muscovite biotite granite, which is penetrated by younger large dikes, up to 1.5 km wide, of alaskite. Rb–Sr whole rock isochron ages show that the older series was emplaced approximately 415 m.y. ago and that the younger alaskite dikes were emplaced about 350 m.y. ago. Major and trace element chemistry shows that the older series of granitic rocks were formed by differentiation of a calc-alkali magma in situ. The younger dikes are all highly silicic, show limited major element variation, and have been affected by hydrothermal metasomatism.

1989 ◽  
Vol 26 (10) ◽  
pp. 2044-2061 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean M. Richardson ◽  
Keith Bell ◽  
John Blenkinsop ◽  
David H. Watkinson

The Davis Lake complex (DLC), composed of biotite monzogranite, leucomonzogranite, and cassiterite–topaz greisen, hosts the East Kemptville tin mine in southwestern Nova Scotia. The DLC monzogranite contains glomeroporphyritic biotite with ilmenite and many rare-earth-element (REE) bearing accessory minerals, zircon-bearing quartz phenocrysts, and xenoliths of biotite granite. Primary muscovite is rare. Major- and trace-element geochemical trends indicate well-defined, but limited, magmatic differentiation trends. REE patterns of the least-evolved granites are flat and show a Ce/Yb ratio of 10.The DLC was previously considered cogenetic with the Devonian South Mountain batholith (SMB) on the basis of its location, lithologies, and similarities in major- and trace-element geochemistry. However, new Rb–Sr whole-rock isotopic data indicate an Rb–Sr date of 330 ± 7 Ma (mean square of weighted deviates (MSWD) = 2.8) for the DLC, implying that it is at least 35 Ma younger than the SMB. The initial 87Sr/86Sr ratio of 0.727 ± 0.004 is significantly higher than those for other Meguma Terrane granites and is the highest yet reported from Appalachian granitoid rocks. Rb–Sr data from biotite indicate open-system behaviour between 260 and 240 Ma and provide more evidence for previously documented tectonothermal events after 300 Ma in the Meguma Terrane.The peraluminous nature of the DLC, its high Rb/Sr and high 87Sr/86Sr ratios, high P, F, and Sn contents, low Ca and B contents, and high differentiation indices indicate that the complex was derived from a highly evolved felsic source. Geochemical distinctions indicate that the DLC is neither derived from nor cogenetic with the SMB. A more probable source for the DLC magma is a dehydrated felsic granulite from which a previous H2O-, B-, Cl-, and Zn-rich granitic magma (perhaps the SMB) had been extracted. Such a source is analogous to that postulated for A-type granites and topaz rhyolites.The DLC shows more similarities to the "stitching" Carboniferous Appalachian volatile- and metal-rich granites than to Devonian Meguma granites. Unlike most of these Appalachian plutons, which occur marginal to terrane boundaries and were probably crystallized from locally generated, anatectic magmas, the DLC was emplaced in the centre of the most-outboard Meguma Terrane, adjacent to the Tobiatic shear zone.


2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chao Wang ◽  
et al.

Text S1: Analytical methods. Figure S1: Zr versus selected element variation diagrams to highlight the effects of alteration and metamorphism for the basalts from Langjiexue area. Figure S2: (A) Ti/Y vs. TiO2, and (B) Ti/Y vs. MgO diagrams for the basalt samples from the Langjiexue in Tethyan Himalaya. Table S1: Representative Permian-Triassic magmatic events along the Tethyan Himalaya. Table S2: Zircon LA-ICP-MS U-Pb in-situ analyzing results for zircons from the Langjiexue basalts. Table S3: Whole-rock major, trace element and Sr-Nd isotope data of Langjiexue basalts.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Chelsea May Tutt

