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41 pages, 7932 KiB  
Article
Element Mobility in a Metasomatic System with IOCG Mineralization Metamorphosed at Granulite Facies: The Bondy Gneiss Complex, Grenville Province, Canada
by Olivier Blein and Louise Corriveau
Minerals 2025, 15(8), 803; https://doi.org/10.3390/min15080803 - 30 Jul 2025
Viewed by 155
Abstract
In the absence of appropriate tools and a knowledge base for exploring high-grade metamorphic terrains, felsic gneiss complexes at granulite facies have long been considered barren and have remained undermapped and understudied. This was the case of the Bondy gneiss complex in the [...] Read more.
In the absence of appropriate tools and a knowledge base for exploring high-grade metamorphic terrains, felsic gneiss complexes at granulite facies have long been considered barren and have remained undermapped and understudied. This was the case of the Bondy gneiss complex in the southwestern Grenville Province of Canada which consists of 1.39–1.35 Ga volcanic and plutonic rocks metamorphosed under granulite facies conditions at 1.19 Ga. Iron oxide–apatite and Cu-Ag-Au mineral occurrences occur among gneisses rich in biotite, cordierite, garnet, K-feldspar, orthopyroxene and/or sillimanite-rich gneisses, plagioclase-cordierite-orthopyroxene white gneisses, magnetite-garnet-rich gneisses, garnetites, hyperaluminous sillimanite-pyrite-quartz gneisses, phlogopite-sillimanite gneisses, and tourmalinites. Petrological and geochemical studies indicate that the precursors of these gneisses are altered volcanic and volcaniclastic rocks with attributes of pre-metamorphic Na, Ca-Fe, K-Fe, K, chloritic, argillic, phyllic, advanced argillic and skarn alteration. The nature of these hydrothermal rocks and the ore deposit model that best represents them are further investigated herein through lithogeochemistry. The lithofacies mineralized in Cu (±Au, Ag, Zn) are distinguished by the presence of garnet, magnetite and zircon, and exhibit pronounced enrichment in Fe, Mg, HREE and Zr relative to the least-altered rocks. In discrimination diagrams, the metamorphosed mineral system is demonstrated to exhibit the diagnostic attributes of, and is interpreted as, a metasomatic iron and alkali-calcic (MIAC) mineral system with iron oxide–apatite (IOA) and iron oxide copper–gold (IOCG) mineralization that evolves toward an epithermal cap. This contribution demonstrates that alteration facies diagnostic of MIAC systems and their IOCG and IOA mineralization remain diagnostic even after high-grade metamorphism. Exploration strategies can thus use the lithogeochemical footprint and the distribution and types of alteration facies observed as pathfinders for the facies-specific deposit types of MIAC systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Mineral Deposits)
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13 pages, 5528 KiB  
Article
Petrogenesis of the Large-Scale Serpentinites in the Kumishi Ophiolitic Mélange, Southwestern Tianshan, China
by Limin Gao, Wenjiao Xiao and Zhou Tan
Minerals 2025, 15(3), 229; https://doi.org/10.3390/min15030229 - 25 Feb 2025
Viewed by 435
Abstract
The Kumishi ophiolitic mélange contains well-preserved large-scale serpentinites and their accompanying granulites in the eastern South Tianshan Accretionary Complex (STAC), southwestern Altaids. Previous studies have mainly focused on the thermodynamic conditions and tectonic setting of granulites. However, the petrogenesis of the widespread serpentinites [...] Read more.
