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Keywords = Thermobarometry

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19 pages, 4272 KB  
Article
Garnet-Free Mineral Assemblage at Eclogite-Facies Conditions in the Riffelberg–Garten Unit, Italian Western Alps
by Gisella Rebay, Thomas Gusmeo, Maria Iole Spalla and Davide Zanoni
Minerals 2026, 16(1), 79; https://doi.org/10.3390/min16010079 - 14 Jan 2026
Viewed by 320
Abstract
The peculiar high-pressure mineral assemblage omphacite, epidote, quartz, calcite, titanite, and opaque minerals, ±phengite, has been observed in the Riffelberg–Garten Unit (RGU), a heterogeneous metasedimentary rock assemblage of the Zermatt–Saas Zone. Microstructural analysis, mineral chemistry, and petrologic modelling allowed to refine the syn-D2 [...] Read more.
The peculiar high-pressure mineral assemblage omphacite, epidote, quartz, calcite, titanite, and opaque minerals, ±phengite, has been observed in the Riffelberg–Garten Unit (RGU), a heterogeneous metasedimentary rock assemblage of the Zermatt–Saas Zone. Microstructural analysis, mineral chemistry, and petrologic modelling allowed to refine the syn-D2 P-T peak conditions for the Alpine tectono-metamorphic evolution. In the upper Valtournenche, S2 foliation is the dominant fabric at the regional scale of the Zermatt–Saas Zone. Petrologic modelling of the syn-D2 mineral assemblage indicates climax conditions of P = 1.85–2.0 GPa and T = 500–525 °C. These estimates are in good agreement with those inferred in the RGU metasedimentary matrix and enclosed eclogite and metagabbro elements. During exhumation, RGU rocks re-equilibrated texturally and mineralogically under blueschist–/epidote–amphibolite (P = 0.4–1.3 GPa and T = 350–500 °C during D3) and greenschist (P ≤ 0.25 GPa and T ≤ 400 °C during) facies conditions. This study highlights the potential of petrologic modelling for constraining the environmental conditions of metamorphism even in anomalous mineral assemblages where conventional thermobarometry is not applicable. Full article
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25 pages, 9280 KB  
Article
Petrogenesis of the Chamuhan Intrusion in the Southern Great Xing’an Range: Constraints from Zircon U-Pb Dating and Petrogeochemistry
by Yutong Song, Gongzheng Chen, Guang Wu, Tiegang Li, Tong Zhang, Jinfang Wang, Yingjie Li, Chenyu Liu, Yuze Li and Yinlong Wang
Minerals 2025, 15(10), 1085; https://doi.org/10.3390/min15101085 - 18 Oct 2025
Viewed by 668
Abstract
The Southern Great Xing’an Range (SGXR), an important W–Sn polymetallic metallogenic belt in northern China, hosts multiphase magmatism and has witnessed recent discoveries of multiple tungsten–tin polymetallic deposits. The W–Sn mineralization in this area is intimately associated with Early Cretaceous highly fractionated granites. [...] Read more.
The Southern Great Xing’an Range (SGXR), an important W–Sn polymetallic metallogenic belt in northern China, hosts multiphase magmatism and has witnessed recent discoveries of multiple tungsten–tin polymetallic deposits. The W–Sn mineralization in this area is intimately associated with Early Cretaceous highly fractionated granites. The Chamuhan deposit, a small-sized W–Mo polymetallic deposit in SGXR, is genetically linked to a concealed fine-grained porphyritic alkali feldspar granite intrusion. In this study, we present the LA-ICP-MS zircon U-Pb ages, whole-rock geochemical, and electron probe microanalysis (EPMA) mineral chemistry to constrain the petrogenesis and metallogenic implications of this granite. Zircon U–Pb dating yields a crystallization age of 141.3 ± 1.2 Ma, consistent with molybdenite Re–Os ages. The granite is characterized by elevated SiO2 (76.9–79.1 wt%) and total alkalis (7.3–8.5 wt%), and exhibits peraluminous high-K calc-alkaline affinity (A/CNK = 1.37–1.57). Geochemical signatures reveal enrichment in large ion lithophile elements (LILEs, e.g., Rb, Th, U) coupled with depletion in high-field strength elements (HFSEs, e.g., Ba, Sr, P, Eu, Ti, Nb, Ta), and are accompanied by right-sloping REE patterns with LREE enrichment and HREE depletion. EPMA data indicate that the mica in the intrusion is primarily zinnwaldite and Li-rich phengite, whereas the plagioclase occurs as albite. The feldspar thermobarometry yields crystallization temperatures of 689–778 °C and 313 MPa–454 MPa, while the melt H2O content and oxygen fugacity are 8.61–11.1 wt% and −22.58–−14.48, respectively. These geochemical signatures indicate that the granites are highly fractionated I-type granites with extensive fractional crystallization of various minerals like plagioclase, K-feldspar, and apatite, etc. From the Late Jurassic to the Early Cretaceous, the subduction and rollback of the Paleo-Pacific Ocean plate resulted in extensional tectonic environments in eastern China. Asthenospheric upwelling and lower crustal melting generated parental magmas, wherein progressive fractional crystallization during ascent concentrated ore-forming elements and volatiles within residual melts. This process played a key role in the formation of the Chamuhan deposit, exemplifying the metallogenic potential of highly evolved granitic systems in the SGXR. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Igneous Rocks and Related Mineral Deposits)