<p>Mount Tauhara is the largest dacitic volcanic complex of onshore New Zealand and comprises seven subaerial domes and associated lava and pyroclastic flows, with a total exposed volume of ca. 1 km3. The dacites have a complex petrography including quartz, plagioclase, amphibole, orthopyroxene, clinopyroxene, olivine and Fe‐Ti oxides and offer an excellent opportunity to investigate the processes and timescales involved in assembling dacitic magma bodies in a continental subduction zone with in situ and mineral specific analytical techniques. Whole rock major and trace element data and Pb isotopes ratios define linear relationships indicating that the dacites are generated by mixing of silicic and mafic magmas. Two groups of samples define separate mixing trends between four endmembers on the basis of La/Yb ratios, 87Sr/86Sr ratios and Sr contents. The older Western and Central Domes have low 87Sr/86Sr (0.7042‐0.7046) and high LREE/HREE (LaN/YbN = 8.0‐11.5) and Sr (380‐650 ppm) compared to the younger Hipaua, Trig M, Breached and Main Domes, which have higher 87Sr/86Sr (0.7047‐0.7052) and lower LREE/HREE (LaN/YbN = 6.5‐7.5) and Sr (180‐400 ppm). In situ mineral major and trace element chemistry of mineral phases, as well as Sr and Pb isotope ratios of mineral separates have been used to: (i) fingerprint the origin of each crystal phase; (ii) constrain the chemistry of the four endmembers involved in the mixing events and; (iii) estimate the timing of mixing relative to eruption and the ascent rate of the dacitic magmas. The presence of quartz and analyses of quartz‐hosted melt inclusions are used to fingerprint the chemistry of the silicic endmembers, which is a rhyolitic melt with a major element chemistry similar to that of either the Whakamaru Group Ignimbrite melts (Western, Central and Trig M Domes) or intermediate between that of the Whakamaru and the Oruanui Ignimbrite melts (Hipaua, Breached and Main Domes). Similarly, Ba‐Sr concentrations and Sr isotopic signatures of plagioclase show that this phenocryst phase also predominantly crystallized from the rhyolitic melt. Variations in the Mg# and trace element chemistry of clinopyroxenes suggest they were formed both in the mixed dacitic melts and in a mafic endmember. The chemistry of the mafic endmembers have been traced using a combination of back‐calculated Sr melt concentrations from clinopyroxene with the highest Mg# in each sample group, and the linear trends between whole rock SiO2 content and most elements. These results indicate that dacites erupted from the Western and Central Dome were generated by the mixing of a high alumina basalt and a rhyolitic melt and Trig M Dome dacites were generated by the mixing of an andesite with a rhyolitic melt. Magmas erupted from Hipaua, Breached and Main Domes were also produced by the mixing of an andesitic melt and a rhyolitic body with a composition intermediate between that of the Whakamaru and the Oruanui melt bodies. Trace element data and 87Sr/86Sr ratios of amphibole demonstrate that it crystallized from the mixed dacitic melt. Thermobarometric conditions obtained from amphibole indicate that the magma mixing event that produced the dacites occurred within a magma chamber located at ca. 9 km depth and ca. 900°C with the exception of Trig M Dome which occurred deeper at 13 km and 950°C. Diffusion profiles of Ti in quartz and Fe‐Mg in clinopyroxene indicate the magma mixing events occurred < 6 months prior to eruption. Amphibole reaction rims show the magma to have ascended over 2‐3 weeks for each dome, with the exception of Main Dome where reaction rims were not present in the amphibole, suggesting the ascent rate was faster than 0.2 m/s (< 6 hours).</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
George Frederick Cooper

