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The Sheahan Diamond Literature Reference Compilation - Scientific and Media Articles based on Major Keyword - Lamproite
The Sheahan Diamond Literature Reference Compilation is compiled by Patricia Sheahan who publishes on a monthly basis a list of new scientific articles related to diamonds as well as media coverage and corporate announcements called the Sheahan Diamond Literature Service that is distributed as a free pdf to a list of followers. Pat has kindly agreed to allow her work to be made available as an online digital resource at Kaiser Research Online so that a broader community interested in diamonds and related geology can benefit. The references are for personal use information purposes only; when available a link is provided to an online location where the full article can be accessed or purchased directly. Reproduction of this compilation in part or in whole without permission from the Sheahan Diamond Literature Service is strictly prohibited. Return to Diamond Keyword Index
Sheahan Diamond Literature Reference Compilation - Scientific Articles by Author for all years
Each article reference in the SDLRC is tagged with one or more key words assigned by Pat Sheahan to highlight the main topics of the article. In an effort to make it easier for users to track down articles related to a specific topic, KRO has extracted these key words and developed a list of major key words presented in this Key Word Index to which individual key words used in the article reference have been assigned. In most of the individual Key Word Reports the references are in crhonological order, though in some such as Deposits the order is first by key word and then chronological. Only articles classified as "technical" (mainly scientific journal articles) and "media" (independent media articles) are included in the Key Word Index. References that were added in the most recent monthly update are highlighted in yellow.
A Lamproite is an ultrapotassic mantle derived intrusion which, unlike a kmberlite whose emplacement setting is limited to cratons, can show up anywhere. But because a lamproite originates from depths as much as 150 km, it is capable of sampling diamond source rocks within the diamond stability field during its ascent. The Argyle Pipe in Australia is the biggest and richest example of a diamondiferous lamproite. Because lamproites tend to be associated with craton margins or mantle plumes, neither of which setting is conducive for diamond formation or preservation, articles about lamproites tend to be very "scientific".
The Geology of Portions of the Kimberley Division with Special Reference to the Fitzroy Basin and the Possibilities of The Occurrence of Minerals and Oil.
Western Australia Geological Survey Bulletin, No. 93. PP. 20-21.
New dat a on the petrology of olivine lamproites of Western australia From the results of the investigation of magmatic inclusions in olivines.(Russian)
Doklady Academy of Sciences Akademy Nauk SSSR, (Russian), Vol. 284, No. 1, pp. 196-201
The Argyle lamproite diamond deposits, Kimberley basin, Western Australia.Brief outline (1/2p.) of talk to Barberton MountaIn land Branch meeting Nov.27, 1985
Geology and exploration of the Rose lamproite, southeast Kansas, SOURCE[ Geological Society of Australia Inc. Blackwell Scientific Publishing,SpecialPublication
Geological Society of Australia Inc. Blackwell Scientific Publishing, Special, No. 14, Vol. 2, pp. 1179-1191
Distribution of fluorine between minerals and glass in lamproites, lamprophyres and kamafugites: implications for the role of F in deep mantle derived magmas
Proceedings of Fifth International Kimberlite Conference held Araxa June 1991, Servico Geologico do Brasil (CPRM) Special, pp. 79-81
Exploration Techniques, Saskatoon, Conference registration The Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum (CIM) Xerox, Sept. 5-13, 1991 Fax 514 939-2714
Heavy mineral geochemical exploration for lamproite
The Canadian Mining and Metallurgical Bulletin (CIM Bulletin) ., Session on Diamonds at The Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum (CIM) Annual Meeting April, Vol. 84, No. 947, March p. 99. Abstract
Conference registration The Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum (CIM) Xerox Tower Suite 1210, 3400 de Maissoneuve, Sept. 5-13, 1991 Fax 514 939-2714
The Canadian Mining and Metallurgical Bulletin (CIM Bulletin) ., Session on Diamonds at The Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum (CIM) Annual Meeting April, Vol. 84, No. 947, March p. 90. Abstract
Overt and cryptic strongly potassic mafic liquids in the Neogene magmatism of the n.part of the Rio Grande Rift, USA: a lithospheric drip feed into asthenospheric so
Proceedings of Fifth International Kimberlite Conference held Araxa June 1991, Servico Geologico do Brasil (CPRM) Special, pp. 420-422
Changing phase relations -mineral chemistry during ascent the Prairie Creek olivine lamproite, demons. by high pressure- high temp. suprasolidusexperiments.
Geological Association of Canada (GAC)/Mineralogical Association of Canada/Society Economic, Vol. 16, Abstract program p. A130
Potassium-rich rock Inter relationships determined experimentally
Geological Association of Canada (GAC)/Mineralogical Association of Canada (MAC)/SEG Annual Meeting May 27-29. Toronto, Ontario, Abstract, Vol. 16, p. A136. Abstract
Lamproite diatreme in the Dubawnt Lake area, Northwest Territories
The Canadian Mining and Metallurgical Bulletin (CIM Bulletin) , Annual Meeting Abstracts approximately 10 lines, Vol. 86, No. 968, March POSTER ABSTRACT p. 67
Geological Association of Canada (GAC), Geological Association of Canada (GAC)/Mineralogical Association of Canada (MAC) Annual Meeting, Abstract, Abstract Vol. p. A71.
Partial melting experiments on a phlogopite harzburgite at 3.0 GPa in relation to lamproite mantle source regions.
Geological Association of Canada (GAC), Geological Association of Canada (GAC)/Mineralogical Association of Canada (MAC) Annual Meeting, Abstract, Abstract Vol. p. A95.
Zhao, D., Smith, D.G.W. Smith, Zhou, M., Jang, J., Deng, C., Huang, Y.
Yinniugou lamproites in Datong, northern Shanxi Province, Chin a: first occurrence in the North Chin a craton.
Mid-continent diamonds Geological Association of Canada (GAC)-Mineralogical Association of Canada (MAC) Symposium ABSTRACT volume, held Edmonton May, pp. 133-140.
Late Pliocene lamproites from Bucak, I sparta ( southwestern Turkey): implications for mantle wedge evolution during Africa-Anatoloan plate convergence.
Journal of Asian Earth Sciencs, Vol. 29, 1, pp.160-176.
Geochemistry of crustal xenoliths from the Hatcher Mesa lamproite, Wyoming, USA: insights into the composition of the deep crust and upper mantle beneath the Wyoming craton.
Assignment of igneous rocks to lamproite major and trace element criteria and implications for the history of the Tomtor pluton ( northwestern Yakutia).
Russian Geology and Geophysics, Vol. 50, 10, pp. 911-916.
Two distinct sets of magma sources in Cretaceous rocks from Magnet Cove, Prairie Creek, and other igneous centres of the Arkansas Alkaline Province, USA.
American Geological Union, Fall meeting Dec. 15-19, Eos Trans. Vol. 89, no. 53, meeting supplement, 1p. abstract
Mineral variations from Mediterranean lamproites: major element compositions and first indications from trace elements in phlogopites, olivines and clinopyroxenes.
Prelevic, D., Akal, C., Romer, R.R., Sracke, A., Van den Bogaard, P.
Ultrapotassic mafic rocks as geochemical proxies for post collisional dynamics of orogenic lithospheric mantle: the case of southwestern Anatolia, Turkey.
Peralk-Carb 2011... workshop June 16-18, Tubingen, Germany, Abstract p.119-121.
Prelevic, D., Akal, C., Romer, R.R., Sracke, A., Van den Bogaard, P.