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23 pages, 12646 KB  
Article
Titanite Textures, U-Pb Dating, Chemistry, and In Situ Nd Isotopes of the Lalingzaohuo Mafic Magmatic Enclaves and Host Granodiorites in the East Kunlun Orogen Belt: Insights into Magma Mixing Processes
by Zisong Zhao, Bingzhang Wang, Shengwei Wu and Jiqing Li
Minerals 2025, 15(9), 886; https://doi.org/10.3390/min15090886 - 22 Aug 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1079
Abstract
Widespread Triassic granitic magmatism is archived in the East Kunlun Orogen Belt (EKOB) of Northern Qinghai–Tibet Plateau. Mafic magmatic enclaves (MMEs), commonly hosted in these plutons, are generally interpreted as products of magma mixing; however, the specific magmatic processes remain poorly understood. In [...] Read more.
Widespread Triassic granitic magmatism is archived in the East Kunlun Orogen Belt (EKOB) of Northern Qinghai–Tibet Plateau. Mafic magmatic enclaves (MMEs), commonly hosted in these plutons, are generally interpreted as products of magma mixing; however, the specific magmatic processes remain poorly understood. In this study, we present new data on the complex zoning patterns, in situ U–Pb ages, trace element compositions, and Nd isotopic characteristics of titanite grains from the MMEs and host granodiorite of Laningzaohuo Zhongyou pluton. Whole-rock geochemical data indicate that the pluton is composed of volcanic arc-related, calc-alkaline, metaluminous I-type granodiorite. Titanite in the MMEs and the granodiorite yield similar U–Pb ages of ~244 Ma but display distinct textural and compositional features. Titanite from the granodiorite is typically euhedral, characterized by magmatic core and mantle with deuteric rim, and exhibits sector and fir-tree zoning in the core. In contrast, titanite from the MMEs is generally anhedral, also showing magmatic core and mantle as well as deuteric rims, but exhibits oscillatory zoning and incomplete sector and fir-tree zoning in the core. Titanite cores in the MMEs have εNd(t) ranging from −2.5 to −3.4, comparable to those of the coeval gabbro and MMEs elsewhere in the EKOB. These cores also show higher LREE/HREE ratios compared to titanite cores in the granodiorite, suggesting crystallization from mixed magmas with greater contributions from enriched lithospheric mantle sources. Titanite mantles in the MMEs yield εNd(t) of −4.0 to −4.8, slightly lower than the cores in the MMEs but higher than those of titanite cores and mantles in the granodiorite (−4.6 to −5.5). The mantle can be interpreted as crystallized from mixed magmas with less mafic components. Titanite rims in the MMEs have εNd(t) of −5.0 to −5.7, identical to those in the granodiorite, and have REE concentrations and Th/U and Nb/Ta ratios consistent with the titanite rims in the granodiorite, clearly indicative of crystallization from evolved, hydrated, granodioritic magmas. Plagioclase in the MMEs exhibits disequilibrium textures such as sieve texture and reverse zoning, with An36–66, contrasting with the more uniform An contents (An35–37) in the granodiorite. This suggests that plagioclase in the MMEs crystallized in an environment influenced by both mafic and felsic magmas. Amphibole thermobarometry indicates that amphibole in the MMEs crystallized at ~788 °C and ~295 MPa, slightly higher than the crystallization conditions in the granodiorite (~778 °C and ~259 MPa). We thus propose that the chemical and textural differences between titanite in the MMEs and granodiorite suggest that the MMEs formed within a mushy hybrid layer generated by injection of upwelling basaltic magma into a pre-existing granitic magma chamber. Titanite cores and mantles in the MMEs likely crystallized from variably mixed magmas. They subsequently underwent resorption and disequilibrium growth within the hybrid layer, and were eventually overgrown by rims formed from evolved interstitial granitic melts within the mushy enclaves. These findings demonstrate that the complex zoning and geochemical titanite in the MMEs provide valuable insights into magma mixing processes. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Mineral Geochemistry and Geochronology)
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25 pages, 3819 KB  
Article
Evolution of Mafic Tungnárhraun Lavas: Transcrustal Magma Storage and Ascent Beneath the Bárðarbunga Volcanic System
by Tanya Furman, Denali Kincaid and Collin Oborn Brady
Minerals 2025, 15(7), 687; https://doi.org/10.3390/min15070687 - 27 Jun 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1114
Abstract
The Tungnárhraun basalts in southern Iceland record a transcrustal magma system formed during Holocene deglaciation. These large-volume (>1 km3) Early through Mid-Holocene lavas contain ubiquitous plagioclase feldspar macrocrysts that are too primitive to have grown from the host lavas. Thermobarometry based [...] Read more.