<p>This thesis research focuses on clast and crystal-specific studies to investigate the pre- and syn-eruptive magmatic processes of two supereruptions in the TVZ: the 1.21 Ma Ongatiti (>500 km3) and the 1.0 Ma Kidnappers (~1200 km3), together with the smaller (~200 km3) 1.0 Ma Rocky Hill eruption from the Mangakino Volcanic Centre (MVC).  Crystallisation histories determined through SIMS U-Pb dating of zircons reveal that the paired Kidnappers and Rocky Hill eruptions were products of a common magmatic system, which built over ~200 kyr, in the time break after the Ongatiti eruption. U-Pb age spectra from the Ongatiti show a protracted crystallisation history (over ~250 kyr), in which the majority of zircon crystallised ~100 kyr prior to eruption in a crystal mush. Zircons then ascended with melt during accumulation of the final erupted magma body in the shallow crust. Zircons remained stable in the melt dominant body but underwent little further crystallisation. Zircons from all three systems record common geochemical processes governed by the fractionating assemblage (predominantly plagioclase and amphibole). In particular, the MREE/HREE ratios and Sr concentrations of zircons from the Ongatiti record imply two contrasting source regions governed by different proportions of crystallising amphibole.  The in-situ major and trace element chemistry of glass shards and crystals from the Kidnappers fall deposit reveal that magma within the Kidnappers was stored in three discrete bodies, which were systematically tapped during the early stages of eruption. Temperature and pressure (T-P) estimates from amphibole and Fe-Ti oxide equilibria from each magma type are similar and therefore the three magma bodies were adjacent, not vertically stacked, in the crust. Amphibole model T-P estimates range from 770 to 840 °C and 90 to 170 MPa corresponding to pre-eruptive storage depths of ~4.0-6.5 km. The systematic evacuation of the three independent magma bodies implies that there was tectonic triggering and linkage of eruptions. The termination of fall deposition and onset of the overlying ignimbrite emplacement marks the point of widespread caldera collapse and the catastrophic evacuation of a wider variety of melt during the Kidnappers eruption.  Pumice compositions from the Kidnappers ignimbrite fall into three groups, two of which (KI-1 and KI-2) can be matched to bodies tapped during the fall phase of the eruption, with the addition of a further discrete batch of lower SiO2 (KI-3) magma. Core-rim textural and chemical variations in major crystal phases (plagioclase, amphibole and orthopyroxene) suggest each compositional group was sourced from a common mush but underwent a unique magmatic history during the development of melt-dominant bodies in the final stages prior to eruption. The field relationships and distinctive appearance of the Rocky Hill ignimbrite (~200 km3 DRE) and the underlying Kidnappers ignimbrite suggests that the two deposits are from distinct eruption events. However, major and trace element chemistry of matrix glass, coupled with the textural and chemical signatures of crystals suggests the magma erupted during the Rocky Hill was generated from the same source or mush zone as the Kidnappers. The two largest melt-dominant bodies (KI-1 and KI-2) within the Kidnappers were renewed, underwent mixing and incorporation of marginal material to form two magma types (RH-1 and RH-2) in the time break prior to the Rocky Hill eruption.  Fe-Mg interdiffusion timescales in orthopyroxenes from the Kidnappers and Rocky Hill deposits suggest the establishment of the final melt-dominant bodies, through extraction of melt and crystals from a common mush, occurred within 1000 years, and peaked within centuries of each eruption. In addition, one discrete batch of Kidnappers melt has evidence for interaction with a lesser evolved melt within 50 yrs prior to eruption. This rejuvenation event was not the eruption trigger but may have primed the magma for eruption. The difference in timescales from common zones from both the Kidnappers and Rocky Hill orthopyroxene, recording the same processes reveal the time break between the two eruptions was ~20-40 years. This work highlights the rapidity of rejuvenation and renewal of the melt-dominant bodies within the Kidnappers/Rocky Hill magmatic system.  The textural and in-situ compositional signatures of crystals from the Ongatiti ignimbrite imply the final erupted magma body was assembled from a thermally and chemically zoned mush, which extended to the base of the quartzofeldspathic crust (~15km). The mush was close to water saturation and was dominated by amphibole crystallisation. Melt and crystals (including the majority of zircons) were extracted from the mush and ascended to 4-6 km depths during the development of a crystal-rich (20-30%), but melt-dominant body. Significant crystallisation of plagioclase (and lesser proportions of orthopyroxene and amphibole) occurred in an event involving the gradual heating and/or increase of water in the rhyolite, from a broadly andesitic underplated magma. Homogeneous crystal rim and matrix glass compositions imply the final erupted volume of magma was effectively mixed through convection. Eu/Eu* values of whole-rock and matrix glass suggest little crystal-melt separation occurred in the melt-dominant magma body prior to eruption.  This work has implications for understanding the generation, storage and eruption of large-scale silicic magma systems. The Ongatiti ignimbrite does not represent either an erupted mush, or a stratified magma chamber, suggesting an alternative model for the development of eruptible magma within large-scale silicic systems. The Kidnappers/Rocky Hill sequence records a complex interplay of multiple melt-dominant bodies, which were established and renewed on rapid timescales. The rapid timescales for the development of melt-dominant bodies and the systematic tapping of magmas in the Kidnappers/Rocky Hill system imply that tectonics may have had a strong external control on the eruptions at Mangakino.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Chelsea May Tutt