The Kumishi ophiolitic mélange contains well-preserved large-scale serpentinites and their accompanying granulites in the eastern South Tianshan Accretionary Complex (STAC), southwestern Altaids. Previous studies have mainly focused on the thermodynamic conditions and tectonic setting of granulites. However, the petrogenesis of the widespread serpentinites in the Kumishi ophiolitic mélange remains largely unexplored. In this paper, petrological, geochemical, and geochronological studies were carried out on the Kumishi serpentinites, as well as the host sediment and intermediate–felsic volcanic rocks. The serpentinites show variable LOI values of 8.3–16.5 wt% and relatively consistent SiO2/(sum oxides) ratios of 0.81, which demonstrate that the major elements of their protoliths have been preserved well during serpentinization. Multi-trace element and REE diagrams suggest that the protoliths of the Kumishi serpentinites have experienced varying degrees of refertilization, with distinct natures seen between the Yushugou, Tonghuashan, and Liuhuangshan serpentinites. Zircon U-Pb chronology of the Tonghuahsan serpentinites yields a mean age of 355.8 ± 7.3 Ma (MSWD = 1.0, N = 26). Detrital zircons from the host sediment record a maximum depositional age of 375 ± 10 Ma (MSWD = 0.4, N = 3), with a peak at ca.419 Ma. Subduction-related volcanic rocks yield ages of ca.437 Ma. Hence, clues are provided to the petrogenesis of the Kumishi serpentinites, with calls for future in-depth works from an isotopic perspective. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Mineral Geochemistry and Geochronology)
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12 pages, 4782 KiB  
Article
Modeling Shapes of Coarse Particles for DEM Simulations Using Polyhedral Meta-Particles
by Felipe de A. Costa, Gabriel K. P. Barrios, Alan P. Fidalgo, Alan A. Arruda Tino and Luís Marcelo Tavares
Minerals 2025, 15(2), 103; https://doi.org/10.3390/min15020103 - 22 Jan 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1491
Abstract
Particles of selected materials, namely granulite quarry rock and itabirite iron ore, have been characterized regarding their shapes using reconstruction from 2D images and 3D laser scanning. Different levels of simplifications of particle geometry were initially proposed, with optimal fit-for-purpose shapes represented by [...] Read more.
Particles of selected materials, namely granulite quarry rock and itabirite iron ore, have been characterized regarding their shapes using reconstruction from 2D images and 3D laser scanning. Different levels of simplifications of particle geometry were initially proposed, with optimal fit-for-purpose shapes represented by polyhedral meta-particles containing 41 to 90 faces. From the distribution of aspect ratios, a total of 16 groups of shapes have been created. Preliminary validation of the shapes modeled was carried out by comparing bulk density measurements from simulations and experiments for granulite, resulting in very good agreement between the two. Further validation was then carried out by comparison of experiments for a gneiss rock and another itabirite sample to simulations, with good agreement between both. This database provides suitable representation of ore/rock shapes for DEM simulations in the software Rocky. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Process Modelling and Applications for Aggregate Production)
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27 pages, 14083 KiB  
Article
Fastening in Rock Mass—Structural Design of Shallow Embedded Anchors in Inhomogeneous Substrate
by Stefan Lamplmair-Irsigler, Oliver Zeman, Elisabeth Stierschneider and Klaus Voit
Materials 2024, 17(24), 6044; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17246044 - 10 Dec 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 738
Abstract
Unlike traditional base materials such as concrete or masonry, there are no guidelines for rock as a base material for post-installed anchors. The varying rock properties (e.g., rock type, discontinuities) and numerous installation parameters (e.g., embedment depth, anchor diameter) leave engineers with limited [...] Read more.
Unlike traditional base materials such as concrete or masonry, there are no guidelines for rock as a base material for post-installed anchors. The varying rock properties (e.g., rock type, discontinuities) and numerous installation parameters (e.g., embedment depth, anchor diameter) leave engineers with limited information on design resistances, leading to an uncertain basis for anchor applications in rock. To identify the key parameters that determine rock as a base material, an evaluation of rock characteristics was conducted, combined with in situ pull-out tests in different key geologies (granite, limestone, mica schist, dolomite, granulite) and discrete element modeling, which has been found to be suitable for investigating the load-bearing behavior of post-installed anchors in rock. Discontinuities were identified as the main factor influencing the load-bearing capacity of post-installed anchors in rock mass. Based on the in situ investigations, assessment methods for rock as a base material were proposed, along with corresponding resistance partial safety factors for design of 2.5, 2.0, and 1.7 for high, medium, and low levels of uncertainty regarding possible inhomogeneities. A limit value R ≥ 36, associated with rebound hammer assessments, was defined for the low degree of uncertainty, showing limitations for schistose rock. This is concluded by a design approach for determining design resistances of shallow fasteners in rock mass. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Rock-Like Material Characterization and Engineering Properties)
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13 pages, 23345 KiB  
Article
Clinopyroxenite-Wehrlite Porya Guba Complex with Fe-Ti-V and PGE-Cu-Ni Mineralization in the Northeastern Part of the Fennoscandian Shield: Evidence of Post-Orogenic Formation from Sm-Nd Isotope System
by Pavel A. Serov and Nikolay Yu. Groshev
Minerals 2024, 14(11), 1099; https://doi.org/10.3390/min14111099 - 29 Oct 2024
Viewed by 821
Abstract
The Porya Guba clinopyroxenite–wehrlite complex is located in the core of the Lapland–Kola collisional orogen (~2.0–1.9 billion years old) in the northeastern part of the Fennoscandian Shield and contains iron–titanium–vanadium and nickel–copper mineralization with platinum group elements (PGEs). The controversial geological position of [...] Read more.