The Tungnárhraun basalts in southern Iceland record a transcrustal magma system formed during Holocene deglaciation. These large-volume (>1 km3) Early through Mid-Holocene lavas contain ubiquitous plagioclase feldspar macrocrysts that are too primitive to have grown from the host lavas. Thermobarometry based on plagioclase melt and clinopyroxene melt equilibrium reveals a transcrustal structure with at least three distinct storage regions. A lower-crustal mush zone at ~14–30 km is fed by primitive, low 87Sr/86Sr magmas with diverse Ti/K and Al/Ti signatures. Plagioclase feldspar growth is controlled by an experimentally determined pseudoazeotrope where crystals develop inversely correlated An and Mg contents. The rapid ascent of magmas to mid-crustal levels (~8–9 km) allows the feldspar system to revert to conventional thermodynamic phase constraints. Continued plagioclase growth releases heat, causing olivine and pyroxene to be resorbed and giving the magmas their characteristic high CaO/Al2O3 values (~0.8–1.0) and Sc contents (~52 ppm in matrix material). Mid-Holocene MgO-rich lavas with abundant plagioclase feldspar macrocrysts erupted directly from this depth, but both older and younger magmas ascended to a shallow-crustal storage chamber (~5 km) where they crystallized olivine, clinopyroxene, and plagioclase feldspar and evolved to lower MgO contents. The Sr isotope differences between the plagioclase macrocrysts and their carrier melts suggest that the fractionation involves the minor assimilation of country rock. This model does not require the physical disruption of an established and long-lived gabbroic cumulate mush. The transcrustal structures documented here existed in south Iceland at least throughout the Holocene and likely influenced much of Icelandic magmatism. Full article
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44 pages, 10740 KB  
Article
Fluid Evolution in the Bundelkhand Granite, North Central India: Implications for Hydrothermal Activities in the Bundelkhand Craton
by Duttanjali Rout, Jayanta K. Pati, Terrence P. Mernagh and Mruganka K. Panigrahi
Minerals 2025, 15(6), 579; https://doi.org/10.3390/min15060579 - 29 May 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1651
Abstract
The Bundelkhand granite (BG) constitutes the bulk of the granitoid complex in the Bundelkhand Craton and preserves imprints of its evolution from the magmatic to a protracted hydrothermal stage as deduced from the petrography. In order to reconstruct such a path of evolution [...] Read more.
The Bundelkhand granite (BG) constitutes the bulk of the granitoid complex in the Bundelkhand Craton and preserves imprints of its evolution from the magmatic to a protracted hydrothermal stage as deduced from the petrography. In order to reconstruct such a path of evolution in this study, thermobarometric calculations were attempted on the mineral chemistry of the major (hornblende, plagioclase, biotite) and minor (epidote, apatite) magmatic phases. They yielded magmatic temperatures and pressures (in excess of 700 °C and ~5 kbar), although not consistently, and indicate mid-crustal conditions at the onset of crystallization. Temperatures in the hydrothermal regime within the BG are better constrained by the chemistry of the chlorite and epidote minerals (340 to 160 °C) that conform with the ranges of homogenization temperatures of aqueous–biphase inclusions in matrix quartz in the BG and subordinate quartz veins. These reconstructions indicate that fluid within the BG evolved down to lower temperatures and towards the deposition of quartz and, more importantly, bears a striking similarity to the temperature–salinity characteristics of fluid in the giant quartz reef system. Scanty mixed aqueous–carbonic inclusions in the BG are indicative of the CO2-poor nature of the BG magma and the exsolution of CO2 at lower pressure (~2.6 kbar). The dominant mechanism of fluid evolution in the BG appears to be the incursion of meteoric fluid, which caused fluid dilution. Laser Raman microspectrometry reveals many types of solid phases in aqueous–carbonic inclusions in the BG domain. The occurrence of unusual, effervescent-type inclusions, though infrequent, bears a striking similarity to that reported in the giant quartz reef domain. Thus, the highlight of the present work is the convincing fluid inclusion evidence that genetically links the BG with the giant quartz reef system, although many cited discrepancies arise from the radiometric dates. We visualize the episodic release of silica-transporting fluid to the major fracture system (now occupied by the giant reef) from the BG, thus making the fluid in the two domains virtually indistinguishable. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Mineral Geochemistry and Geochronology)
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26 pages, 8922 KB  
Article
Comparative Study of Sulfides from Porphyry, Skarn, and Carbonate-Replacement Mineralization at the Recsk Porphyry-Mineralized Complex, Hungary
by Máté Biró, Johann G. Raith, Monika Feichter, Máté Hencz, Gabriella B. Kiss, Attila Virág and Ferenc Molnár
Minerals 2024, 14(9), 956; https://doi.org/10.3390/min14090956 - 21 Sep 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2204
Abstract
A calc–alkaline dioritic–andesitic–dacitic intrusive–volcanic complex of Early Oligocene (30 Ma) age and its Mesozoic sedimentary basement at Recsk host a well-preserved porphyry–skarn–polymetallic carbonate-replacement–epithermal mineral system. The unique occurrence offers an exceptional possibility to study these related mineralization types at a single locality. This [...] Read more.