Ultrapotassic mafic rocks as geochemical proxies for post collisional dynamics of orogenic lithospheric mantle: the case of southwestern Anatolia, Turkey.
Peralk-Carb 2011... workshop June 16-18, Tubingen, Germany, Abstract p.119-121.
Mineral composition in cognate inclusions in Late Miocene-Early Pliocene potassic lamprophyres with affinities to lamproites from the Denizli region, Western Anatolia, Turkey: implications for uppermost mantle processes in a back arc setting.
Twelve year old unearths 5.16 carat diamond named it God's Glory Diamond ( honey brown colour) # 328 found this year 27th largest and 75,000 found to date since 1906.
Resolving geological and geophysical evidence for a reactivated Cambrian plate boundary beneath the Ouachita orogen: the Alabama- Oklahoma transform fault.
Geological Society of America, 47th Meeting South central April 4-5, 1/2p. Abstract
Chalapathi Rao, N.V., Kumar, A., Sahoo, S., Dongre, A.N., Talukdar, D.
Petrology and petrogenesis of Mesoproterozoic lamproites from the Ramadugu field NW margin of the Cuddapah basin, eastern Dharwar craton, southern India.
Volatile fluxing causes cratonic flood basalt volcanism: case study of the Siberian Craton.
V.S. Sobolev Institute of Geology and Mineralogy Siberian Branch Russian Academy of Sciences International Symposium Advances in high pressure research: breaking scales and horizons ( Courtesy of N. Poikilenko), Held Sept. 22-26, 4p. Abstract
Post collisional lamproites of the Por'ya Guba dike fields.
East European Craton: Early Precambrian history & 3 D. Model Authors: M.V. Mints, K.A. Dokukina, A.N. Konilov, I.B. Philippova, C.L. Zlobin., GSA SPE 510, 433p. Chapter 11, section 3
Abstract: We report mineral chemistry and whole-rock major and trace-element geochemistry for a recent find of Mesoproterozoic (~1.4 Ga) lamproites from the Garledinne (Banganapalle) cluster, south-western part of the Paleo-Mesoproterozoic Cuddapah Basin, southern India. The Garledinne lamproites occur as WNW-ESE-trending dykes that have undergone varying degree of pervasive silicification and carbonate alteration. Nevertheless, their overall texture and relict mineralogy remain intact and provide important insights into the nature of their magmas. The lamproite dykes have porphyritic to weakly porphyritic textures comprising pseudomorphed olivine macrocrysts and microphenocrysts, titanian phlogopite microphenocrysts, spinel having a compositional range from chromite to rarely magnesiochromite, Sr-rich apatite and niobian rutile. The Garledinne and other Cuddapah Basin lamproites (Chelima and Zangamarajupalle) collectively lack sanidine, clinopyroxene, potassic richterite, and titanite and are thus mineralogically distinct from the nearby Mesoproterozoic lamproites (Krishna and Ramadugu) in the Eastern Dharwar Craton, southern India. The strong correlation between various major and trace elements coupled with high abundances of incompatible and compatible trace elements imply that alteration and crustal contamination have had a limited effect on the whole-rock geochemistry (apart from K2O and CaO) of the Garledinne lamproites and that olivine fractionation played an important role in their evolution. The Garledinne lamproites represent small-degree partial melts derived from a refractory (previously melt extracted) peridotitic mantle source that was subsequently metasomatised (enriched) by carbonate-rich fluids/melts within the garnet stability field. The involvement of multiple reservoirs (sub-continental lithospheric mantle and asthenosphere) has been inferred in their genesis. The emplacement of the Garledinne lamproites is linked to extensional events, across the various Indian cratons, related to the break-up of the Proterozoic supercontinent of Columbia.
Mineralogy and Petrology, in press available, 25p.
India
Lamproites - Nuapada field
Abstract: We report the mineralogy, bulk-rock geochemistry, 40Ar/39Ar (whole-rock) age and radiogenic (Sr and Nd) isotope composition of an ultrapotassic dyke from Sakri (Nuapada lamproite field) located at the tectonic contact between the easternmost margin of the Bastar craton and Eastern Ghats Mobile Belt, India. The Sakri dyke has a mineralogy which strongly resembles a lamproite sensu stricto (viz.,Ti-rich phlogopite, Na-poor diopside, Fe-rich sanidine, ulvospinel trend and Sr-rich apatite). However, its bulk-rock major element geochemical characteristics (viz., extreme silica-undersaturated nature) resemble sensu lato kamafugite from Toro Ankole, Uganda, East African Rift, and Alto Paranaiba Province, Brazil. The Sakri dyke also displays certain compositional peculiarities (viz., high degree of evolution of mica composition from phlogopite to biotite, elevated titanium and aluminum in clinopyroxene and significantly lower bulk Mg#) when compared to the ultrapotassic rocks from various Indian cratons. 40Ar/39Ar dating gave a plateau age of 1045?±?9 Ma which is broadly similar to that of other Mesoproterozoic (i) lamproites from the Bastar and Bundelkhand cratons, and (ii) kimberlites from the Eastern Dharwar craton. Initial bulk-rock Sr (0.705865-0.709024) and Nd (0.511063-0.511154) isotopic ratios reveal involvement of an ‘enriched’ source region with long-term incompatible element enrichment and a depleted mantle (TDM) Nd model age of 2.56 Ga straddling the Archaean-Proterozoic chronostratigraphic boundary. The bulk-rock incompatible trace element ratios (Ta/Yb, Th/Yb, Rb/Ba and Ce/Y) of the Sakri ultrapotassic dyke negate any significant influence of crustal contamination. Small-degree melting (1 to 1.5 %) of a mixed garnet-facies and spinel-facies phlogopite lherzolite can account for its observed REE concentrations. Whereas the emplacement of the Sakri ultrapotassic dyke is related to the amalgamation of the supercontinent of Rodinia, its overlapping geochemical characteristics of lamproite and kamafugite (also displayed by two other lamproites of the Nuapada field at Amlidadar and Parkom) are linked to the emplacement in a unique geological setting at the craton-mobile belt contact and hence of geodynamic significance.
Mineralogy and Petrology, In press available, 39p.
Australia
Lamproite
Abstract: New data are presented for groundmass chromian spinel, perovskite, ilmenite, and K-Ti-Ba-rich phases from the Miocene olivine and leucite lamproites of the West Kimberley region. The spinels range from early Ti-Al-Mg chromite through Ti-Mg chromite to Ti-chromite and, in Ellendale 4 and 9, Ti-Cr magnetite and Ti-magnetite. Most crystallized at 850-1220 °C and fO2 ~ MW + 1-2 log units except for Ellendale 4 and 9 spinels which underwent marked late oxidation at ~650-750 °C with fO2 increasing sharply to ~FMQ + 2-3 log units. Perovskite is ubiquitous in the olivine lamproites and the Walgidee Hills (WH) lamproite. Compositional features of the perovskite are a wide range in Cr, and high Sr, Nb, Th, and LREE contents with highly fractionated REE patterns (La/YbCN ~ 750-3000). Perovskite from WH defines an evolutionary trend of enrichment in Na, Sr, Y, Nb, U and REE, and depletion in Cr, Fe, and Th with magma fractionation. Late crystallizing WH perovskite shows a decrease in LREE due to relative depletion of LREE in residual magma by extended crystallization of perovskite (and apatite). Priderite ((K,Ba)(Ti,Fe3+)8O16) has low Mg and V, and a range in Cr contents which decrease with magma evolution. Jeppeite ((K,Ba)2(Ti,Fe)6O13), has higher Sr and Nb content than priderite. Both contain low Y and REEs. Wadeite (K2ZrSi3O9), a ubiquitous groundmass phase, has high Sc, Rb and Hf contents, and strongly LREE-depleted REE patterns with positive Ce anomalies. Noonkanbahite, a late crystallizing phase in WH, has low Cr and Ni, and high Sr, Nb and Y contents. REE patterns for noonkanbahite display high HREE, depleted MREE, enriched La-Ce-Pr, and a positive Eu anomaly.