The Porya Guba clinopyroxenite–wehrlite complex is located in the core of the Lapland–Kola collisional orogen (~2.0–1.9 billion years old) in the northeastern part of the Fennoscandian Shield and contains iron–titanium–vanadium and nickel–copper mineralization with platinum group elements (PGEs). The controversial geological position of the complex within the mafic granulites of the Kolvitsa mélange (pre-, syn- or post-orogenic) is clarified by Sm-Nd isotopic dating of the rocks and mineralization. The Sm-Nd age of the barren clinopyroxenites that dominate the complex is 1858 ± 34 Ma (εNd(T) = −1.5) and is interpreted as the time of its emplacement as evidenced by a sample from the largest intrusion, named Zhelezny. This age is younger than that of the peak of granulite metamorphism in the host rocks (1925–1915 Ma) and coincides within error with the age of rutile from granulites (1880–1870 Ma), indicating the time at which cooling to 450 °C occurs. Emplacement in the cooled rocks is confirmed by the detection of quenching zones in clinopyroxenites around granulite xenoliths. Magnetite ores, as well as mineralized pyroxenites with sulfide disseminations, are formed during a late stage of the complex development, as suggested by active assimilation of granulite xenoliths by these rocks. The isotopic age of mineralized pyroxenites enriched in PGEs is 1832 ± 35 Ma (εNd(T) = –2.0), while the age of magnetite ores is 1823 ± 19 Ma (εNd(T) = –2.5). Thus, the obtained isotopic data indicate that the emplacement of the Porya Guba complex and probably other small mafic–ultramafic intrusions in the Kolvitsa mélange granulites took place after the end of the Lapland–Kola collision. Full article
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32 pages, 83957 KiB  
Article
Stealth Metasomatism in Granulites from Ivrea (NW Italy): Hydration of the (Variscan) Lower Crust by Melt Flow
by Stylianos Karastergios, Simona Ferrando, Barbara E. Kunz and Maria Luce Frezzotti
Geosciences 2024, 14(8), 218; https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences14080218 - 16 Aug 2024
Viewed by 6532
Abstract
Granulites and associated dykes from the less well-studied southern Ivrea–Verbano Zone (around Ivrea town) are characterized by combining field, macro, micro and chemical (major and trace-element mineral composition) data to identify chemical and rheological variations in the lower crust that could be relevant [...] Read more.