A calc–alkaline dioritic–andesitic–dacitic intrusive–volcanic complex of Early Oligocene (30 Ma) age and its Mesozoic sedimentary basement at Recsk host a well-preserved porphyry–skarn–polymetallic carbonate-replacement–epithermal mineral system. The unique occurrence offers an exceptional possibility to study these related mineralization types at a single locality. This study presents the textural–paragenetic, compositional characteristics, and systematics of sulfide mineral assemblages for the porphyry, skarn, and carbonate-replacement ore types, which are currently situated at a depth of 500–1200 m below the present surface. Detailed petrography combined with EPMA analyses of molybdenite, galena, sphalerite, tetrahedrite-group minerals and Bi-bearing sulfosalts allows for the establishment of characteristic mineral and chemical fingerprints for each mineralization type. Rhenium concentration in molybdenite, occurring as rare disseminations and quartz–carbonate veinlets in altered host rocks in all three mineralization types, shows a decreasing trend towards the more distal mineralization types. High Re contents (x¯ = 1.04 wt.%, max. up to 4.47 wt%) are typical for molybdenite from the porphyry mineralization, but Re is not homogeneously distributed, neither within individual molybdenite crystals nor on a mineralization scale. Copper and Se show opposite behavior in molybdenite, both becoming enriched in the more distal mineralization types. Silver, Bi, and Se concentrations increase in galena and tetrahedrite-group minerals, both towards the country rocks, making them the best candidates for vectoring within the whole hydrothermal system. For tetrahedrite-group minerals, Ag, Bi, Se, together with Sb and Zn, are the suitable elements for fingerprinting; all these are significantly enriched in the distal carbonate-replacement mineralization compared to the other, more proximal ore types. Additionally, further trends can be traced within the composition of sulfosalts. Lead-bearing Bi sulfosalts preferentially occur in the polymetallic carbonate-replacement veins, while being under-represented in the skarn and porphyry mineralization. Porphyry mineralization hosts Cu-bearing Bi sulfosalts dominantly, while skarn is characterized by Bi-dominated sulfosalts. Sphalerite, although present in all mineralization types, cannot be used for fingerprinting, vectoring, or thermobarometry based on EPMA measurements only. Trace element contents of sphalerite are low, often below the detection limits of the analyses. This is further complicated by the intense “chalcopyrite disease” occurring throughout the distal mineralization types. All the above-listed major, minor, and trace element ore mineral characteristics enable the characterization of the Recsk ores by mineral geochemical fingerprints, providing a possible vectoring tool in porphyry Cu–(Mo)–Au-mineralized systems. Full article
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29 pages, 36117 KB  
Article
Mineralogical Constraints on the Pressure–Temperature Evolution of Granulites in the Bunger Hills, East Antarctica
by Ilnur A. Abdrakhmanov, Yuri L. Gulbin, Sergey G. Skublov and Olga L. Galankina
Minerals 2024, 14(5), 488; https://doi.org/10.3390/min14050488 - 4 May 2024
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 2642
Abstract
Spinel- and orthopyroxene-bearing metapelitic granulites exposed in the Bunger Hills, East Antarctica, have been intensively studied in recent years because they are supposed to record evidence for UHT metamorphism. Detailed petrographic observations, as well as whole rock and mineral chemistry, together with SIMS [...] Read more.
