17 research outputs found

    P-T PODMÍNKY NÁSUNOVÉ DEFORMACE A CHARAKTER GENEROVANÝCH FLUID V HÁDSKO-ƘÍČSKÝCH VÁPENCÍCH NA HÁDECH U BRNA

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    Variscan hydrothermal calcite±quartz veins have been investigated by microthermometric and isotopic methods (O, C, Sr). Veins are located in the HĂĄdy-Ƙíčka Limestones within a black coloured shear-thrust zone in the RĆŻenin quarry at the HĂĄdy Hill. Organic matter in rocks has been transformed and aqueous and organic fluids have been derived by deformation processes and elevated temperature. The coexistence of CH4±CO2 and H2O-NaCl fluids trapped in fluid inclusions enabled to calculate P-T trapping conditions and formation of hydrothermal phases. Revealed pressure and temperature represent local conditions within shear zone, T = 130° - 250°C, P = 180-1200 bar. They exceeding regional parameters as a result of friction within rocks during a deformation event

    Fluid Inclusion Study of Quartz Xenocrysts in Mafic Dykes from Kawant Area, Chhota Udaipur District, Gujarat, India

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    Unusual mafic dykes occur in the proximity of the Ambadongar Carbonatite Complex, Lower Narmada Valley, Gujarat, India. The dykes contain dense population of quartz xenocrysts within the basaltic matrix metasomatised by carbonate-rich fluids. Plagioclase feldspars, relict pyroxenes, chlorite, barite, rutile, magnetite, Fe-Ti oxides and glass were identified in the basaltic matrix. Quartz xenocrysts occur in various shapes and sizes and form an intricate growth pattern with carbonates. The xenocrysts are fractured and contain several types of primary and secondary, single phase and two-phase fluid inclusions. The two-phase inclusions are dominated by aqueous liquid, whereas the monophase inclusions are composed of carbonic gas and the aqueous inclusions homogenize to liquid between 226°C and 361°C. Majority of the inclusions are secondary in origin and are therefore unrelated to the crystallization of quartz. Moreover, the inclusions have mixed carbonic-aqueous compositions that inhibit their direct correlation with the crustal or mantle fluids. The composition of dilute CO2-rich fluids observed in the quartz xenocrysts appear similar to those exsolved during the final stages of evolution of the Amba Dongar carbonatites. However, the carbonates are devoid of fluid inclusions and therefore their genetic relation with the quartz xenocrysts cannot be established

    REE Minerals as Geochemical Proxies of Late-Tertiary Alkalic Silicate ± Carbonatite Intrusions Beneath Carpathian Back-Arc Basin

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    The accessory mineral assemblage (AMA) of igneous cumulate xenoliths in volcanoclastic deposits and lava flows in the Carpathian back-arc basin testifies to the composition of intrusive complexes sampled by Upper Miocene-Pliocene basalt volcanoes. The magmatic reservoir beneath PincinĂĄ maar is composed of gabbro, moderately alkalic to alkali-calcic syenite, and calcic orthopyroxene granite (pincinite). The intrusive complex beneath the wider area around FiÄŸakovo and Hajnáčka maars contains mafic cumulates, alkalic syenite, carbonatite, and calc-alkalic granite. Both reservoirs originated during the basaltic magma underplating, differentiation, and interaction with the surrounding mantle and crust. The AMA of syenites is characterized by yttrialite-Y, britholite-Y, britholite-Ce, chevkinite-Ce, monazite-Ce, and rhabdophane(?). Baddeleyite and REE-zirconolite are typical of alkalic syenite associated with carbonatite. Pyrochlore, columbite-Mn, and Ca-niobates occur in calc-alkalic granites with strong peralkalic affinity. Nb-rutile, niobian ilmenite, and fergusonite-Y are crystallized from mildly alkalic syenite and calc-alkalic granite. Zircons with increased Hf/Zr and Th/U ratios occur in all felsic-to-intermediate rock-types. If rock fragments are absent in the volcanic ejecta, the composition of the sub-volcanic reservoir can be reconstructed from the specific AMA and zircon xenocrysts–xenolith relics disintegrated during the basaltic magma fragmentation and explosion

    Niobium Mineralogy of Pliocene A1-Type Granite of the Carpathian Back-Arc Basin, Central Europe

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    A1-type granite xenoliths occur in alkali basalts erupted during Pliocene–Pleistocene continental rifting of Carpathian back-arc basin (Central Europe). The Pliocene (5.2 Ma) peraluminous calc-alkalic granite contains unusually high concentrations of critical metals bound in Nb, Ta, REE, U, Th-oxides typical for silica-undersaturated alkalic granites, and syenites: columbite-Mn, fergusonite-Y, oxycalciopyrochlore, Nb-rutile, and Ca-niobate (fersmite or viggezite). In contrast, it does not contain allanite and monazite—the main REE-carriers in calc-alkalic granites. The crystallization of REE-bearing Nb-oxides instead of OH-silicates and phosphates was probably caused by strong water deficiency and low phosphorus content in the parental magma. Increased Nb and Ta concentrations have been inherited from the mafic parental magma derived from the metasomatized mantle. The strong Al- and Ca-enrichment probably reflects the specific composition of the mantle wedge modified by fluids, alkalic, and carbonatitic melts liberated from the subducted slab of oceanic crust prior to the Pliocene-Pleistocene rifting

