Troodos ophiolite mantle section exposed along Atalante Geo-Trail, Troodos Geopark, Cyprus

2016 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-6
Author(s):  
Michał Bukała ◽  
Katarzyna Zboińska ◽  
Mateusz Szadkowski

Abstract The following paper presents the field trip through the unique mantle sequence composed of peridotites and exposed along Atalante Geo-Trail in Troodos Geopark, Cyprus. This manuscript briefly summarises data from many papers and presents authors’ own field observations, in order to provide information on evolution of enigmatic Troodos mantle peridotites.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jakub Mikrut ◽  
Magdalena Matusiak-Małek ◽  
Jacek Puziewicz ◽  
Kujtim Onuzi

<p>Mirdita Ophiolite in northern Albania is a part of 30-40 km wide ophiolitic Pindos Zone in Dinaride-Hellenide part of the Alpine orogenic system (e.g. Dilek & Furnes 2009, Lithos). Mantle and crustal sections in the eastern part of this zone have Supra-Subduction Zone geochemical affinities. The goal of our study is to examine chemical diversity of rocks within Kukesi Massif and to decipher its evolution.</p><p>The Kukesi Massif is composed mostly of coarse- to medium-grained spinel harzburgites and dunite with chromite layers (e.g. Morishita et al. 2011, Lithos), locally  cross-cut by orthopyroxenite veins. Uppermost part of the sequence consist of cumulate pyroxenites and peridotites (composed of olivine, orthopyroxene, clinopyroxene and spinel). Most of the rocks are pervasively serpentinised, but degree of serpentinisation varies within the massive. Samples of peridotites and pyroxenites from over a dozen localities within the massif were collected.</p><p>Olivine occurring in the lower sections of the ophiolite has composition of Fo<sub>89.5-91.2</sub> (NiO 0.28-0.52 wt.%) in peridotites and Fo<sub>90.6-92 </sub>(NiO 0.38-0.52 wt.%) in orthopyroxenite veins. Olivine forming cumulates has Fo<sub>82.4-83.3</sub> and NiO content=0.12-0.23 wt. %. Orthopyroxene (enstatite) in mantle peridotites is Al-poor (0.05-0.08 Al a.p.f.u.) and has Mg# 90.5-91.5. Orthopyroxene from peridotite cut by orthopyroxenite veins is even poorer in Al (0.03-0.04 a.pfu) and has lower Mg# 91.1-91.7 and is chemically indistinguishable from pyroxenitic orthopyroxene. Orthopyroxene forming cumulates has Mg#=82.3-84.0 and the highest Al content among all the lithologies (0.12-0.14 a.p.f.u.). Peridotitic clinopyroxene (diopside) has Al=0.02-0.08 a.p.f.u. which corresponds well to this in orthopyroxene, but Mg# is higher – 92.5-95.4. Clinopyroxene in cumulate rocks has Al content=0.13-0.16 a.p.f.u. and Mg#=87-88. Spinel in mantle peridotites has Cr#=0.47-0.80 and is negatively correlated with Mg# (0.38 to 0.56). The cumulative spinel has lower Cr# (0.18-0.27), but the  Mg# is similar to that forming peridotite (0.38-0.45). </p><p>The orthopyroxene equilibration temperatures calculated with Witt-Eickschen & Seck (1991, CMP) algorithm, yield wide range of temperatures (800-950˚C in mantle peridotites and 950-1020˚C in cumulate peridotites suggesting its magmatic origin). Low Al content in orthopyroxene suggest that peridotites suffered from high degree of melt extraction.</p><p>Chemical composition of minerals forming rocks of Kukesi Massif is typical  for mantle sections of SSZ ophiolites (e.g. Troodos ophiolite, Batanova & Sobolev 2000, Geology). Our preliminary mineral chemical data for Kukesi ultramafics have a wider range than those previously obtained by Morishita et al. (2011, Lithos). The chemical composition of ultramafic rocks within this massif varies, which may result from variable geochemical history, but further studies are required to fully characterize the composition of Kukesi ultramafics and to reconstruct its geochemical and tectonic evolution.</p><p>This study was financed from scientific funds for years 2018-2022 as a scientific project within program “Diamond Grant” (DI 024748).</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 72 (3) ◽  
pp. A110620
Author(s):  
Júlia Farré-de-Pablo ◽  
Núria Pujol-Solà ◽  
Harlison Torres-Herrera ◽  
Thomas Aiglsperger ◽  
José María González-Jiménez ◽  
...  