Spinel- and orthopyroxene-bearing metapelitic granulites exposed in the Bunger Hills, East Antarctica, have been intensively studied in recent years because they are supposed to record evidence for UHT metamorphism. Detailed petrographic observations, as well as whole rock and mineral chemistry, together with SIMS trace element data on quartz, garnet, and orthopyroxene, are presented for these rocks. Mineral thermobarometry, including Al-in-orthopyroxene, ternary feldspar, Ti-in-quartz, and Fe-Ti oxide solvus, has been used to quantify the UHT conditions. Based on phase equilibrium modeling, a tight clockwise P-T path has been deduced, which involves near-isobaric heating at 6–7 kbar to ~950 °C followed by near-isobaric to slightly up-pressure cooling at 5–6 kbar to ~750 °C. It is concluded that the outlined metamorphic history is characteristic of an extensional crustal regime which is also evidenced by the correlation of prograde and retrograde metamorphism with the extensional and compressional phases of major ductile deformations recognized in the region. In order to constrain the tectonic setting of the granulites, this result is discussed in the context of current views on the Mesoproterozoic evolution of the Albany-Fraser Orogen, the westernmost part of which the Bunger Hills are considered to be. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Mineral Deposits)
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21 pages, 13868 KB  
Article
Electron Probe Micro-Analyzer Studies and Raman Spectroscopic Characterization of Plagioclase in Basaltic Rocks from the Asal–Ghoubbet Area, Republic of Djibouti
by Awaleh Djama Iltireh and Yusuf Kağan Kadioğlu
Minerals 2024, 14(3), 216; https://doi.org/10.3390/min14030216 - 21 Feb 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2065
Abstract
The Asal–Ghoubbet Rift area comprises basaltic rocks with similar compositions that were formed by volcanic eruptions. To gain insight into the magmatic processes of these volcanic formations, we investigated the mineral chemistry of plagioclase macrocrysts and microcrysts found in the basaltic rocks by [...] Read more.
The Asal–Ghoubbet Rift area comprises basaltic rocks with similar compositions that were formed by volcanic eruptions. To gain insight into the magmatic processes of these volcanic formations, we investigated the mineral chemistry of plagioclase macrocrysts and microcrysts found in the basaltic rocks by using an electron probe micro-analyzer (EPMA). These basaltic rocks contain olivine, pyroxene, euhedral plagioclase macrocrysts, and euhedral to subhedral plagioclase microcrysts. These plagioclase macrocrysts reach up to 4 cm in length in the form of giant crystals as plagioclase ultraphyric basalts (PUBs). They have a mineral composition varying from bytownite to labradorite with anorthite content ranging from An53 to An86. Also, the microcrysts of all these volcanic rocks are characterized by labradorite and andesine compositions with An22–80. According to the calculated plagioclase thermobarometry, the crystallization temperature of the plagioclase macrocrysts and microcrysts is 1082 to 1216 °C and 1072 to 1203 °C, respectively, and the pressure is 3.92 to 14.51 kbar for the macrocrysts and 2.99 to 14.84 kbar for the microcrysts. Based on these thermobarometry results for the plagioclases, we conclude that the volcanic formations located in the Asal–Ghoubbet area would have come from different eruptions from a single magmatic chamber. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Mineral Geochemistry and Geochronology)
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19 pages, 10995 KB  
Article
Iron–Titanium Oxide–Apatite–Sulfide–Sulfate Microinclusions in Gabbro and Adakite from the Russian Far East Indicate Possible Magmatic Links to Iron Oxide–Apatite and Iron Oxide–Copper–Gold Deposits
by Pavel Kepezhinskas, Nikolai Berdnikov, Valeria Krutikova and Nadezhda Kozhemyako
Minerals 2024, 14(2), 188; https://doi.org/10.3390/min14020188 - 11 Feb 2024
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 2626
Abstract
Mesozoic gabbro from the Stanovoy convergent margin and adakitic dacite lava from the Pliocene–Quaternary Bakening volcano in Kamchatka contain iron–titanium oxide–apatite–sulfide–sulfate (ITOASS) microinclusions along with abundant isolated iron–titanium minerals, sulfides and halides of base and precious metals. Iron–titanium minerals include magnetite, ilmenite and [...] Read more.