Journal of The Geological Society of India, Vol. 87, 2, pp. 127-131.
India
Lamproite
Abstract: A singular outcrop of a lamproite dyke is located ~1.5 km south-west of Chintalapalle village at the NW margin of the Cuddapah basin, eastern Dharwar craton, southern India.. The dyke trends E-W and is emplaced within the granitic rocks belonging to the peninsular gneissic complex. The lamproite dyke has a porphyritic to weakly porphyritic texture comprising microphenocrysts of sanidine, and potassic richterite set in a groundmass rich in carbonate, and chlorite with rutile and titanate as accessory phases. This new occurrence of lamproite is located mid-way between the well-known Narayanpet kimberlite field towards the west and the Ramadugu and Vattikod lamproite fields in east. The Chintalapalle lamproite dyke, together with those from Vattikod, Ramadugu, Krishna and Cuddapah basin lamproite fields, constitute a wide spectrum of ultrapotassic magmatism emplaced in and around the Palaeo-Mesoproterozoic Cuddapah basin in southern India.
Proceedings National Academy of Sciences India , Vol. 82, 3, July special issue pp. 515-536.
India
Kimberlites, lamproites
Abstract: Major highlights of researches carried out on kimberlites, lamproites, lamprophyres, carbonatites, other alkaline rocks and mafic dykes from the Indian shield during 2012-2016 are presented. New findings involving field mapping, petrology, geochemistry (including high quality mineral based in situ isotopic studies) and geophysics have provided remarkable insights on the mode of their occurrence, timing of emplacement, mineralogy and bulk-rock composition, redox conditions, relative contribution of the lithosphere and asthenosphere, as well as their economic potential. Several large-scale geodynamic aspects such as plume-lithosphere interactions, ancient subduction events, layered structure of the sub-continental lithospheric mantle, spatial extent of the Precambrian large igneous provinces and supercontinent configurations could be unraveled from these studies on deep-mantle derived small-volume magmatic rocks.
Abstract: During convergence of Gondwana-derived microplates and Laurussia in the Palaeozoic, subduction of oceanic and continental crusts and their sedimentary cover introduced material of regionally contrasting chemical and isotopic compositions into the mantle. This slab material metasomatised the local mantle, producing a highly heterogeneous lithospheric mantle beneath the European Variscides. The eastern termination of the European Variscides (Moldanubian and Saxo-Thuringian zones of Austria, Czech Republic, Germany and Poland) is unusual in that the mantle was modified by material from several subduction zones within a small area. Orogenic lamproites sampled this lithospheric mantle, which has a chemical signature reflecting extreme depletion (low CaO and Al2O3 contents and high Mg-number) followed by strong metasomatic enrichment, giving rise to crust-like trace element patterns, variable radiogenic 87Sr/86Sr(330) (0.7062-0.7127) and non-radiogenic Nd isotopic compositions (?Nd(330) = ? 2.8 to ? 7.8), crustal Pb isotopic compositions, and a wide range of ?7Li values (? 5.1 to + 5.1). This metasomatic signature is variably expressed in the lamproites, depending on the extent of melting and the nature of the source of the metasomatic component. Preferential melting of the metasomatically enriched (veined) lithospheric mantle with K-rich amphibole resulted in lamproitic melts with very negative, crust-like ?7Li values, which correlate positively with peralkalinity, HFSE contents and lower ?Nd. Both the higher degree of melting and progressive consumption of the metasomatic component reduce the chemical and isotopic imprints of the metasomatic end member. The very positive ?7Li values of some lamproites indicate that the source of these lamproites may have been modified by subducted oceanic lithosphere. Fresh olivine from the Brloh (Moldanubian) lamproitic dyke shows very high Fo (up to 94%) and very high Li contents (up to 25 ppm), demonstrating that the extremely depleted and later enriched lithospheric mantle may have contributed significantly to the Li budget of the lamproites. The regional distribution of lamproites with contrasting chemical and isotopic fingerprints mimics the distribution of the different Variscan subduction zones.
Abstract: In this experimental study we obtained new mineral/melt (DF = cmineral/cmelt) partitioning data for fluorine in a bimineralic hydrous eclogite under Earth's upper mantle conditions (4-6 GPa, 1460-1550 °C). Omphacitic clinopyroxene displays mineral/melt partition coefficients between DF = 0.056 ± 0.005 and DF = 0.074 ± 0.001. Garnet partition coefficients are consistently lower with an average partition coefficient of DF = 0.016 ± 0.003. We found that omphacitic clinopyroxene is the dominant nominally fluorine-free phase in subducted oceanic crust and hence omphacite is expected to be the major fluorine carrier during subduction of crust into the deeper mantle. Together with previously obtained partitioning data we propose that the oceanic crust can host more fluorine per mass unit than the underlying depleted oceanic mantle. If the majority of entrained fluorine is recycled into Earth's transition zone it is possible that the fluorine is either incorporated into high-pressure transition zone phases or released during high-pressure phase transformations and forming fluorine-rich small degree partial melts. Both scenarios are supported by elevated fluorine concentration in ocean island basalts, kimberlites, and lamproites. Combining the fluorine partitioning data with water partitioning data yields a plausible process to generate lamproitic magmas with a high F/H2O ratio. The enrichment of fluorine relative to H2O is triggered by multiple episodes of small degree melting that deplete the residual more in H2O than in fluorine, caused by the approximately three times smaller mineral-melt partition coefficients of H2O.
Abstract: Lamproites are mineralogically complex rocks and their bulk rock geochemistry is not for characterization of their parental magmas (Mitchell and Bergman, [1]). Characterization is best accomplished by consideration of their typomorphic mineralogy. We have investigated nine dykes from Vattikod (VL1:Vl8 and VL10). The mineral assemblage and their compositions are comparable to those of lamproites in terms of the presence of phlogopite (Ti-rich, Al-poor phlogopite and tetraferriphlogopite); amphiboles (potassic-arfvedsonite, potassic-richterite, potassic-ferro-richterite, potassic-katophorite, Ti- rich potassic-katophorite, Ti-rich potassic-magnesio-katophorite); Al-poor pyroxene; feldspars (K- feldspar, Ba-K-feldspar and Na-feldspar), spinels (chromite-magnetite and qandilite-ulvÖspinel-ZnFe2O4). These dykes have also undergone varied degrees of deuteric alteration as shown by the development of secondary phases such as titanite, allanite, hydro-zircon, calcite, chlorite, quartz and cryptocrystalline SiO2. We have classified the Vattikod dyke on the basis of their typomorphic major mineralogy in conjunction with alteration affects as: Group 1 (VL1); Group 2 (VL2 and VL3); Group 3 (VL4 and VL5); Group 4 (VL6, VL7 and VL8); and Group 5 (VL10). Group 2 dykes are pseudoleucite-amphibole-lamproite; Group 3 dykes are pseudoleucite-phlogopite-lamproite; Group 4 dykes are pseudoleucite-phlogopite- amphibole-lamproite. The Group 1 dyke is completely altered and the precursor mineralogy cannot be identified. Group 5 dyke is also extensively altered but contains fresh euhedral apatite microphenocrysts together with pseudomorphs after leucite and is classified as a pseudoleucite-apatite-(phlogopite?) lamproite. It is suggested that the Vattikod lamproites represent a spectrum of modal variants of lamproite produced by the differentiation and crystallization of a common parental peralkaline potassic magma. The near-linear disposition of Deformed Alkaline Rocks and Carbonatites commonly known as DARC’s (Burke and Khan, [2]) and lamproites in eastern India implies a relationship with subduction-related processes (Das Sharma & Ramesh, [3]; Gurmeet Kaur & Mitchell, [4]). We propose that the Vattikod and other lamproites in eastern India emplaced at 1100-1450 Ma are possible manifestations of subduction- related alkaline magmatism along the Eastern Ghats Mobile Belt, in contrast to extension-related anorogenic lamproite magmatism related to supercontinent(s) break-up as has been suggested for Ramadugu and other Dharwar Craton lamproites.
