66 research outputs found

    Retrieving magma composition from TIR spectra: implications for terrestrial planets investigations

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    Emissivity and reflectance spectra have been investigated on two series of silicate glasses, having compositions belonging to alkaline and subalkaline series, covering the most common terrestrial igneous rocks. Glasses were synthesized starting from natural end-members outcropping at Vulcano Island (Aeolian Islands, Italy) and on Snake River Plain (USA). Results show that the shift of the spectra, by taking Christiansen feature (CF) as a reference point, is correlated with SiO2 content, the SCFM factor and/or the degree of polymerization state via the NBO/T and temperature. The more evolved is the composition, the more polymerized the structure, the shorter the wavelength at which CF is observable. CF shift is also dependent on temperature. The shape of the spectra discriminates alkaline character, and it is related to the evolution of Qn structural units. Vulcano alkaline series show larger amount of Q4 and Q3 species even for mafic samples compared to the subalkaline Snake River Plain series. Our results provide new and robust insights for the geochemical characterization of volcanic rocks by remote sensing, with the outlook to infer origin of magmas both on Earth as well as on terrestrial planets or rocky bodies, from emissivity and reflectance spectra

    Retrieving magma composition from TIR spectra: implications for terrestrial planets investigations

    Get PDF
    Emissivity and reflectance spectra have been investigated on two series of silicate glasses, having compositions belonging to alkaline and subalkaline series, covering the most common terrestrial igneous rocks. Glasses were synthesized starting from natural end-members outcropping at Vulcano Island (Aeolian Islands, Italy) and on Snake River Plain (USA). Results show that the shift of the spectra, by taking Christiansen feature (CF) as a reference point, is correlated with SiO2 content, the ScfM factor and/or the degree of polymerization state via the nBo/t and temperature. the more evolved is the composition, the more polymerized the structure, the shorter the wavelength at which CF is observable. CF shift is also dependent on temperature. The shape of the spectra discriminates alkaline character, and it is related to the evolution of Qn structural units. Vulcano alkaline series show larger amount of Q4 and Q3 species even for mafic samples compared to the subalkaline Snake River Plain series. Our results provide new and robust insights for the geochemical characterization of volcanic rocks by remote sensing, with the outlook to infer origin of magmas both on Earth as well as on terrestrial planets or rocky bodies, from emissivity and reflectance spectra

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    Leucitites within and around the Mediterranean area

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    Leucite-bearing volcanic rocks are commonly found within and around the Mediterranean area. A specific type of this rock group are leucitites. They are found both in a hinterland position of active and fossil subduction systems as well as in foreland tectonic settings, but none have been found in the Maghreb (N Africa) and Mashreq (Middle East) areas. Here a review of the main leucitite occurrences in the circum-Mediterranean area is presented, with new whole-rock, mineral chemical and Sr-Nd-Pb isotopic ratios on key districts, with the aim of clarifying the classification and genesis of this rock type. Many of the rocks classified in literature as leucitites do not conform to the IUGS definition of leucitite (i.e., rocks with >10 vol% modal leucite and with foids/(foids + feldspars) ratio > 0.9, with leucite being the most abundant foid). Among circum-Mediterranean rocks classified as leucitites in the literature, we distinguish two types: clinopyroxene-olivine-phyric (COP) and leucite- phyric (LP) types. Only the second group can be truly classified as leucitite, being characterized by the absence or the very rare presence of feldspars, as well as by ultrapotassic composition. The COP group can be distinguished from the LP group on the basis of lower SiO2, Na2O + K2O, K2O/Na2O, Al2O3, Rb and Ba, and higher MgO, TiO2, Nb, Cr and Ni. The LP group shows multi-elemental patterns resembling magmas emplaced in subduction-related settings, while COP rocks are much more variable, showing HIMU-OIB-like to subduction-related-like incompatible element patterns. COP rocks are also characterized generally by more homogeneous isotopic compositions clustering towards low Sr and high Nd isotopic ratios, while LP leucitites plot all in the enriched SrNd isotopic quadrant. LP rocks usually have lower 206Pb/204Pb and higher 207Pb/204Pb. This study shows that the geochemical signal of mantle melts does not always reflect the tectonic setting of magma emplacement, suggesting paying extreme attention in proposing geodynamic reconstructions on the basis of chemical data only