Granulites and associated dykes from the less well-studied southern Ivrea–Verbano Zone (around Ivrea town) are characterized by combining field, macro, micro and chemical (major and trace-element mineral composition) data to identify chemical and rheological variations in the lower crust that could be relevant for geodynamic implications. The Ivrea granulites are similar to those in the Lower Mafic Complex of the central Ivrea–Verbano Zone. The mafic lithologies experienced stealth metasomatism (pargasitic amphibole and An-rich plagioclase) that occurred, at suprasolidus conditions, by a pervasive reactive porous flow of mantle-derived orogenic (hydrous) basaltic melts infiltrated along, relatively few, deformation-assisted channels. The chemical composition of the metasomatic melts is similar to that of melts infiltrating the central and northern Ivrea–Verbano Zone. This widespread metasomatism, inducing a massive regional hydration of the lowermost Southalpine mafic crust, promoted a plastic behavior in the lowermost part of the crust during the Early Mesozoic and, ultimately, the Triassic extension of the Variscan crust and the beginning of the Alpine cycle. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Geochemistry)
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11 pages, 1033 KiB  
Article
U-Pb LA-ICP-MS Zircon Dating of Crustal Xenoliths: Evidence of the Archean Lithosphere Beneath the Snake River Plain
by William P. Leeman, Jeffrey D. Vervoort and S. Andrew DuFrane
Minerals 2024, 14(6), 578; https://doi.org/10.3390/min14060578 - 30 May 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1493 | Correction
Abstract
New U-Pb zircon ages are reported for granulite facies crustal xenoliths brought to the surface by mafic lavas in the Snake River Plain. All samples yield Meso-to-Neoarchean ages (2.4–3.6 Ga) that significantly expand the known extent of the Archean Wyoming Craton at least [...] Read more.
New U-Pb zircon ages are reported for granulite facies crustal xenoliths brought to the surface by mafic lavas in the Snake River Plain. All samples yield Meso-to-Neoarchean ages (2.4–3.6 Ga) that significantly expand the known extent of the Archean Wyoming Craton at least as far west as the west-central Snake River Plain. Most zircon populations indicate multiple growth episodes with complexity increasing eastward, but they bear no record of major Phanerozoic magmatic episodes in the region. To extrapolate this work further west to the inferred craton boundary, zircons from southwestern Idaho batholith granodiorites were also analyzed. Although most batholith zircons record Cretaceous formation ages, all samples have zircons with inherited cores—with some recording Proterozoic ages (approaching 2 Ga). These data enhance our perspectives regarding lithosphere architecture beneath southern Idaho and adjacent areas and its possible influence on Cenozoic magmatism associated with the Snake River Plain–Yellowstone “melting anomaly”. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Mineral Geochemistry and Geochronology)
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20 pages, 12378 KiB  
Article
Petrogenesis and Metallogenesis of Late Cretaceous Adakites in the Nuri Large Cu-W-Mo Deposit, Tibet, China: Constraints from Geochronology, Geochemistry, and Hf Isotopes
by Zhishan Wu, Yiyun Wang, Hongzhao Shi, Bin Chen, Yong Huang, Qingan Du, Wenqing Chen, Liwei Tang and Yun Bai
Minerals 2024, 14(6), 565; https://doi.org/10.3390/min14060565 - 29 May 2024
Viewed by 1018
Abstract
The Gangdese metallogenic belt in Tibet is an important polymetallic metallogenic belt formed during the subduction of the Neo-Tethys Ocean and subsequent India–Asia collision. Adakitic rocks are widely distributed in this belt and are considered to be closely related to porphyry–skarn Cu-Mo polymetallic [...] Read more.
The Gangdese metallogenic belt in Tibet is an important polymetallic metallogenic belt formed during the subduction of the Neo-Tethys Ocean and subsequent India–Asia collision. Adakitic rocks are widely distributed in this belt and are considered to be closely related to porphyry–skarn Cu-Mo polymetallic mineralization. However, the petrogenesis and geodynamic setting of the Late Cretaceous adakites in the Gangdese belt remain controversial. In this study, we focus on the quartz diorite in the Nuri Cu-W-Mo deposit along the southern margin of the eastern Gangdese belt. LA-ICP-MS zircon U-Pb dating yields a Late Cretaceous age of 93.6 ± 0.4 Ma for the quartz diorite. Whole-rock geochemistry shows that the quartz diorite possesses typical adakitic signatures, with high SiO2, Al2O3, and Sr contents, but low Y and Yb contents. The relatively low K2O content and high MgO, Cr, and Ni contents, as well as the positive zircon εHf(t) values (+6.58 to +14.52), suggest that the adakites were derived from the partial melting of the subducted Neo-Tethys oceanic slab, with subsequent interaction with the overlying mantle wedge. The Late Cretaceous magmatic flare-up and coeval high-temperature granulite-facies metamorphism in the Gangdese belt were likely triggered by Neo-Tethys mid-ocean ridge subduction. The widespread occurrence of Late Cretaceous adakitic intrusions and associated Cu mineralization in the Nuri ore district indicate a strong tectono-magmatic-metallogenic event related to the Neo-Tethys subduction during this period. This study provides new insights into the petrogenesis and geodynamic setting of the Late Cretaceous adakites in the Gangdese belt, and has important implications for Cu polymetallic deposit exploration in this region. Full article
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29 pages, 36117 KiB  
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 4 | Viewed by 1950
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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19 pages, 5380 KiB  
Article
Petrology and Geochemistry of an Unusual Granulite Facies Xenolith of the Late Oligocene Post-Obduction Koum Granodiorite (New Caledonia, Southwest Pacific): Geodynamic Inferences
by Dominique Cluzel, Fabien Trotet and Jean-Louis Paquette
Minerals 2024, 14(5), 466; https://doi.org/10.3390/min14050466 - 28 Apr 2024
Viewed by 1120
Abstract
Pressure–temperature estimates of a xenolith found within a post-obduction granodiorite in southern New Caledonia provide evidence for subcrustal, granulite facies, peak crystallisation conditions (ca. 850 °C—8.5 ± 1.0 kbar), followed by isobaric cooling to 700 °C, and final decompression with partial rehydration at [...] Read more.