Abstract: Detailed textural and mineral chemistry characterisation of lamproites from the Socovos fault zone, SE Spain Neogene Volcanic Province (NVP) combining X-ray element maps and LA-ICP-MS spot analyses has provided valuable information about mantle depth ultrapotassic magma mixing processes. Despite having similar whole-rock compositions, rocks emplaced in the Socovos fault are mineralogically varied: including type-A olivine-phlogopite lamproites; and type-B clinopyroxene-phlogopite lamproites. The Ol-lacking type-B predates Ol-bearing type-A by c. 2 million years. We propose that the mineralogical variations, which are representative of lamproites in the NVP as a whole, indicate mantle source heterogeneities. Major and trace element compositions of mineral phases suggest both metasomatised harzburgite and veined pyroxenite sources that were most likely closely spatially related. Thin section scale textural and compositional variations in mineral phases reveal heterogeneous mantle- and primitive magma-derived crystals. The variety of crystals points to interaction and mingling-mixing of ultrapotassic magma batches at mantle depths prior crustal emplacement. The mixing apparently occurred in a mantle melting zone with a channelised flow regime and localised magma chambers-reservoirs. Magma interaction was interrupted when the Socovos and other lithosphere-scale faults tore down to the mantle source region, triggering rapid ascent of the heterogeneous lamproite magma.
Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, in press available 15p.
Africa, Algeria
Lamproite
Abstract: The late Miocene (11-9 Ma) volcanic rocks of Kef Hahouner, ~ 40 km NE of Constantine (NE Algeria), are commonly classified as lamproites in literature. However, these rocks are characterized by an anhydrous paragenesis with plagioclase and Mg-rich olivine phenocrysts, set in a groundmass made up of feldspars, pyroxenes and opaque minerals. Thus, we classify the Kef Hahouner rocks as ultrapotassic shoshonites and latites, having K2O > 3 wt.%, K2O/Na2O > 2.5, MgO > 3-4 wt.%, SiO2 < 55-57 wt.% and SiO2/K2O < 15. All the investigated samples show primitive mantle-normalized multi-element patterns typical of orogenic (arc-type) magmas, i.e. enriched in LILE (e.g. Cs, Rb and Ba) and LREE (e.g. La/Yb = 37-59) with respect to the HFSE, peaks at Pb and troughs at Nb and Ta. Initial isotopic ratios are in the range of 87Sr/86Sr = 0.70874-0.70961, 143Nd/144Nd = 0.51222-0.51223, 206Pb/204Pb = 18.54-18.60, 207Pb/204Pb = 15.62-15.70 and 208Pb/204Pb = 38.88-39.16. The Kef Hahouner volcanic rocks show multi-element patterns similar to the other circum-Mediterranean lamproites and extreme Sr, Nd and Pb isotopic compositions. Nevertheless, the abundant plagioclase, the presence of Al-rich augite coupled with high Al2O3 whole rock compositions (9.6-21.4 wt.%), and the absence of phlogopite are all at inconsistent with the definition of lamproite. We reviewed the rocks classified as lamproites worldwide, and found that many of these rocks, as for the Kef Hahouner samples, should be actually defined as "normal" potassic to ultrapotassic volcanic rocks. Even the grouping of lamproites into "orogenic" and "anorogenic" types appears questionable.
Abstract: A lamproitic igneous occurrence was recently discovered by a prospector working in the area to the north of Marathon, Ontario. It occurs near a large number of features related to the 1.1 Ga Midcontinent Rift such as the Coldwell Complex and the Trans-Superior Tectonic Zone, but no radiometric dating has been completed on this particular unit of rock. At outcrop level, the unit appears as a collection of metre-scale mafic sills within granitic country rock. These sills appear on all sides of a large lake, marking the lake as the likely location of the main body of the lamproitic rock. The rock is composed of a variety of minerals, including forsteritic olivine, diopside pyroxene, sanidine feldspar, and a variety of spinels. Later periods of magmatism contributed secondary apatite and phlogopite. At the same time, the volatile-rich fluids produced by the magma created a variety of alterations, such as serpentine, chlorite, and carbonate, and heavily disrupted the primary minerals in the rock. This rock retains a classification as a paralamproite, with a mineral assemblage that cannot fulfill the defined composition of lamproite due to geochemical differences between definition and observed samples.
Boletin del Museo Nacional de Historia Narural del Paraguay, Vol. 20, 2, pp. 154-187. pdf available in * Port
South America, Paraguay
Lamproite
Abstract: Diamonds in Eastern-Paraguay began to be recognized in the 60s of last century near the town of Capiibary Dept. San Pedro; but it was only formalized the occurrence in 2008. In Capiibary and around, over 100 macro (1 ~ 3 mm) diamond (colorless, shades of brown and rare shades of pink, blue and green) were recovered from alluvial deposits. Micro-diamonds and small macro-diamonds were separated from sediment (conglomeratic/breccia´s/others; rich in indicators mineral: eclogitic garnets, rounded ilmenite, chromite, frosting-tourmaline, zircon, etc.) interpreted as reworked primary source. In the same locality 20 diamonds in its external morphology, internal structure, its mineral inclusions and the nitrogen content and state of aggregation were studied. The late 90s of last century diamonds were recovered from re-worked volcanic facies a probable pipe of Mesozoic picrític calc-alkaline lamprophyre, in the vicinity of the town of La Colmena in the Dept. Paraguari. Few later years (2003), some ten kilometers to the east, a mining company announced that it had found macro-diamond in a lamproite dyke (also Mesozoic) of 4 meters wide, along the Cordillera del Ybytyruzú, Dept. of Guaira. The same mining company notice that have found macro (~ 1 mm) diamonds in other departments of East Paraguay. It was also in late 2003 that were found in stream sediments, alluvium, soil and primary weathered rock /primary reworked -macro (millimeter) diamonds (colorless, yellow, pink, green, brown) accompanied by high concentration of indicator minerals (eclogitic garnets, rounded ilmenite, chromite, rutile, frosting-tourmaline, Fe-Ti-staurolite, zircon, etc.) around the town of Puentesińo (and adjacent areas), Dept. of Concepcion. More recently regional research work allowed locate macro (> 0.5 to 2 mm) diamonds in alluvial deposits and fine/coarse sediments (probable primary re-worked rock -also accompanied by high concentration of indicator minerals: rounded ilmenite, chromite, rutile, frosting-tourmaline, zircons, etc.) between the Department Concepción-Amambay -in the vicinity of Mesozoic carbonatitic alkaline complex. Officially between the 90s of last century to date have collected (Paraguay-East) around 5000 (for diamonds/indicator minerals) samples of stream sediment, soil, termite nest, weathered rock. Some samples (Puentesińo-around and Capiibary and vicinity) produced indicator minerals were analyzed in their chemical composition: eclogitic garnets (G-3 and G-4); picro-chromites (some with Zn and Mn); chromite-spinel; Mn-ilmenite, Ti-K-tourmaline (frosting-tourmaline); rutile and Fe-Ti-estaurolites. Eclogitic-garnets, picro-chromites and frosting-tourmaline reproduces compatible parameters with its association with diamonds (in the mantle and/or primary rocks). The composition of chromite-spinel, K-Ti-tourmaline, Mn-ilmenite and Zircons supported by the types of eclogitic-garnets and some forms of diamonds-corrosion suggest that the primary source for the diamonds try to lamproites. The tectonic environment, deduced from seismic tomography (Model TX2011 -dVs%) -supported by calculations of P in eclogitic garnets and in picro-chromites, correspond to a block Archon (Apa) of Rio de La Plata Craton. Archon- block that it would be deep (about 250-280 km deep) and thus ideal for the occurrence of primary productive sources of diamond.