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    Formation of Esseneite and Kushiroite in Tschermakite-Bearing Calc-Silicate Xenoliths Ejected in Alkali Basalt

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    Skarnoid calc-silicate xenoliths composed of anorthite, clinopyroxene and Mg-Al spinel occur in alkali basalts of the Pliocene-Pleistocene intra-plate magmatic province in the northern part of the Pannonian Basin. Randomly oriented and elongated pseudomorphs are tschermakite crystals replaced by olivine, spinel and plagioclase. The relict amphibole within the pseudomorphs is characterized by high VIAl, between 1.95 and 2.1, and very low occupancy of the A-site (3+Al)AlSiO6 endmember with an equal proportion of VIAl3+ and Fe3+. Concentrations of kushiroite CaAlAlSiO6 endmember, up to 47.5 mol%, are the highest recorded in terrestrial samples. The AlFe3+-rich pyroxenes originated at the expense of diopside-augite during the interaction with carbonate-aluminosilicate melt. Forsterite (Fo72–83) and hemoilmenite with up to 32 mol% geikielite (9.3 wt% MgO) also crystallized from the melt, leaving behind the residual calcic carbonate with minor MgO (1–3 wt%). Columnar habit of neoformed olivine growing across diopside-augite layers indicates rapid crystallization from eutectic liquid. Euhedral aragonite and apatite embedded in fine-grained calcite or aragonite groundmass indicate slow crystallization of the residual carbonatite around the calcite-aragonite stability boundary. Corundum exsolutions in rock-forming anorthite are products of superimposed low-pressure pyrometamorphic reworking during transport in alkali basalt. Concomitant alkali metasomatism produced neoformed interstitial sodalite, nepheline, sanidine, albite, biotite, Mg-poor ilmenite (10–18 mol% MgTiO3), Ti-magnetite and fluorapatite. Olivine-ilmenite-aragonite-calcite thermobarometry returned temperatures of 770–860 °C and pressures of 1.8–2.1 GPa, whereas plagioclase-amphibole thermobarometer yielded 781 ± 13 °C and 2.05 ± 0.03 GPa. The calculated pressures correspond to depths of 60–70 km. The calc-silicate xenoliths are most likely metamorphosed marbles; however, a magmatic protolith (metagabbro, metaanorthosite) cannot be ruled out owing to high Cr contents in spinels (up to 30 mol% chromite) and abundant Cu-sulfides

    Geochemistry, mineralogy, and zircon U–Pb–Hf isotopes in peraluminous A‑type granite xenoliths in Pliocene–Pleistocene basalts of northern Pannonian Basin (Slovakia)

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    International audienceAnorogenic granite xenoliths occur in alkali basalts coeval with the Pliocene–Pleistocene continental rifting of the Pannonian Basin. Observed granite varie - ties include peraluminous, calcic to peralkalic, magnesian to ferroan types. Quartz and feldspars are dominant rock-forming minerals, accompanied by minor early ilmenite and late magnetite–ulvöspinel. Zircon and Nb–U–REE minerals (oxycalciopyrochlore, fergusonite, columbite) are locally abundant accessory phases in calc-alkalic types. Absence of OH-bearing Fe, Mg-silicates and presence of single homogeneous feldspars (plagioclase in calcic types, anorthoclase in calc-alkalic types, ferrian Na-sanidine to anorthoclase in alkalic types) indicate water-deficient, hypersolvus crystallization conditions. Variable volumes of interstitial glass, absence of exsolutions, and lacking deu-teric hydrothermal alteration and/or metamorphic/meta -somatic overprint are diagnostic of rapid quenching from hypersolidus temperatures. U–Pb zircon ages determined in calcic and calc-alkalic granite xenoliths correspond to a time interval between 5.7 and 5.2 Ma. Positive ΔHf val -ues (14.2± 3.9) in zircons from a 5.2-Ma-old calc-alkalic granite xenolith indicate mantle-derived magmas largely unaffected by the assimilation of crustal material. This is in accordance with abundances of diagnostic trace elements (Rb, Y, Nb, Ta), indicating A1-type, OIB-like source mag-mas. Increased accumulations of Nb–U–REE minerals in these granites indicate higher degree of the magmatic dif-ferentiation reflected in Rb-enrichment, contrasting with Ba-enrichment in barren xenoliths. Incipient charnock-itization, i.e. orthopyroxene and ilmenite crystallization from interstitial silicate melt, was observed in many granite xenoliths. Thermodynamic modeling using pseudosections showed that the orthopyroxene growth may have been trig-gered by water exsolution from the melt during ascent of xenoliths in basaltic magma. Euhedral-to-skeletal orthopy-roxene growth probably reflects contrasting ascent rates of basaltic magma with xenoliths, intermitted by the stagna-tion in various crustal levels at a <3 kbar pressure. The Ter-tiary suite of intra-plate, mantle-derived A1-type granites and syenites is geochemically distinct from pre-Tertiary, post-orogenic A2-type granites of the Carpatho–Pannonian region, which exhibit geochemical features diagnostic of crustal melting along continental margins
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