<p>Mount Tauhara is the largest dacitic volcanic complex of onshore New Zealand and comprises seven subaerial domes and associated lava and pyroclastic flows, with a total exposed volume of ca. 1 km3. The dacites have a complex petrography including quartz, plagioclase, amphibole, orthopyroxene, clinopyroxene, olivine and Fe‐Ti oxides and offer an excellent opportunity to investigate the processes and timescales involved in assembling dacitic magma bodies in a continental subduction zone with in situ and mineral specific analytical techniques. Whole rock major and trace element data and Pb isotopes ratios define linear relationships indicating that the dacites are generated by mixing of silicic and mafic magmas. Two groups of samples define separate mixing trends between four endmembers on the basis of La/Yb ratios, 87Sr/86Sr ratios and Sr contents. The older Western and Central Domes have low 87Sr/86Sr (0.7042‐0.7046) and high LREE/HREE (LaN/YbN = 8.0‐11.5) and Sr (380‐650 ppm) compared to the younger Hipaua, Trig M, Breached and Main Domes, which have higher 87Sr/86Sr (0.7047‐0.7052) and lower LREE/HREE (LaN/YbN = 6.5‐7.5) and Sr (180‐400 ppm). In situ mineral major and trace element chemistry of mineral phases, as well as Sr and Pb isotope ratios of mineral separates have been used to: (i) fingerprint the origin of each crystal phase; (ii) constrain the chemistry of the four endmembers involved in the mixing events and; (iii) estimate the timing of mixing relative to eruption and the ascent rate of the dacitic magmas. The presence of quartz and analyses of quartz‐hosted melt inclusions are used to fingerprint the chemistry of the silicic endmembers, which is a rhyolitic melt with a major element chemistry similar to that of either the Whakamaru Group Ignimbrite melts (Western, Central and Trig M Domes) or intermediate between that of the Whakamaru and the Oruanui Ignimbrite melts (Hipaua, Breached and Main Domes). Similarly, Ba‐Sr concentrations and Sr isotopic signatures of plagioclase show that this phenocryst phase also predominantly crystallized from the rhyolitic melt. Variations in the Mg# and trace element chemistry of clinopyroxenes suggest they were formed both in the mixed dacitic melts and in a mafic endmember. The chemistry of the mafic endmembers have been traced using a combination of back‐calculated Sr melt concentrations from clinopyroxene with the highest Mg# in each sample group, and the linear trends between whole rock SiO2 content and most elements. These results indicate that dacites erupted from the Western and Central Dome were generated by the mixing of a high alumina basalt and a rhyolitic melt and Trig M Dome dacites were generated by the mixing of an andesite with a rhyolitic melt. Magmas erupted from Hipaua, Breached and Main Domes were also produced by the mixing of an andesitic melt and a rhyolitic body with a composition intermediate between that of the Whakamaru and the Oruanui melt bodies. Trace element data and 87Sr/86Sr ratios of amphibole demonstrate that it crystallized from the mixed dacitic melt. Thermobarometric conditions obtained from amphibole indicate that the magma mixing event that produced the dacites occurred within a magma chamber located at ca. 9 km depth and ca. 900°C with the exception of Trig M Dome which occurred deeper at 13 km and 950°C. Diffusion profiles of Ti in quartz and Fe‐Mg in clinopyroxene indicate the magma mixing events occurred < 6 months prior to eruption. Amphibole reaction rims show the magma to have ascended over 2‐3 weeks for each dome, with the exception of Main Dome where reaction rims were not present in the amphibole, suggesting the ascent rate was faster than 0.2 m/s (< 6 hours).</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Karvinen ◽  
◽  
A. Heinonen ◽  
C. Beier

This project focuses on the trace element chemistry of igneous apatite in various magmatic systems with the use of in situ analytical techniques. The composition of apatite may possibly be used as a tracer for various magmatic-hydrothermal processes due to the breadth of chemical substitutions possible within the structure. Apatite is found in many mineralized layered intrusions as a minor phase. Apatite may be utilized in the tracking of metasomatic fluids in layered intrusions or in geochronological studies in the absence of other commonly used phases i.e. zircon. Apatite accumulations can be exploited economically for phosphorus and possibly for rare earth elements as well.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
George Frederick Cooper