Pressure–temperature estimates of a xenolith found within a post-obduction granodiorite in southern New Caledonia provide evidence for subcrustal, granulite facies, peak crystallisation conditions (ca. 850 °C—8.5 ± 1.0 kbar), followed by isobaric cooling to 700 °C, and final decompression with partial rehydration at ca. 650 °C—3.5 kbar. The xenolith, dated at 24.7 Ma (U-Pb zircon), i.e., the same age as the granodiorite host rock, has low SiO2 (35.5 wt%) and high Al2O3 (33.2 wt%) contents, suggesting that it is the restite of a previous melting episode, while the elevated Ca (Ba and Sr) contents suggest mantle metasomatism. Although the concentrations of Rb, K, Ca, Ba, and Sr have been strongly modified, some geochemical (REE patterns and some “immobile” trace element ratios) and isotopic (Sr and Nd isotopic ratios, U-Pb zircon age) characteristics of the granulite facies xenolith are similar to those of the xenoliths found in other Late Oligocene intrusions in southern New Caledonia; therefore, this rock is interpreted to be related to an early magmatic episode. The rock protolith was emplaced and equilibrated at the base of the crust where it underwent ductile deformation. Younger ascending magma picked it up and they eventually crystallised together at a shallow crustal level, near the tectonic sole of the ophiolite. The recrystallisation and ductile deformation at ~8.5 kbar suggest that a rheological discontinuity existed at about 25–28 km, probably representing the Moho. It is concluded that a continental crust of normal thickness must have existed beneath New Caledonia at about 24 Ma, i.e., 10 Ma after obduction. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Mineral Geochemistry and Geochronology)
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23 pages, 8593 KiB  
Article
Identification of the Sedimentary Sources and Origin of Uranium for Zhiluo Formation of the Tarangaole U Deposit, Northeastern Ordos Basin
by Guang-Yao Li, Chun-Ji Xue, Qiang Zhu, Jian-Wen Yang and Xiao-Bo Zhao
Minerals 2024, 14(4), 429; https://doi.org/10.3390/min14040429 - 20 Apr 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1579
Abstract
The large-sized Tarangaole uranium deposit and its neighboring Daying and Nalinggou deposits, located in the northeastern margin of the Ordos Basin, constitutes a major uranium resource base in northern China. In order to further clarify the sedimentary material source, uranium source and regional [...] Read more.