Mesozoic gabbro from the Stanovoy convergent margin and adakitic dacite lava from the Pliocene–Quaternary Bakening volcano in Kamchatka contain iron–titanium oxide–apatite–sulfide–sulfate (ITOASS) microinclusions along with abundant isolated iron–titanium minerals, sulfides and halides of base and precious metals. Iron–titanium minerals include magnetite, ilmenite and rutile; sulfides include chalcopyrite, pyrite and pyrrhotite; sulfates are represented by barite; and halides are predominantly composed of copper and silver chlorides. Apatite in both gabbro and adakitic dacite frequently contains elevated chlorine concentrations (up to 1.7 wt.%). Mineral thermobarometry suggests that the ITOASS microinclusions and associated Fe-Ti minerals and sulfides crystallized from subduction-related metal-rich melts in mid-crustal magmatic conduits at depths of 10 to 20 km below the surface under almost neutral redox conditions (from the unit below to the unit above the QFM buffer). The ITOASS microinclusions in gabbro and adakite from the Russian Far East provide possible magmatic links to iron oxide–apatite (IOA) and iron oxide–copper–gold (IOCG) deposits and offer valuable insights into the early magmatic (pre-metasomatic) evolution of the IOA and ICOG mineralized systems in paleo-subduction- and collision-related geodynamic environments. Full article
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22 pages, 18898 KB  
Article
Metamorphic Ages and PT Conditions of Amphibolites in the Diebusige and Bayanwulashan Complexes of the Alxa Block, North China Craton
by Feng Zhou, Longlong Gou, Xiaofei Xu and Zhibo Tian
Minerals 2023, 13(11), 1426; https://doi.org/10.3390/min13111426 - 9 Nov 2023
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 2443
Abstract
The metamorphism and geological significance of amphibolites in the Diebusige and Bayanwulashan Complexes of the eastern Alxa Block, North China Craton, were poorly understood until now. This study presents the results of petrology, laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) zircon U–Pb [...] Read more.
The metamorphism and geological significance of amphibolites in the Diebusige and Bayanwulashan Complexes of the eastern Alxa Block, North China Craton, were poorly understood until now. This study presents the results of petrology, laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) zircon U–Pb analysis, phase equilibrium modeling and geothermobarometry for these rocks. The peak mineral assemblage of clinopyroxene + hornblende + plagioclase + K-feldspar + ilmenite + quartz + melt is inferred for amphibolite sample ALS2164 in the Diebusige Complex. Correspondingly, the peak mineral assemblage of clinopyroxene + hornblende + plagioclase ± K-feldspar + ilmenite + quartz + melt is identified for amphibolite sample ALS2191 in the Bayanwulshan Complex. Phase equilibrium modelling constrained the peak metamorphic condition of amphibolite sample ALS2164 in the Diebusige Complex to be 825–910 °C/7.2–10.8 kbar, which is similar to that (800–870 °C/7.0–10.7 kbar) of amphibolite sample ALS2191 in the Bayanwulashan Complex. Hbl–pl–qz thermobarometry yielded the metamorphic PT conditions of 732–810 °C/3.0–6.7 kbar for these amphibolites, which are consistent with the average temperatures of 763 °C, 768 °C and 780 °C calculated by Ti-zircon thermometry. As a result, phase equilibrium modelling yielded wide PT condition ranges of 800–910 °C/7.0–10.8 kbar, the lower limit of which is consistent with the upper limit of estimates by the hbl–pl–qz thermobarometer. In addition, LA-ICP-MS U–Pb analysis on metamorphic zircons yielded weighted mean 207Pb/206Pb ages of 1901 ± 22–1817 ± 21 Ma, which represent the timing of amphibolite-facies metamorphism. As a whole, the PT estimates display a high geothermal gradient, which is consistent with coeval ultrahigh-temperature metamorphism and associated mantle-derived mafic-ultramafic rocks in the Diebusige Complex. Combing this information with the previously published data from the Diebusige Complex, an extensional setting after continental collision is inferred for the eastern Alxa Block during the late Paleoproterozoic. The HREE enrichment patterns of metamorphic zircons from the amphibolites in this study are in agreement with that these amphibolites formed at relatively shallower crust than the garnet-bearing mafic granulites in the Diebusige Complex. Full article
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16 pages, 7228 KB  
Review
Amp-TB2 Protocol and Its Application to Amphiboles from Recent, Historical and Pre-Historical Eruptions of the Bezymianny Volcano, Kamchatka
by Filippo Ridolfi, Renat R. Almeev, Alexey Yu Ozerov and Francois Holtz
Minerals 2023, 13(11), 1394; https://doi.org/10.3390/min13111394 - 30 Oct 2023
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 1927
Abstract
This article reports a protocol on the application of Amp-TB2 (single-amphibole thermobarometry) based on detailed electron-microprobe analyses performed on homogeneous natural standards and synthetic glasses, and amphibole crystals (mostly phenocrysts) of volcanic products erupted by the Bezymianny volcano during its activity through time. [...] Read more.