International Journal of Mining Science, Vol. 3, 1, pp. 1-28.
Europe, Israel
Kimberlite, Lamproite
Abstract: An integrated analysis of several regional geological and geophysical factors allowed to select the Makhtesh Ramon area (northern Negev, Israel) for sesarching diamondiferous associations. The most important regional factor is the Middle Cretaceous maximum in the development of upper mantle hot spots brightly appearing in this area. Analysis of magnetic (paleomagnetic), self-potential and ionselective data inambogously indicate presence of some bodies possibly having kimberlite (lamproite) origin occurring at small depths (8 - 50 m) in the western Makhtesh Ramon. Repeated erosion processes in the area caused removing most part of sedimentary associations that significantly simplified the processes of mineral sampling and rock withdrawn for geochemical and petrological analyses. Comprehensive mineralogical analyses enabled to detect the following minerals-satellites of diamond associations: chrome-diopside, orange garnet, bright-crimson pyrope, picroilmenite, moissanite, corundum, black spinel, olivine, anatase and tourmaline (including black samples). These minerals do not rolled and oxidized that is an additional evidence of the neighboring occurrence of the indigenous rocks. Data of electronic microscopy show that the grains of (1) picroilmenite and (2) pyrope contain, respectively: (1) cobalt, chrome, magnesium and nickel and (2) chrome, magnesium and aluminum. This indicates that both picroilmenite and pyrope have the hyper-abyssal origin that also is an indicator of the possible occurring of diamondiferous pipes. List of secondary-importance satellite minerals includes feldspars, pyroxenes, magnetite, hematite, ilmenite, galenite, pyrite, limonite, mica, chromite, leucoxene, zircon, rutile, etc. These minerals (by their considering with the first group) are also indicators of diamond-bearing of the studied area. Identification of small plates of gold and silver as well as considerable traces of La, Ce, Th, Nb and Ta (Rare Earth Elements) also may be associated with the nearest kimberlite rock occurrence. The total number of recognized microdiamonds consists of more than 300 units; five diamonds (> 1 mm) were identified (sizes of the most largest crystals are 1.2 and 1.35 mm). Thus, on the basis of a set of geological-geophysical factors and identification of the mentioned minerals we can definitely estimate that the Makhtesh Ramon area is perspective for discovering diamondiferous rocks (kimberlite or lamproite pipes) as well as diamond crystals in loose deposits. Discovered silver- and gold-bearing and REE signatures may have independent importance.
National Seminar on Strategic trends and future perspectives in the development of natural resources of Telangana state, Kakatiya University, Abstract Volume, 1, March 30,31 pp. 18-19.
India, Telangana
Lamproites
Abstract: The authigenic carbonates which occur in arid and semi-arid regions of the world are commonly referred to as calcretes or caliche or kankar. These are pedogenic calcretes which occur in association with soil forming the residual regolith. Many rock types produce calcretes upon weathering and denudation, but calcrete derived from certain rocks acts as an exploration guide. Calcrete is a prominent sampling medium in countries like Australia and South Africa whereas it is not so popular in the Indian context. Kimberlites, being ultrapotassic in nature and owing to the enrichment of olivine, serpentine an calcite, often produce calcrete duricrust as a capping on the outcrops. The calcretes derived from kimberlites contain relict kimberlitic xenocrystic minerals like pyrope, ilmenite, Cr-diopside, pseudomorphs of olivine, phlogopite etc. unlike those derived from other rock types. The calcretes derived from granitoid rocks significantly contain minerals like chert, quartz, semi-weathered feldspar etc. Recently more than fifteen lamproites have been discovered at Vattikodu and Chintalapalli and one lamprophyre at Bayyaram of Telangana state, by the Geological Survey of India, unraveling new panorama that the state has a substantial potential for occurrence of more kimberlite clan rocks. Perhaps for the first time, an attempt has been made here to test the geochemical affinity of calcretes from various locations within Nalgonda district, which is endowed mostly with granitic terrain and Cuddapah sedeimentaries in the southern part. About sixteen samples have been collected from the in-situ regolith, spread in the granite-mafic dyke terrain, with an omission of calcretes occurring in transported black soil areas. The samples were geochemically analysed for major and trace elements for a preliminary study. The data has been compared with published geochemical data of lamproites of Ramadugu Field, to understand their geohchemical association. The calcretes are low in SiO2 (33.92-45.1wt %), high in K2O (1.07-2.21wt %) and CaO (0.78-13.61wt %). When compared to other major elements, MgO displays low concentration and K2O has a higher concentration than Na2O. The trace elements are found to be enriched in some of the samples collected in close vicinity of known lamproite occurrences. The samples show a high degree of chemical weathering, alteration and compositional variation indices. It is observed that enrichment of elements like Cr, Nb, Ni indicates, similar to parent kimberlite/lamproite rock, favourable targets for further ground exploration in virgin areas. In the present study, two samples, towards five kilometers southeast of Vattikodu Lamproite Field, possess higher Nb (>25ppm) concentration, which stand out as explorable targets for further ground investigations. Further field investigations such as geological mapping, pitting, petrography and geochemistry on these two locations are in progress to ascertain whether or not these two targets unveil new kimberlites/lamproites in the area.