The Havana–Matanzas Ophiolite contains one of the few examples of ophiolitic platinum group minerals (PGM)-rich chromitites associated with orthopyroxenites in the mantle section of ophiolitic complexes. The chromitites occur as veins hosted by orthopyroxenite bands within mantle peridotites. The peridotites are mostly harzburgites and their accessory chromite shows high-Al compositions (Cr# [Cr/(Cr+Al), atomic ratio] = 0.39–0.50), which are typical of spinels in abyssal peridotites. Conversely, chromite from the chromitite veins and their host orthopyroxenite are high-Cr (Cr# = 0.72–0.73 and 0.62–0.69, respectively), with lower Mg# [Mg/(Mg+Fe2+), atomic ratio]. This suggests that both the chromitite and the orthopyroxenite formed from melts with boninitic affinity. The abundant PGM inclusions found in the chromitites are mainly Os-rich laurite grains, which is also characteristic of chromitites formed from magmas with boninitic affinity. Therefore, we propose that the chromitite veins and the orthopyroxenite bands probably formed contemporaneously in the fore-arc setting of an intra-oceanic arc during subduction. The chromitite-orthopyroxenite pair of the Havana-Matanzas Ophiolite could form after the reaction of a Si-rich melt with boninitic affinity and mantle harzburgite, with the orthopyroxenite bands preserving fingerprints of the infiltration of boninitic-affinity melts within the mantle. The small volume of forming chromitite could maximize the efficiency for the mechanical collection of the PGM forming in the parental melt of these rocks, resulting in the anomalous enrichment of primary PGM in the chromitites.


2008 ◽  
Vol 179 (5) ◽  
pp. 503-518 ◽  
Author(s):  
Georges Ceuleneer ◽  
Elisabeth Le Sueur

AbstractThis paper addresses the question of the petrological relationships between the mantle section and the crustal section of the Trinity ophiolite. Our conclusions are based on a field survey and on petrographic and electron micro-probe study of about 200 samples. We show that the crustal section of Trinity is more developed and less chaotic than expected on the basis of previous surveys. In the Bear Creek area, we were able to describe a well preserved cumulate sequence about 1,500 m thick. The cumulate pile includes a thick (~800 m) basal part made of ultramafic cumulates (dunites, wehrlites, pyroxenites, etc…) displaying very thin (mm- to cm thick) modal layering. The most salient characterisitc of this basal section is the gradual decrease of the modal abundance of olivine from bottom to top. This paragenetic evolution is correlated with the evolution of mineral chemistry consistent with fractional crystallisation from a common parent melt. Plagioclase appears above this ultramafic sequence, in the upper half of the cumulate section, in a diffuse way at first (plagioclase pyroxenites), becoming increasingly abundant toward the top of the section. Its crystallization always coincides with that of hornblende pseudomorphs on previously crystallized pyroxenes. The layering becomes very irregular at this level and attributable essentially to textural variations. The top of the cumulate sequence is characterized by the abundance of magmatic breccias (pyroxenitic and gabbrodioritic fragments embedded in fine grained diorite). These breccias are cross cut by diabase dykes. The horizontal extent of the Bear Creek “magma chamber” is moderate (2–3 km). The lateral contact with the host peridotites and gabbros is always underlain by a screen of pegmatites reaching several hundred metres in thickness. These pegmatites are made of pyroxenites in the lowermost levels and of diorites in the upper levels. Angular xenoliths of mantle derived lherzolites are frequently observed in the layered ultramafic section, their incorporation being contemporaneous to the crystallization of the cumulates.The field relationships and the lithological succession described above are consistent with the sudden injection of a huge batch of melt (reaching several km3) into the lithosphere (rocks at sub-solidus To) followed by fractional crystallization into the internal part of this magma body. The boniniticandesitic kindred of the parent melt is clearly revealed by the crystallization sequence. This conclusion is corroborated by the extreme depletion of pyroxenes and Cr-spinel in relatively incompatible elements (Ti, Al). The fractional crystallization trend of the Trinity cumulates is identical to the one defined by phenocrysts in present-day high-Ca boninites and is clearly distinct from that of mid-ocean ridge gabbros. The plagioclase composition is buffered around high An% values (90–95%), which is consistent with a low Na content of their parent melt and with H2O saturation at the time of crystallization of this mineral. The various so-called “gabbroic” massifs cropping out in Trinity represent individual intrusions similar to the one we have studied in detail in the Bear Creek area.Two generations of melt migration structures are observed in the mantle section of Trinity: (1) ariegitic-gabbroic segregations in mineralogical and chemical equilibrium with the plagioclase lherzolite and whose injection is contemporaneous with high-To plastic deformation ; (2) pyroxenitic (and, less commonly, dioritic) segregations and dykes post-dating the high-To deformation and characterized by strong mineralogical and chemical disequilibrium with the host plagioclase lherzolite. The parent melts of these second generation segregations and dykes are identical to those of the crustal cumulates. The interaction between the boninitic melts, undersaturated in Al and ultra-depleted in incompatible elements, and the peridotites accounts for extreme mineralogical and geochemical variability of the Trinity mantle. Peridotites, away from reactive dykes, are, as a rule, richer in incompatible elements than the cumulates from the crustal section. The mantle peridotites of Trinity cannot be the source nor the residue of the melt that fed the crustal magma chambers. Accordingly, the mantle-crust complementarity argument that is the basis of the slow spreading mid-ocean ridge model for Trinity (Lherzolite Ophiolite Type), must be reconsidered.A likely tectonic scenario that accounts for our data involves the evolution of a marginal, likely back-arc basin, from its opening to its closure. The ariegitic-gabbroic segregations are the witness of a low degree and shallow (~30 km depth) partial melting event experienced by the cold and relatively fertile Trinity peridotites during the first stage of opening of this basin in a transtensional regime, as suggested by the plastic flow pattern. The injection of the boninitic magma in strong disequilibrium with the lherzolite and feeding the crustal section occurred when one of the margins of the Trinity basin migrated above the zone of melting induced by dehydration of the subducting slab. This event occurred shortly before the definitive closure of the back-arc basin and of the obduction event. Paleomagnetic and geochronological data published so far are consistent with this scenario and with a life time of about 40 Ma for the Trinity basin, which is close to the life time of modern back-arc basins.