The large-sized Tarangaole uranium deposit and its neighboring Daying and Nalinggou deposits, located in the northeastern margin of the Ordos Basin, constitutes a major uranium resource base in northern China. In order to further clarify the sedimentary material source, uranium source and regional sediment–tectonic setting of the uranium-fed clastic rocks (i.e., Zhiluo Formation(J2z)) in the district, this paper carried out whole-rock geochemistry, heavy minerals composition and in situ U-Pb dating of detrital zircons for sandstones from the lower section of the Zhiluo Formation. The results have shown that the average chemical differentiation index (CIA) for the host rocks is 73.16 and the chemical weathering degree is moderate. Heavy minerals are mainly composed of ilmenite, garnet, chlorpyrite, zircon, pyrite, apatite, hematite, etc. The U-Pb dating of detrital zircon generally indicates three age peaks, i.e., 260~Ma, 1850~Ma and 2450~Ma, respectively. In conclusion, the source rocks may have been formed at active continental margins, e.g., in a continental margin arc environment. The sedimentary materials mainly come from khondalite series, TTGs, granulite, and mafic–ultramafic intrusive rocks distributed among the Daqing–Ula Mountains and adjacent areas, etc. The Late Paleozoic U-rich intermediate and acidic magmatic rocks spreading over the eastern part of the Ula–Daqing and Wolf mountains have provided the main uranium sources for the formation of major U deposits in the northern Ordos Basin. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Mineral Deposits)
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31 pages, 11704 KiB  
Article
Petrology and Geochemistry of Highly Differentiated Tholeiitic Magmas: Granophyres in the Messejana–Plasencia Great Dyke (Central Iberia)
by David Orejana, Carlos Villaseca, Emma Losantos and Pilar Andonaegui
Minerals 2024, 14(3), 316; https://doi.org/10.3390/min14030316 - 16 Mar 2024
Viewed by 1769
Abstract
The Messejana–Plasencia great dyke (MPGD) is a Late Triassic tholeiitic gabbro intrusion related to the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province. Its large outcrop extent (~530 km), combined with its prolongation below the Duero basin (additional 100 km), makes it one of the world’s largest [...] Read more.
The Messejana–Plasencia great dyke (MPGD) is a Late Triassic tholeiitic gabbro intrusion related to the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province. Its large outcrop extent (~530 km), combined with its prolongation below the Duero basin (additional 100 km), makes it one of the world’s largest dykes known. We have studied felsic granophyric bodies appearing in its northernmost segment at different scales, from mm-sized (interstitial micrographic pockets) to felsic dykes of up to 10 m thick and 1.5 km long, intruding within the gabbros. Significant differences exist in the mineral and whole-rock composition of gabbros and granophyres, including the Sr–Nd isotopic ratios. The chemical variation in the gabbros is coherent with fractionation of olivine, clinopyroxene and plagioclase at depth. However, the presence of a compositional gap between gabbros and granophyres (absence of intermediate compositions) and the formation of these late-stage intergranular felsic melts within the gabbro mesostasis suggest that they could be derived by liquid immiscibility. The Sr–Nd isotopic heterogeneity in the MPGD gabbros and the presence of zircons with Variscan ages (~286 Ma), inherited from granulitic rocks, indicate that the mafic magmas experienced some degree of lower crust assimilation during fractionation close to the Moho depth. On the contrary, the scarce xenocrystic Variscan zircon crystals found in a granophyric dyke within the MPGD gabbro display similar textures and ages (~299 Ma) to those of the country rock granites and point to contamination at a different crustal level. Full article
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28 pages, 29060 KiB  
Article
Metamorphism and P-T Evolution of High-Pressure Granulites from the Fuping Complex, North China Craton
by Zijing Zhang, Changqing Zheng, Chenyue Liang, M. Santosh, Junjie Hao, Lishuai Dong, Jianjun Hou, Feifei Hou and Meihui Li
Minerals 2024, 14(2), 138; https://doi.org/10.3390/min14020138 - 26 Jan 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2364
Abstract
Granulite facies rocks provide important keys to evaluating collisional metamorphism in orogenic belts. The mafic granulites of Baoding in the Fuping Complex of the North China Craton occur within the Trans-North China Orogen (TNCO), a major Paleoproterozoic collisional orogen. Here, we present results [...] Read more.