Abstract: Micas from mafic ultrapotassic rocks with lamproitic affinity from several localities of the Central Mediterranean region were studied through single-crystal X-ray diffraction (SC-XRD), electron microprobe analysis (EMPA) and Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry (SIMS); Mössbauer Spectroscopy (MöS), when feasible, was also applied to minimise the number of unknown variables and uncertainties. Lamproitic samples analysed cover the most important Central Mediterranean type localities, from Plan d'Albard (Western Alps) to Sisco (Corsica), Montecatini Val di Cecina and Orciatico (Tuscany, Italy) and Torre Alfina (Northern Latium, Italy). The studied crystals show distinctive chemical and structural features; all of them belong to the phlogopite-annite join and crystallise in the 1 M polytype, except for micas from Torre Alfina, where both 1 M and 2 M1 polytypes were found. Studied micas have variable but generally high F and Ti contents, with Mg/(Mg + Fe) ranging from ~ 0.5 to ~ 0.9; 2M1 crystals from Torre Alfina radically differ in chemical composition, showing high contents of Ti and Fe as well as of Al in both tetrahedra and octahedra, leading to distinctive structural distortions, especially in tetrahedral sites. SIMS data indicate that studied micas are generally dehydrogenated with OH contents ranging from ~ 0.2 apfu (atoms per formula unit) for Orciatico and Torre Alfina to ~ 1.4 for Plan d'Albard crystals; this feature is also testified by the length of the c parameter, which decreases with the loss of hydrogen and/or the increase of the F ? OH substitution. Chemical and structural data suggest that the entry of high charge octahedral cations is mainly balanced by an oxy mechanism and, to a lesser extent, by a M3 +,4 +-Tschermak substitution. Our data confirm that Ti preferentially partitions into the M2 site and that different Ti and F contents, as well as different K/Al values, are both dependant upon fH2O and the composition of magma rather than controlled by P and T crystallisation conditions. The obtained data help to discriminate among lamproite-like rocks formed within a complex geodynamic framework but still related to a destructive tectonic margin and evidence different trends for micas from the youngest Torre Alfina (Northern Latium) lamproites, referred to the Apennine orogeny and those of the older lamproites from Orciatico, Montecatini Val di Cecina (Tuscany), Western Alps, and Corsica, the latter referred to the Alpine orogeny. Phlogopite crystals from the older lamproites fall within the compositional and structural field of worldwide phlogopites from both within-plate and subduction-related settings. Phlogopite from the Plio-Pleistocene lamproite-like occurrence in Tuscany and Northern Latium, despite crystals with low Mg# of the Torre Alfina rock plot well within the general field of the other crystals in less evolved samples, follows a different evolution trend similar to that of shoshonites from Tuscany and Northern Latium. On this basis, we argue that the observed differences are inherited by slight differences in the magma compositions that are related with different genetic and evolution pathways.
Abstract: Numerous Mesozoic bodies of lamproite-like intrusions are located NE and E of the city of Villarrica, Guairá Department, in eastern Paraguay. This magmatic field, known as Ybytyruzú Field, lies immediately on the margin of the SW part of Paranapanemá cratonic-block, just of the Asunción rift backs-horst and so related to deep crustal/lithospheric fracture zones.Mostly of observed rocks are weathered, however fresh samples were collected in dykes from Acaty (=Yzu-2), Tacuarita (=Yzu-7); lava/breccias from Mbocayaty (=Yzu-3); and sill from Salto Boni (=Yzu-6). They intrude, both, the sediments (Independencia Group and Misiones Formation) and the tholeiitic basalts of the Paraná Basin. In the present study we have performed petrographic and mineral chemistry data to show that all of the study rocks, from the Ybytyruzú Field, are lamproites (leucite lamproite from Yzu-2/Yzu-3/Yzu-7 and sanidine lamproite from Yzu-6).With respect to Yzu-2, Yzu-3 and Yzu-6, the following analyzes show the lamproite character: -phenocrysts/microphenocrysts of: olivine (mg# (Mg/(Mg+Fe)) 0.80-0.85), Al-poor diopside (Al2O3 0.53-2.09% and TiO2 0.65-1.61%), phlogopite/Al-poor-Ti phlogopite (mg# 0.76-0.85, TiO2 5.8-10.2% and Al2O3 12.7-13.9%), Mg-Ti magnetites and leucite (pseudomorphs). -and matrix phases of: Al-poor diopside (Al2O3 0.39-2.46% and TiO2 0.43-1.55%), Al-poor-Ti phlogopite/biotite (mg# 0.57-0.80, TiO2 5.6-10.2% and Al2O3 8.9-12.8%), Mg-Ti magnetites/Ti-magnetites; sanidine (0-4.0% Fe2O3, 0-2.6% BaO and 0-2.5% Na2O). And as accessory phases, ilmenite (0.2-5.7% MgO and 0.3-6.6% MnO), K and Ti-rich Feeckermanite/richterite (1.32-3.6% K2O and 4.7-9.0% TiO2), K-rich Fe-Mg-Mn amphiboles, apatite and quartz (Yzu-6). And so, Ybytyruzú lamproite-like intrusions authenticates the true lamproitic province in Paraguay. III; INTERNATIONAL, 2000 BRAZIL 2000; 3 1ST INTERNATIONAL GEOLOGICAL CONGRESS; ABSTRACTS VOLUME
Abstract: The paper presents new palaeomagnetic results and reassesses complete set of published palaeomagnetic results on the lamproite intrusions in the Gondwana formations of the Eastern India. Altogether eleven sites register reliable characteristic magnetisations corresponding to the c. 110 Ma emplacement age of the lamproites. A mean ChRM is estimated with D = 331.3°; I = ?62.4° (?95 = 6.2°, k = 55; N = 11). The palaeomagnetic pole of ? = 14.9°: ? = 287.6° (A95 = 8.4°) is established for the lamproites and it averaged the secular variation and confirms to the Geocentric Axial Dipole (GAD). The pole compares remarkably well with the grand mean pole reported for the Rajmahal traps that are attributed to represent location of the Kerguelen mantle plume head. The palaeolatitudes transferred to Rajmahal coordinates (25.05°: 87.84°) are situated ?6° north of the present location of the Kerguelen hotspot location. The interpretations are consistent with earlier suggestions of southward migration of the plume based on palaeomagnetic results of Site 1138 of the ODP Leg 183 and with the predictions of numerical models of global mantle circulation.
Abstract: Potassic and ultrapotassic magmatism from deep lithospheric sources in intra-cratonic settings can be the signal of subsequent voluminous mafic magmatism and the formation of Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs) triggered by mantle plumes. Here we report for the first time, precise zircon U-Pb age data from a suite of lamproites in the Bastar Craton of central India that mark the onset of Paleoproterozoic rifting and culminating in the formation of extensive mafic dyke swarms as the bar codes of one of the major LIP events during the Precambrian evolution of the Indian shield. The lamproites from the Nuapada field occur as dismembered dykes and are composed of phenocrysts and microphenocrysts of altered olivine together with microphenocrysts of phlogopite and magnetite within a groundmass of chlorite and calcite with accessory rutile, apatite and zircon. The rocks compositionally correspond to olivine phlogopite lamproite and phlogopite lamproite. Geochemical features of the lamproites correlate with their counterparts in Peninsular India and other similar suites elsewhere in the world related to rift settings, and also indicate OIB-like magma source. The associated syenite shows subduction-related features, possibly generated in a post-collisional setting. Magmatic zircon grains with high Th/U ratios in the syenite from the Nuapada lamproite form a coherent group with an upper intercept age of 2473 ± 8 Ma representing the timing of emplacement of the magma. Zircon grains in three lamproite samples yield four distinct age groups at ca. 2.4 Ga, 2.2 Ga, 2.0 Ga and 0.8 Ga. The 2.4 Ga group corresponds to xenocrysts entrained from the syenite whereas the 2.2 Ga group is considered to represent the timing of emplacement of the lamproites. The ca. 2.0 Ga zircon grains correlate with the major thermal imprint associated with mafic magmatism and dyke emplacement in southern Bastar and the adjacent Dharwar Cratons. A few young zircon grains in the syenite and lamproites show a range of early to middle Neoproterozoic ages from 879 to 651 Ma corresponding to younger thermal event(s) as also represented by granitic veins cutting across these rocks and extensive silicification. Zircon Lu-Hf isotope data suggest magma derivation from a refertilized Paleo-Mesoarchean sub-continental lithospheric mantle, or OIB-type sources. The differences in Hf-isotope composition among the zircon grains from different age groups indicate that the mantle sources of the lamproite are heterogeneous at the regional scale. A combination of the features from geochemical and zircon Hf isotope data is consistent with asthenosphere-lithosphere interaction during the lamproite magma evolution. The timing of lamproite emplacement in central India correlates with the global 2.2 Ga record of LIPs. We link the origin of the related mantle plume to the recycling of subducted slabs associated with the prolonged subduction-accretion history prior to the Neoarchean cratonization, as well as the thermal blanket effect of the Earth’s oldest supercontinent. Pulsating plumes and continued rifting generated voluminous dyke swarms across the Bastar and Dharwar Cratons, forming part of a major global rifting and LIP event.