    Leucitites within and around the Mediterranean area

    No full text
    Leucite-bearing volcanic rocks are commonly found within and around the Mediterranean area. A specific type of this rock group are leucitites. They are found both in a hinterland position of active and fossil subduction systems as well as in foreland tectonic settings, but none have been found in the Maghreb (N Africa) and Mashreq (Middle East) areas. Here a review of the main leucitite occurrences in the circum-Mediterranean area is presented, with new whole-rock, mineral chemical and Sr-Nd-Pb isotopic ratios on key districts, with the aim of clarifying the classification and genesis of this rock type. Many of the rocks classified in literature as leucitites do not conform to the IUGS definition of leucitite (i.e., rocks with >10 vol% modal leucite and with foids/(foids + feldspars) ratio > 0.9, with leucite being the most abundant foid). Among circum-Mediterranean rocks classified as leucitites in the literature, we distinguish two types: clinopyroxene-olivine-phyric (COP) and leucite- phyric (LP) types. Only the second group can be truly classified as leucitite, being characterized by the absence or the very rare presence of feldspars, as well as by ultrapotassic composition. The COP group can be distinguished from the LP group on the basis of lower SiO2, Na2O + K2O, K2O/Na2O, Al2O3, Rb and Ba, and higher MgO, TiO2, Nb, Cr and Ni. The LP group shows multi-elemental patterns resembling magmas emplaced in subduction-related settings, while COP rocks are much more variable, showing HIMU-OIB-like to subduction-related-like incompatible element patterns. COP rocks are also characterized generally by more homogeneous isotopic compositions clustering towards low Sr and high Nd isotopic ratios, while LP leucitites plot all in the enriched Sr-Nd isotopic quadrant. LP rocks usually have lower 206Pb/204Pb and higher 207Pb/204Pb. This study shows that the geochemical signal of mantle melts does not always reflect the tectonic setting of magma emplacement, suggesting paying extreme attention in proposing geodynamic reconstructions on the basis of chemical data only

    Strongly SiO2-undersaturated, CaO-rich kamafugitic Pleistocene magmatism in Central Italy (San Venanzo volcanic complex) and the role of shallow depth limestone assimilation

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    The Pleistocene (~460–265 ka) San Venanzo volcanic complex belongs to the IAP (Intra-Apennine Province) in central Italy, which comprises at least four small Pleistocene monogenetic volcanoes plus several unrooted pyroclastic deposits with peculiar mineralogical and whole-rock chemical compositions. San Venanzo products are strongly SiO2-undersaturated, CaO- and MgO-rich and show ultrapotassic serial character. The relatively common occurrence of calcite in the pyroclastic rocks and the overall high CaO content are interpreted in literature as primary mineral. The main rock facies at San Venanzo are calcite-rich scoria and lapilli tuffs, with minor massive lava flows, and a rare pegmatoid variant (melilitolitic pockets). All the San Venanzo rocks are feldspar-free, with a typical paragenesis of forsteritic olivine, non-stoichiometric Ca-rich diopside, melilite, leucite, kalsilite, opaque minerals, nepheline, phlogopite, calcite, apatite, cuspidine, wollastonite, kirschsteinite-monticellite s.s. ± glass and other minor and very rare minerals typical of agpaitic melts. Based on petrographic analyses, the studied rocks can be classified as olivine melilitites, olivine leucite melilitites, venanzites (a local variant of kamafugites), calcite leucite melilitolites and Ca-rich olivine leucite melilitite tuffs. Mass balance calculations indicate a direct genetic link between the lava bodies and the pegmatoid melilitolitic pocket through a fractional crystallization process characterized by the removal of ~74% of a melilite-bearing uganditic cumulate made up of melilite, leucite, olivine, kalsilite and chromite. Primitive mantle-normalized patterns of the lavas and tuffs are rather spiked and share negative anomalies for Ba, Nb, Ta, P and Ti resembling typical magmas generated by supra-subduction mantle wedge. These compositions are very different from the only two other kamafugite localities outside Italy (Toro Ankole and Virunga in the East Africa Rift and Alto Paranaiba Igneous Province in SE Brazil). The melilitolite sample is more incompatible element-enriched than the other San Venanzo volcanic rocks, coherently with its evolved liquid composition proposed here. Major and trace element contents indicate a general depletion proportional to the amount of CaO content. The negative trends in Harker-type diagrams with CaO as abscissa are compatible with a process of variable interaction between a silicate magma with sedimentary marly carbonates/limestones. The presence of Mg-rich (Fo97–92) and rim-ward CaO-enriched (up to 1.72 wt%) euhedral olivine, as well as the presence of thin kirschsteinite rim around olivine crystals agree with a process of crustal carbonate assimilation by an originally strongly SiO2-undersaturated silicate magma. On the other hand, the lack of feldspars even in the rocks with the highest SiO2, the high CaO content, and the extreme SiO2-undersaturation of San Venanzo rocks exclude their derivation from a simple peridotitic source. In order to generate these peculiar compositions, the presence of a SiO2-K2O-CaO-rich H2O-bearing component, identified in a carbonated phlogopite peridotite is required. The results of different isotopic systematics (Sr-Nd-Pb-He-Ne-Ar) presented here are compatible with a process of crustal contamination both at mantle source levels (to explain the general N-S isotopic trends recorded in Quaternary volcanic rocks of Italian peninsula and Sicily) and with interaction of ultrabasic melts with limestones at shallow crustal depths
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