Skarn formation between metachalk and agglomerate in the Central Ring Complex, Isle of Arran, Scotland

1987 ◽  
Vol 51 (360) ◽  
pp. 231-246 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Cressey

AbstractA skarn mineral assemblage occurs at the junction between vent pyroclastics and a xenolithic Cretaceous chalk block which subsided into the collapsed caldera of the Central Ring Complex, Isle of Arran, Scotland. Adjacent to the metachalk marble an andradite garnet exoskarn zone has developed at the expense of the carbonate. An andradite grossular/diopsidic clinopyroxene endoskarn zone has formed in the surrounding agglomerate, and a magnetite exoskarn is present in places between the andradite and garnet/pyroxene zones. The andraditic exoskarn garnets have fluor-hydrogarnet components, indicating that fluorine was present in the metasomatic fluid. From petrographic evidence, three distinct episodes of exoskarn garnet crystallization can be recognized, in which the fluor-hydrogarnet component steadily increased as a function of time, which probably reflects falling temperature. The REE compositions of the exoskarn minerals are regarded as having been largely inherited from the carbonate, and the exoskarn garnets increasingly fractionated HREE with time. The endoskarn and agglomerate have also been epidotized. The REE signatures of epidotes appear to be inherited partially from precursor clinopyroxenes or feldspars, which have been replaced by epidote. Late-stage vein minerals include prehnite, laumontite and K-rich laumontite, and their REE compositions appear to have been derived from the marble, probably via REE fluoro-complexes in the fluid.

1974 ◽  
Vol 111 (1) ◽  
pp. 43-47 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. K. Webb

SummaryThe Rayfield-Gona granite of the Jos Plateau, Nigeria, formerly regarded as an independent intrusive body, is now thought to be a roof facies of the Ngell granite. This explains several phenomena, such as the gradational contact between the two, and the distinctive mineral assemblage of the former.


1964 ◽  
Vol 44 ◽  
pp. 1-62
Author(s):  
B.G.J Upton

Among the Precambrian (Gardar) intrusions in the Tugtutôq area, syenitic rocks are abundantly represented. Quartz-bearing alkalic rocks were first intruded after the emplacement of a number of large gabbro dykes. Although early Gardar nepheline syenites occur on Tugtutôq, no post-gabbro undersaturated syenites occur within the area under discussion. Quartz syenites and their faster cooled equivalents occur either as ENE directed dykes or as ring-dykes and stocks within a late Gardar central complex. The earliest quartz syenite occurs as the central component in a composite sector of one of the large gabbro dykes. This was succeeded by multiple swarms of dykes with alkalic types ranging from 'rhomb porphyry' microsyenite to comendite. Dyke intrusion was virtually at an end by the time of formation of the central ring-complex. The total petrographic range of the oversaturated alkalic rocks extends from ferroaugite-fayalite syenites with relatively calcic feldspar (ca. Or25Ab66An9) to highly acid riebeckite-bearing rock types. The various intrusions are considered to represent magma batches supplied, at irregular intervals, from a deep-seated syenite complex which was crystallising throughout the latter part of the Gardar period. The inferred sub-surface complex is taken to be closely comparable to the Gardar complexes exposed at Nunarssuit and Kungnât, and to have differentiated by process of crystal fractionation. By analogy with the Kungnât complex the parental magma of the underlying magma chamber(s) is believed to have passed through a larvikitic stage. The perthosite stock which forms the latest major intrusion on Tugtutoq is thought to indicate a slight divergence from the general larvikite-nordmarkite-alkali granite differentiation sequence. The magmas of this main differentiation sequence changed in composition along a "thermal valley" dose to that of the synthetic system Or-Ab-SiO2-H2O.


2014 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Stoppa ◽  
M. Schiazza

AbstractMelilitolites of the Umbria Latium Ultra-alkaline District display a complete crystallisation sequence of peculiar, late-stage mineral phases and hydrothermal/cement minerals, analogous to fractionated mineral associations from the Kola Peninsula. This paper summarises 20 years of research which has resulted in the identification of a large number of mineral species, some very rare or completely new and some not yet classified. The progressive increasing alkalinity of the residual liquid allowed the formation of Zr-Ti phases and further delhayelitemacdonaldite mineral crystallisation in the groundmass. The presence of leucite and kalsilite in the igneous assemblage is unusual and gives a kamafugitic nature to the rocks. Passage to non-igneous temperatures (T<600 °C) is marked by the metastable reaction and formation of a rare and complex zeolite association (T<300 °C). Circulation of low-temperature (T<100 °C) K-Ca-Ba-CO2-SO2-fluids led to the precipitation of sulphates and hydrated and/or hydroxylated silicate-sulphate-carbonates. As a whole, this mineral assemblage can be considered typical of ultra-alkaline carbonatitic rocks.


2007 ◽  
Vol 45 (05) ◽  
Author(s):  
F Sipos ◽  
S Spisák ◽  
T Krenács ◽  
O Galamb ◽  
B Galamb ◽  
...  

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