Abstract: Two typical lamproitic dykes were found in Noril'sk region of the north-western Siberian Craton, which according to mineralogical, geochemical and isotopic criteria belong to anorogenic, non-diamondiferous type of lamproites. According to the geologic relationships, they cut through the Noril'sk-1 intrusion of the Siberian flood basalt province and thus are younger than ~251 Ma. 40Ar/39Ar dating of the two dykes yielded ages of 235.24 ± 0.19 Ma and 233.96 ± 0.19 Ma, showing that they were emplaced in Carnian of the Late Triassic, about 16 Ma after the flood basalt event. There are some indications that there were multiple lamproitic dyke emplacements, including probably emplacement of diamondiferous lamproites, which produced Carnian-age diamond-rich placer deposits in other parts of the Siberian Craton and in adjacent regions. Lead isotope modelling shows that the source of the studied lamproites was formed with participation of recycled crust, which underwent modification of its U/Pb ratio as early as 2.5 Ga. However, the exactmechanismof the recycling cannot be deciphered now. It could be either through delamination of the cratonic crust or subduction of amix of ancient terrigenous sediments into the mantle transition zone.
Abstract: Potassic and ultrapotassic magmatism from deep lithospheric sources in intra-cratonic settings can be the signal of subsequent voluminous mafic magmatism and the formation of Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs) triggered by mantle plumes. Here we report for the first time, precise zircon U-Pb age data from a suite of lamproites in the Bastar Craton of central India that mark the onset of Paleoproterozoic rifting and culminating in the formation of extensive mafic dyke swarms as the bar codes of one of the major LIP events during the Precambrian evolution of the Indian shield. The lamproites from the Nuapada field occur as dismembered dykes and are composed of phenocrysts and microphenocrysts of altered olivine together with microphenocrysts of phlogopite and magnetite within a groundmass of chlorite and calcite with accessory rutile, apatite and zircon. The rocks compositionally correspond to olivine phlogopite lamproite and phlogopite lamproite. Geochemical features of the lamproites correlate with their counterparts in Peninsular India and other similar suites elsewhere in the world related to rift settings, and also indicate OIB-like magma source. The associated syenite shows subduction-related features, possibly generated in a post-collisional setting. Magmatic zircon grains with high Th/U ratios in the syenite from the Nuapada lamproite form a coherent group with an upper intercept age of 2473 ± 8 Ma representing the timing of emplacement of the magma. Zircon grains in three lamproite samples yield four distinct age groups at ca. 2.4 Ga, 2.2 Ga, 2.0 Ga and 0.8 Ga. The 2.4 Ga group corresponds to xenocrysts entrained from the syenite whereas the 2.2 Ga group is considered to represent the timing of emplacement of the lamproites. The ca. 2.0 Ga zircon grains correlate with the major thermal imprint associated with mafic magmatism and dyke emplacement in southern Bastar and the adjacent Dharwar Cratons. A few young zircon grains in the syenite and lamproites show a range of early to middle Neoproterozoic ages from 879 to 651 Ma corresponding to younger thermal event(s) as also represented by granitic veins cutting across these rocks and extensive silicification. Zircon Lu-Hf isotope data suggest magma derivation from a refertilized Paleo-Mesoarchean sub-continental lithospheric mantle, or OIB-type sources. The differences in Hf-isotope composition among the zircon grains from different age groups indicate that the mantle sources of the lamproite are heterogeneous at the regional scale. A combination of the features from geochemical and zircon Hf isotope data is consistent with asthenosphere-lithosphere interaction during the lamproite magma evolution. The timing of lamproite emplacement in central India correlates with the global 2.2 Ga record of LIPs. We link the origin of the related mantle plume to the recycling of subducted slabs associated with the prolonged subduction-accretion history prior to the Neoarchean cratonization, as well as the thermal blanket effect of the Earth's oldest supercontinent. Pulsating plumes and continued rifting generated voluminous dyke swarms across the Bastar and Dharwar Cratons, forming part of a major global rifting and LIP event.
Abstract: In this study, we show how veined lithospheric mantle is involved in the genesis of ultrapotassic magmatism in cratonic settings. We conducted high pressure experiments to simulate vein + wall rock melting within the Earth's lithospheric mantle by reacting assemblages of harzburgite and phlogopite-rich hydrous mantle xenoliths. These comprised a mica-, amphibole-, rutile-, ilmenite-, diopside (MARID) assemblage at 3-5 GPa and 1325-1450 °C. Melting of the MARID assemblages results in infiltration of melt through the harzburgite, leading to its chemical alteration. At 3 and 4 GPa, melts are high in K2O (> 9 wt%) with K2O/Na2O > > 2 comparable to anorogenic lamproites. Higher pressures and temperatures (5 GPa/1450 °C) lead to increasing MgO contents of the melt and to some extent lower K2O contents (5-7 wt%) at equally high K2O/Na2O ratios. Our experiments provide insights into the role of alkalis in nickel-partitioning (DNi) between olivine and ultrapotassic melt. We observe that the high contents of Na, K, and Al are indicative of high DNi values, implying that the melt polymerization is the dominant factor influencing the olivine/melt nickel partitioning. The change of DNi as a function of melt composition results in a pressure independent, empirical geothermometer: Element oxides represent the composition of the glass (in wt%), and DNi is the liquid/olivine Ni-partitioning coefficient. We propose that this geothermometer is applicable to all natural silicate melts that crystallized olivine in a temperature interval between 1000 and 1600 °C. Application to glass-olivine pairs from calc-alkaline settings (Mexico), MORB (East Pacific Rise), and OIB (Hawaii) yielded reasonable values of 996-1199 °C, 1265 °C, and 1330 °C, respectively.
Abstract: The mineralogy of nine recently discovered dykes (VL1:VL8 and VL10) in the vicinity of Vattikod village, Nalgonda district in Telangana State is described. The mineral assemblage present and their compositions are comparable to those of bona fide lamproites in terms of the presence of phlogopite (Ti-rich, Al-poor phlogopite and tetraferriphlogopite); amphiboles (potassic-arfvedsonite, potassic-richterite, potassic-ferro-richterite, potassic-katophorite, Ti-rich potassic-katophorite, Ti-rich potassic-magnesio-katophorite); Al-poor clinopyroxenes; feldspars (K-feldspar, Ba-K-feldspar and Na-feldspar) and spinels (chromite-magnetite and qandilite-ulvöspinel-franklinite). These dykes have undergone diverse and significant degrees of deuteric alteration as shown by the formation of secondary phases such as: titanite, allanite, hydro-zircon, calcite, chlorite, quartz and cryptocrystalline SiO2. On the basis of their respective mineralogy: the VL4 and VL5 dykes are classified as pseudoleucite-phlogopite lamproite; VL2 and VL3 dykes as pseudoleucite-amphibole-lamproite; and VL6, VL7 and VL8 as pseudoleucite-phlogopite-amphibole-lamproite. VL10 is extensively altered but contains fresh euhedral apatite microphenocrysts together with pseudomorphs after leucite and is classified as a pseudoleucite-apatite-(phlogopite?) lamproite. The mineralogy of the Vattikod lamproite dykes is compared with that of the Ramadugu, Somavarigudem and Yacharam lamproite dykes which also occur in the Ramadugu lamproite field. The lamproites from the Eastern Dharwar Craton are considered as being possible expressions of ancient subduction-related alkaline magmatism along the Eastern Ghats mobile belt.