2002 ◽  
Vol 204 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 385-402 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anette Büchl ◽  
Gerhard Brügmann ◽  
Valentina G. Batanova ◽  
Carsten Münker ◽  
Albrecht W. Hofmann

1999 ◽  
Vol 44 (6) ◽  
pp. 493-495
Author(s):  
Mary P. Koss
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
pp. 10-21 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vladimir V. Voronov ◽  
Nikolay I. Shchepetkov

The article describes content of original and relevant but virtually forgotten thesis of V.V. Voronov on lighting of production site interiors by means of overhead natural (using three types of skylights) and artificial illumination, in order to elaborate scientific methodology for architectural design of more qualitative luminous environment on the basis of comprehensive approach and enhanced criteria framework of its evaluation using light engineering parameters. The thesis is unique in terms of the scope and quality of field and laboratory observations which are reflected not only in the text but also in the graphical attachments, namely photos, figures, schemes, drawings, charts, nomograms, and diagrams accompanied by specific measured or calculated parameters. The first part of the thesis contains theoretical basics and results of field observations conducted by different methods. This second part is the exposition of chapter 3 of the V.V. Voronov’s candidate thesis (1985). It describes the methodology for and the results of the experiments by means of planar and volumetric light simulation using the architectural lighting simulating assembly (chamber) which were conducted in MARKHI in 1970–1985.


2020 ◽  
pp. 34-42
Author(s):  
Nikolay I. Shchepetkov ◽  
Svetlana B. Kapeleva ◽  
Denis V. Bugaev ◽  
Gregory S. Matovnikov ◽  
Anna S. Kostareva

The article provides a comprehensive analysis of outdoor lighting in the central part of Tyumen (with consideration of conducted field observations) and prospects of its development on the basis of the general plan of illumination of the central part of the city being under design. Main provisions of this general plan as well as methodological principles and assessment criteria of design solutions illustrat-ed by photographs, schemes and visualisations of the illuminated objects are described.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 81-88
Author(s):  
Bambang Nurcahyono ◽  
Rita Retnowati ◽  
Entis Sutisna

INDUSTRIAL BASED CURRICULUM IMPLEMETATION AT SMK MITRA INDUSTRI MM2100 CIKARANG-BEKASIThis study aims to obtain a fact-based picture in the form of data and information regarding the implementation of an industry-based curriculum at SMK Mitra Industri MM2100. This study uses a qualitative method, which is to make a complex and comprehensive picture with detailed descriptions from the eyes of the informants to produce a comprehensive exposure based on clear and real findings, events, processes and results related to the implementation of an industry-based curriculum. Data obtained through interviews, field observations and documentation studies. Based on data analysis, the following results are obtained: 1). The curriculum development model used at SMK Mitra Industri MM2100, is a model of curriculum development that is problem-centered by integrating several disciplines to form a concept of attitudes, skills and knowledge in accordance with the demands and needs of the industry which are oriented to the vision, mission and goals of the school. 2). The learning process at SMK Mitra Industri MM2100 uses a block system, which is designed to be oriented towards the merging of instruction and construction, so that the learning process approach refers to the dual base program to fully and fully cultivate industrial work patterns. 3). Challenges and obstacles in the implementation of industrial-based curriculum in SMK Mitra Industri MM2100 in the form of not wanting to change the principles of school/mental blockage, focusing on knowledge, school target is focus on graduation of students, not on the distribution of work at industries and bad networking with industry which can be overcome through socialization to all elements of the school and stakeholders involved.


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