6 research outputs found

    Dellagiustaite: A Novel Natural Spinel Containing V2+

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    Dellagiustaite, ideally Al2V2+O4, is a new spinel-group mineral from Sierra de Comechingones, San Luis, Argentina, where it is found associated with hibonite (containing tubular inclusions, 5\u2013100 \ub5m, of metallic vanadium), grossite, and two other unknown phases with ideal stoichiometry of Ca2Al3O6F and Ca2Al2SiO7. A very similar rock containing dellagiustaite has been found at Mt Carmel (northern Israel), where super-reduced mineral assemblages have crystallized from high-T melts trapped in corundum aggregates (micro-xenoliths) within picritic-tholeiitic lavas ejected from Cretaceous volcanoes. In the holotype, euhedral grains of dellagiustaite are found as inclusions in grossite. The empirical average chemical formula of dellagiustaite is (Al1.09 V2+ 0.91 V3+ 0.87 Mg0.08 Ti3+ 0.04 Mn0.01)\u3a33O4, but it may show limited replacement of V2+ by Mg and of V3+ by Al. As Al is the dominant trivalent cation, the ideal formula is Al2V2+O4 according to the current IMA rules. Dellagiustaite shows the usual space group of spinel-group minerals (Fd3m, R1 = 1.46%) with a = 8.1950(1) \uc5. The observed mean bond lengths = 1.782(2) \uc5 and = 2.0445(9) \uc5, the observed site scattering (T = 13.3 eps, M = 22.5 eps), and the chemical composition show that dellagiustaite is an inverse spinel: T tetrahedra are occupied by Al3+, whereas M octahedra are occupied by V2+ and V3+, leading to the site assignment asTAlM(V2+ 0.91 V3+ 0.88 Al3+ 0.09 Mg0.08 Ti3+ 0.03 Mn0.01)O4. \ua9 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland

    Kishonite, VH2, and oreillyite, Cr2N, two new minerals from the corundum xenocrysts of Mt Carmel, Northern Israel

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    Here, we describe two new minerals, kishonite (VH2) and oreillyite (Cr2N), found in xenoliths occurring in pyroclastic ejecta of small Cretaceous basaltic volcanoes exposed on Mount Carmel, Northern Israel. Kishonite was studied by single-crystal X-ray diffraction and was found to be cubic, space group Fm3m, with a = 4.2680(10) \uc5, V = 77.75(3) \uc53, and Z = 4. Oreillyite was studied by both single-crystal X-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy and was found to be trigonal, space group P31m, with a = 4.7853(5) \uc5, c = 4.4630(6) \uc5, V = 88.51 \uc53, and Z = 3. The presence of such a mineralization in these xenoliths supports the idea of the presence of reduced fluids in the sublithospheric mantle influencing the transport of volatile species (e.g., C, H) from the deep Earth to the surface. The minerals and their names have been approved by the Commission of New Minerals, Nomenclature and Classification of the International Mineralogical Association (No. 2020-023 and 2020-030a)

    Discovery of the first natural hydride

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    Although hydrogen is the most abundant element in the solar system, the mechanisms of exchange of this element between the deep interior and surface of Earth are still uncertain. Hydrogen has profound effects on properties and processes on microscopic-to-global scales. Here we report the discovery of the first hydride (VH2) ever reported in nature. This phase has been found in the ejecta of Cretaceous pyroclastic volcanoes on Mt Carmel, N. Israel, which include abundant xenoliths containing highly reduced mineral assemblages. These xenoliths were sampled by their host magmas at different stages of their evolution but are not genetically related to them. The xenoliths are interpreted as the products of extended interaction between originally mafic magmas and CH4+H2 fluids, derived from a deeper, metal-saturated mantle. The last stages of melt evolution are recorded by coarse-grained aggregates of hibonite (CaAl12O19) + grossite (CaAl4O7) + V-rich spinels \ub1 spheroidal to dendritic inclusions of metallic vanadium (V0), apparently trapped as immiscible metallic melts. The presence of V0 implies low oxygen fugacities and suggests crystallization of the aggregates in a hydrogen-rich atmosphere. The presence of such reducing conditions in the upper mantle has major implications for the transport of carbon, hydrogen and other volatile species from the deep mantle to the surface

    Extreme reduction: Mantle-derived oxide xenoliths from a hydrogen-rich environment

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    International audienceCoarse-grained xenoliths of hibonite + grossite + Mg-Al-V spinel from Cretaceous pyroclastic rocks on Mt. Carmel, N. Israel, and from Sierra de Comechingones, Argentina, include spherules, rods and dense branching structures of native vanadium and VAl alloys. Microstructures suggest that vanadium melts became immiscible with the host Ca-Al-Mg-Si-O melt, and nucleated as droplets on the surfaces of the oxide phases, principally hibonite. Many extended outward as rods or branching structures as the host oxide crystal grew. The stability of V0 implies oxygen fugacities ≥9 log units below the Iron-Wustite buffer, suggesting a hydrogen-dominated atmosphere. This is supported by wt%-levels of hydrogen in gasses released by crushing, by Raman spectroscopy, and by the presence of VH2 among the vanadium balls. The oxide assemblage formed at 1400–1200 °C; the solution of hydrogen in the metal could lower the melting point of vanadium to these temperatures. These assemblages probably resulted from reaction between differentiated mafic melts and mantle-derived CH4 + H2 fluids near the crust-mantle boundary, and they record the most reducing magmatic conditions yet documented on Earth
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