This article reports a protocol on the application of Amp-TB2 (single-amphibole thermobarometry) based on detailed electron-microprobe analyses performed on homogeneous natural standards and synthetic glasses, and amphibole crystals (mostly phenocrysts) of volcanic products erupted by the Bezymianny volcano during its activity through time. The application of this protocol is facilitated by a new version of the model (Amp-TB2.1.xlsx) including an equation to identify heterogeneous domains (disequilibrium; not suitable for thermobarometric constraints) and homogenous (equilibrium) zones within amphibole crystals, which can be used to quantify the physicochemical parameters (i.e., pressure, P; temperature, T; volatile content in the melt, H2Omelt; oxygen fugacity, fO2) of “steady-state” magmatic crystallization. Application examples of the protocol, showing detailed core–rim microprobe data and physicochemical parameter variations in representative amphibole phenocrysts of the Bezymianny are also reported. The depth (and P) estimated by Amp-TB2.1 for this volcano are compared to seismic tomography results. Amp-TB2.1 results mainly show (1) that the Bezymianny is characterized by a very dynamic feeding system where the magma is stored at shallow crustal levels before recent activity periods characterized by climatic events and (2) that the pre-eruptive depth of magma storage generally increases with the age of the investigated products. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Mineral Exploration Methods and Applications)
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50 pages, 11165 KB  
Article
Vein Formation and Reopening in a Cooling Yet Intermittently Pressurized Hydrothermal System: The Single-Intrusion Tongchang Porphyry Cu Deposit
by Xuan Liu, Antonin Richard, Jacques Pironon and Brian G. Rusk
Geosciences 2023, 13(4), 107; https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences13040107 - 1 Apr 2023
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 6743
Abstract
Porphyry deposits are the dominant sources of copper and major sources of several base and precious metals. They are commonly formed via the repeated emplacement of hydrous magmas and associated fluid exsolution. As a result, mineralized hydrothermal veins may undergo multiple deposition and [...] Read more.
Porphyry deposits are the dominant sources of copper and major sources of several base and precious metals. They are commonly formed via the repeated emplacement of hydrous magmas and associated fluid exsolution. As a result, mineralized hydrothermal veins may undergo multiple deposition and reopening processes that are not fully accounted for by existing fluid models. The Tongchang porphyry Cu deposit is a rare example of being related to a single intrusion. The simplicity in intrusive history provides an ideal starting point for studying fluid processes in more complex multi-intrusion porphyry systems. Detailed scanning electron microscope (SEM) cathodoluminescence imaging (CL) revealed rich microtextures in quartz and anhydrite that point to a fluid timeline encompassing early quartz deposition followed by fluid-aided dynamic recrystallization, which was succeeded by an intermediate stage of quartz dissolution and subsequent deposition, and ended with a late stage of continuous quartz deposition, brecciation, and fracturing. Vein reopening is more common than expected. Fifteen out of seventeen examined vein samples contained quartz and/or anhydrite that was older or younger than the vein age defined by vein sequences. Thermobarometry and solubility analysis suggests that the fluid events occurred in a general cooling path (from 650 °C to 250 °C), interspersed with two episodes of fluid pressurization. The first episode occurred at high-T (>500 °C), under lithostatic conditions alongside dynamic recrystallization, whereas the second one took place at a lower temperature (~400 °C), under lithostatic to hydrostatic transition conditions. The main episode of chalcopyrite veining took place subsequent to the second overpressure episode at temperatures of 380–300 °C. The results of this study reaffirm that thermal and hydraulic conditions are the main causative factors for vein reopening and growth in porphyry deposits. Full article
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25 pages, 20567 KB  
Article
Tectonometamorphic Evolution of the Migmatitic Paragneisses of the Filali Unit (Internal Rif, Morocco)
by Abdelkhaleq Afiri, Abderrahim Essaifi, Ali Charroud, Mourad Aqnouy, Kamal Abdelrahman, Amar Alali and Mohamed Abioui
Minerals 2023, 13(4), 484; https://doi.org/10.3390/min13040484 - 30 Mar 2023
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 3319
Abstract
A lithosphere-scale extensional shear zone juxtaposes an underlying sub-continental peridotite body and overlying migmatitic paragneisses of the Filali unit in the Beni Bousera massif (Internal Rif, Morocco). Three stages are recognized in the metamorphic evolution of the aluminous paragneiss, marked by the chemical [...] Read more.