Granulite facies rocks provide important keys to evaluating collisional metamorphism in orogenic belts. The mafic granulites of Baoding in the Fuping Complex of the North China Craton occur within the Trans-North China Orogen (TNCO), a major Paleoproterozoic collisional orogen. Here, we present results from detailed investigations on newly discovered garnet pyroxenite, garnet two-pyroxene granulite, and garnet-bearing-plagioclase amphibolite using petrographic, mineralogical, geochemical, and zircon U-Pb dating methods. Our results show that the Fuping Complex metamorphic evolution in this study evolved in four stages: prograde (M1), high-pressure granulite facies (M2), granulite facies (M3), and retrograde (M4) stages. The mineral assemblage of the prograde stage (M1) consists of Amp + Pl + Q within garnet cores. The mineral assemblage of high-pressure granulite facies at the peak stage (M2) consists of Gt + Cpx + Pl + Q ± Amp, forming the garnet pyroxenite. The granulite facies stage M3 is characterized by the occurrence of orthopyroxene, with a mineral assemblage of Gt + Cpx + Opx + Amp+ Pl + Q. The early retrograde stage M4-1 includes clinopyroxenes scattered inside amphiboles, following the breakdown of garnet and clinopyroxene. The mineral assemblage of this stage comprises Amp + Pl + Q + Ilm ± Cpx. Later, in the late retrograde stage M4-2, the composition of amphiboles changed to actinolite, and epidote and chlorite started to appear in the matrix. Traditional geothermobarometry yielded P-T conditions of 700~706 °C and 6.0~6.2 kbar for prograde stage M1, 854~920 °C and 13.0~13.8 kbar for high-pressure granulite facies stage M2, 912~939 °C and 8.1~9.9 kbar for M3, 661~784 °C and 3.1~4.4 kbar for M4-1, and 637~638 °C, 1.1~1.3 kbar for M4-2, along a clockwise P-T path with a nearly isothermal decompression (ITD) and slight heating. Zircon LA-ICP-MS U-Pb dating constrains the timing of the high-pressure granulite facies metamorphic event to be between 1.83 and 1.86 Ga. Geochemical features suggest that the protoliths of the high-pressure granulites may have formed in an island arc environment within a convergent margin setting. Together with results from previous studies, our data suggest that the ~1.85 Ga metamorphic age recorded in the Fuping Complex represents a regional metamorphism in the TNCO, associated with the subduction–collision and assembly of the Eastern and Western Blocks of the NCC. Full article
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22 pages, 18898 KiB  
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 5 | Viewed by 1837
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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18 pages, 15382 KiB  
Article
Geochronological Constraints on the Origin of the Paleoproterozoic Qianlishan Gneiss Domes in the Khondalite Belt of the North China Craton and Their Tectonic implications
by Hengzhong Qiao, Peipei Deng and Jiawei Li
Minerals 2023, 13(11), 1361; https://doi.org/10.3390/min13111361 - 25 Oct 2023
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 1328
Abstract
The Paleoproterozoic gneiss domes are important structures of the Khondalite Belt in the northwestern North China Craton. However, less attention has been paid to their formation and evolution, and it thus hampers a better understanding of the deformation history of the Khondalite Belt. [...] Read more.
The Paleoproterozoic gneiss domes are important structures of the Khondalite Belt in the northwestern North China Craton. However, less attention has been paid to their formation and evolution, and it thus hampers a better understanding of the deformation history of the Khondalite Belt. In this paper, we conducted structural and geochronological studies on the Qianlishan gneiss domes of the Khondalite Belt. The field observations and zircon U–Pb dating results show that the Qianlishan gneiss domes consist of 2.06–2.01 Ga granitoid plutons in the core, rimmed by granulite facies metasedimentary rocks (khondalites) of the Qianlishan Group. Both of them were subjected to two major phases of deformation (D1–D2) in the late Paleoproterozoic. Of these, D1 deformation mainly generated overturned to recumbent isoclinal folds F1 and penetrative transposed foliations/gneissosities S1 at ~1.95 Ga. Subsequently, D2 deformation produced the NW(W)–SE(E)-trending doubly plunging upright folds F2 at 1.93–1.90 Ga, and they have strongly re-oriented S1 gneissosities, giving rise to the Qianlishan gneiss domes. Combined with previous studies, we argue that the Qianlishan gneiss domes were the products of the Paleoproterozoic collisional orogenesis between the Yinshan and Ordos Blocks. Additionally, the development of doubly plunging antiforms is considered an important dome-forming mechanism in the Khondalite Belt. Full article
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