<p>This thesis research focuses on clast and crystal-specific studies to investigate the pre- and syn-eruptive magmatic processes of two supereruptions in the TVZ: the 1.21 Ma Ongatiti (>500 km3) and the 1.0 Ma Kidnappers (~1200 km3), together with the smaller (~200 km3) 1.0 Ma Rocky Hill eruption from the Mangakino Volcanic Centre (MVC).  Crystallisation histories determined through SIMS U-Pb dating of zircons reveal that the paired Kidnappers and Rocky Hill eruptions were products of a common magmatic system, which built over ~200 kyr, in the time break after the Ongatiti eruption. U-Pb age spectra from the Ongatiti show a protracted crystallisation history (over ~250 kyr), in which the majority of zircon crystallised ~100 kyr prior to eruption in a crystal mush. Zircons then ascended with melt during accumulation of the final erupted magma body in the shallow crust. Zircons remained stable in the melt dominant body but underwent little further crystallisation. Zircons from all three systems record common geochemical processes governed by the fractionating assemblage (predominantly plagioclase and amphibole). In particular, the MREE/HREE ratios and Sr concentrations of zircons from the Ongatiti record imply two contrasting source regions governed by different proportions of crystallising amphibole.  The in-situ major and trace element chemistry of glass shards and crystals from the Kidnappers fall deposit reveal that magma within the Kidnappers was stored in three discrete bodies, which were systematically tapped during the early stages of eruption. Temperature and pressure (T-P) estimates from amphibole and Fe-Ti oxide equilibria from each magma type are similar and therefore the three magma bodies were adjacent, not vertically stacked, in the crust. Amphibole model T-P estimates range from 770 to 840 °C and 90 to 170 MPa corresponding to pre-eruptive storage depths of ~4.0-6.5 km. The systematic evacuation of the three independent magma bodies implies that there was tectonic triggering and linkage of eruptions. The termination of fall deposition and onset of the overlying ignimbrite emplacement marks the point of widespread caldera collapse and the catastrophic evacuation of a wider variety of melt during the Kidnappers eruption.  Pumice compositions from the Kidnappers ignimbrite fall into three groups, two of which (KI-1 and KI-2) can be matched to bodies tapped during the fall phase of the eruption, with the addition of a further discrete batch of lower SiO2 (KI-3) magma. Core-rim textural and chemical variations in major crystal phases (plagioclase, amphibole and orthopyroxene) suggest each compositional group was sourced from a common mush but underwent a unique magmatic history during the development of melt-dominant bodies in the final stages prior to eruption. The field relationships and distinctive appearance of the Rocky Hill ignimbrite (~200 km3 DRE) and the underlying Kidnappers ignimbrite suggests that the two deposits are from distinct eruption events. However, major and trace element chemistry of matrix glass, coupled with the textural and chemical signatures of crystals suggests the magma erupted during the Rocky Hill was generated from the same source or mush zone as the Kidnappers. The two largest melt-dominant bodies (KI-1 and KI-2) within the Kidnappers were renewed, underwent mixing and incorporation of marginal material to form two magma types (RH-1 and RH-2) in the time break prior to the Rocky Hill eruption.  Fe-Mg interdiffusion timescales in orthopyroxenes from the Kidnappers and Rocky Hill deposits suggest the establishment of the final melt-dominant bodies, through extraction of melt and crystals from a common mush, occurred within 1000 years, and peaked within centuries of each eruption. In addition, one discrete batch of Kidnappers melt has evidence for interaction with a lesser evolved melt within 50 yrs prior to eruption. This rejuvenation event was not the eruption trigger but may have primed the magma for eruption. The difference in timescales from common zones from both the Kidnappers and Rocky Hill orthopyroxene, recording the same processes reveal the time break between the two eruptions was ~20-40 years. This work highlights the rapidity of rejuvenation and renewal of the melt-dominant bodies within the Kidnappers/Rocky Hill magmatic system.  The textural and in-situ compositional signatures of crystals from the Ongatiti ignimbrite imply the final erupted magma body was assembled from a thermally and chemically zoned mush, which extended to the base of the quartzofeldspathic crust (~15km). The mush was close to water saturation and was dominated by amphibole crystallisation. Melt and crystals (including the majority of zircons) were extracted from the mush and ascended to 4-6 km depths during the development of a crystal-rich (20-30%), but melt-dominant body. Significant crystallisation of plagioclase (and lesser proportions of orthopyroxene and amphibole) occurred in an event involving the gradual heating and/or increase of water in the rhyolite, from a broadly andesitic underplated magma. Homogeneous crystal rim and matrix glass compositions imply the final erupted volume of magma was effectively mixed through convection. Eu/Eu* values of whole-rock and matrix glass suggest little crystal-melt separation occurred in the melt-dominant magma body prior to eruption.  This work has implications for understanding the generation, storage and eruption of large-scale silicic magma systems. The Ongatiti ignimbrite does not represent either an erupted mush, or a stratified magma chamber, suggesting an alternative model for the development of eruptible magma within large-scale silicic systems. The Kidnappers/Rocky Hill sequence records a complex interplay of multiple melt-dominant bodies, which were established and renewed on rapid timescales. The rapid timescales for the development of melt-dominant bodies and the systematic tapping of magmas in the Kidnappers/Rocky Hill system imply that tectonics may have had a strong external control on the eruptions at Mangakino.</p>


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