A lithosphere-scale extensional shear zone juxtaposes an underlying sub-continental peridotite body and overlying migmatitic paragneisses of the Filali unit in the Beni Bousera massif (Internal Rif, Morocco). Three stages are recognized in the metamorphic evolution of the aluminous paragneiss, marked by the chemical zoning of garnet porphyroblasts and the evolution of associated mineral assemblages characterized by the presence of kyanite and rutile (M1), sillimanite, k-feldspar and melt (M2), and cordierite (M3). Phase-equilibrium modeling (pseudosections) and multi-equilibrium thermobarometry point to P-T conditions of 7 kbar 750 °C and 3.5 kbar 685 °C for the M2 and M3 stages, respectively. M1 conditions of 9.3 kbar 660 °C were inferred using modeling after the reintegration of melt lost during M2 into the bulk composition. Published geochronological data suggest a Variscan age (250–340 Ma) for the M1 event, whereas M2 and M3 are Oligo-Miocene and related to the Alpine orogeny. The recorded sub-isothermal decompression is related to significant crustal attenuation in the Oligo-Miocene and is responsible for the juxtaposition of the hot asthenospheric mantle and the crustal units, causing the melting of the paragneiss. The exhumation of the gneisses by crustal extension is associated with the westward retreat of an Alpine subduction (slab rollback). Full article
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18 pages, 7947 KB  
Article
Thermobarometry of the Rajmahal Continental Flood Basalts and Their Primary Magmas: Implications for the Magmatic Plumbing System
by Nilanjan Chatterjee and Naresh C. Ghose
Minerals 2023, 13(3), 426; https://doi.org/10.3390/min13030426 - 17 Mar 2023
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 3441
Abstract
The Late Aptian Rajmahal Traps originated through Kerguelen-Plume-related volcanism at the eastern margin of the Indian Shield. Clinopyroxene and whole-rock thermobarometry reveals that the Rajmahal magmas crystallized at P-T conditions of ≤~5 kbar/~1100–1200 °C. These pressures correspond to upper crustal depths (≤~19 km). [...] Read more.
The Late Aptian Rajmahal Traps originated through Kerguelen-Plume-related volcanism at the eastern margin of the Indian Shield. Clinopyroxene and whole-rock thermobarometry reveals that the Rajmahal magmas crystallized at P-T conditions of ≤~5 kbar/~1100–1200 °C. These pressures correspond to upper crustal depths (≤~19 km). Modeling shows that the Rajmahal primary magmas were last in equilibrium with mantle at P-T conditions of ~9 kbar/~1280 °C. The corresponding depths (~33 km) are consistent with gravity data that indicate a high-density layer at lower crustal depths below an upwarped Moho. Thus, the high-density layer probably represents anomalous mantle. It is likely that the mantle-derived magmas accumulated below the upwarped Moho and were subsequently transported via trans-crustal faults/fractures to the upper crust where they evolved by fractional crystallization in small staging chambers before eruption. In the lower part of the Rajmahal plumbing system, buoyant melts from the Kerguelen Plume may have moved laterally and upward along the base of the lithosphere to accumulate and erode the eastern Indian lithospheric root. The Rajmahal plumbing system was probably shaped by tectonic forces related to the breakup of Gondwana. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Large Igneous Provinces: Research Frontiers)
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27 pages, 22087 KB  
Article
Early Mylonitization in the Nevado-Filábride Complex (Betic Cordillera) during the High-Pressure Episode: Petrological, Geochemical and Thermobarometric Data
by Ángel Santamaría-López, Isabel Abad, Fernando Nieto and Carlos Sanz de Galdeano
Minerals 2023, 13(1), 24; https://doi.org/10.3390/min13010024 - 23 Dec 2022
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2658
Abstract
In the western part of the Sierra de los Filabres area, there are fine-grained metamorphic rock bands, showing a field aspect simitar to slates, as previously described in the geological literature of the studied region. They are variable in thickness, from millimeters to [...] Read more.
In the western part of the Sierra de los Filabres area, there are fine-grained metamorphic rock bands, showing a field aspect simitar to slates, as previously described in the geological literature of the studied region. They are variable in thickness, from millimeters to tens of meters and appear intercalated in the schist succession. The geochemical resemblance between both types of rocks (major, minor and trace elements), determined by a statistical approach and the comparison of depositional condition indices, points to a similar sedimentary origin of the protolith but different clay content. Mineral facies and illite “crystallinity” indices in the so-called slates indicate that they followed the same metamorphic path and reached the same metamorphic grade than schists. According to compositional zoning detected in micas and garnets present in both lithologies and the P-T conditions deduced from garnets, the mineral nucleation and growth episode of the main mineral paragenesis in these fine-grained schists was more remarkable during the high-pressure event, with a no significant effect of the latter low-pressure–high-temperature episode. In contrast, the coarse-grained schists developed higher size minerals during the low-pressure–high-temperature episode. A differential mylonitization process during the metamorphism is proposed to justify the discrepant field appearance and the contrasting response of both types of metapelitic rocks to the latter metamorphic event. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Mineral Geochemistry and Geochronology)
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