Abstract: The mineralogy of a new lamproitic diatreme 200-250 m in diameter and 3 ga in area is studied in detail. The chemical and 3-D mineralogical analysis identify the diatreme rocks as strongly altered olivine lamproites with a large volume (50-60%) of xenoliths of strongly altered spinel (garnet) lherzolites and harzburgites-dunites. Numerous grains-xenocrysts of indicator minerals of diamond have been extracted from the heavy concentrates (the weight of the initial product is 742 g and the size is 100-500 ?m) as a result of hydroseparation: (1) subcalcium (CaOav. 2.6 wt %) high-Cr (Cr2O3 av. 5.3 wt %) pyrope (50 grains); (2) chrome diopside (7 and 8 mol % of kosmochlor and jadeite components, respectively, >40 grains); (3) high-Cr chromite (Cr2O3 > 62 wt %); and (4) picroilmenite (MgO 12-13.8 wt %) and Cr-rutile (Cr2O3 1.1 wt %). Xenocrysts prove the mantle endogene (the level of garnet lherzolites) source of the magmatic center of lamproites and forecast the diamond potential of the new diatreme in the Kostomuksha ore district.
Mineralogy and Petrology, doi.org/10.1007/s00710-018-0612-9 19p.
Australia
lamproites
Abstract: The Miocene lamproites of the West Kimberley region, Western Australia include olivine-leucite lamproites (?10 wt% MgO) containing olivine and leucite microphenocrysts, and diamondiferous olivine lamproites (20-30 wt% MgO) containing olivine phenocrysts and larger (1-10 mm) olivine as mantle xenocrysts and dunite micro-xenoliths. Olivine phenocrysts and thin (<100 ?m) magmatic rims define trends of decreasing Cr and Ni, and increasing Ca and Mn, with decreasing olivine Mg#, consistent with fractional crystallisation of olivine (and minor chromite). Many phenocrysts are zoned, and those with cores of similar Mg# and trace element abundances to the mantle xenocrysts may be xenocrysts overgrown by later olivine crystallised from the lamproite magma. Magmatic olivines Mg#91-92 are estimated to have been in equilibrium with olivine lamproite magma(s) containing ~22-24 wt% MgO. The xenocrystic mantle olivines Mg90-92.5 in the olivine lamproites are inferred from trace element abundances to be mostly derived from garnet peridotite with equilibration temperatures estimated from the Al-in-olivine thermometer (Bussweiler et al. 2017) to be ~1000-1270 °C at depths of 115-190 km. Olivines from the deeper lithosphere are less depleted (lower Mg#, higher Na, Al, P, Ti, Zr etc) than those at shallower depths, a feature suggested to reflect the combined effects of metasomatic re-enrichment of the craton roots (Ti, Fe, Zr etc) and increasing temperature with depth of origin (Na, Al, Ca). The West Kimberley lamproite olivines are not enriched in Li, as might be expected if their source regions contained continental sedimentary material as has been previously inferred from lamproite large-ion-lithophile trace elements, and Sr and Pb isotopes.
Abstract: Petrographic, mineral chemical and whole-rock geochemical characteristics of two newly discovered lamproitic dykes (Dyke 1 and Dyke 2) from the Sidhi Gneissic Complex (SGC), Central India are presented here. Both these dykes have almost similar sequence of mineral-textural patterns indicative of: (1) an early cumulate forming event in a deeper magma chamber where megacrystic/large size phenocrysts of phlogopites have crystallized along with subordinate amount of olivine and clinopyroxene; (2) crystallization at shallow crustal levels promoted fine-grained phlogopite, K-feldspar, calcite and Fe-Ti oxides in the groundmass; (3) dyke emplacement related quench texture (plumose K-feldspar, acicular phlogopites) and finally (4) post emplacement autometasomatism by hydrothermal fluids which percolated as micro-veins and altered the mafic phases. Phlogopite phenocrysts often display resorption textures together with growth zoning indicating that during their crystallization equilibrium at the crystal-melt interface fluctuated multiple times probably due to incremental addition or chaotic dynamic self mixing of the lamproitic magma. Carbonate aggregates as late stage melt segregation are common in both these dykes, however their micro-xenolithic forms suggest that assimilation with a plutonic carbonatite body also played a key role in enhancing the carbonatitic nature of these dykes. Geochemically both dykes are ultrapotassic (K2O/Na2O: 3.0 -9.4) with low CaO, Al2O3 and Na2O content and high SiO2 (53.3 -55.6 wt.%) and K2O/Al2O3 ratio (0.51 -0.89) characterizing them as high-silica lamproites. Inspite of these similarities, many other features indicate that both these dykes have evolved independently from two distinct magmas. In dyke 1, phlogopite composition has evolved towards the minette trend (Al-enrichment) from a differentiated parental magma having low MgO, Ni and Cr content; whereas in dyke 2, phlogopite composition shows an evolutionary affinity towards the lamproite trend (Al-depletion) and crystallized from a more primitive magma having high MgO, Ni and Cr content. Whole-rock trace-elements signatures like enriched LREE, LILE, negative Nb-Ta and positive Pb anomalies; high Rb/Sr, Th/La, Ba/Nb, and low Ba/Rb, Sm/La, Nb/U ratios in both dykes indicate that their parental magmas were sourced from a subduction modified garnet facies mantle containing phlogopite. From various evidences it is proposed that the petrogenesis of studied lamproitic dykes stand out to be an example for the lamproite magma which attained a carbonatitic character and undergone diverse chemical evolution in response to parental melt composition, storage at deep crustal level and autometasomatism.
Geophysical Research Abstracts EGU , Vol. 19, EGU2017-12945-2 1p. Abstract
India
lamproites
Abstract: The Mesoproterozoic Banganapalle Lamproite Field of southern India comprises four lamproite dykes which have intruded the Tadpatri Shale of the Cuddapah platformal sedimentary sequence. Mineralogical study of the dyke no. 551/110/4 shows that the rock has an inequigranular texture with megacrysts and macrocrysts of possibly olivine which are completely pseudomorphed by calcite and quartz due to pervasive hydrothermal and/or duteric alteration. Phenocrysts and microphenocrysts of phlogopite are highly chloritised with occasional preservation of relicts. The groundmass is dominated by calcite with subordinate amounts of phlogopite (completely chloritised), diopside, apatite, rutile and spinel. Other minor phases in the groundmass include titanite, allanite, monazite, zircon, barite, carboceranite, pyrite, pyrrhotite, chalcopyrite, galena, sphalerite, heazlewoodite, and pentlandite. Spinel occurs in three textural types: (i) xenocrysts showing homogeneous composition; (ii) phenocrysts and microphenocrysts with continuous compositional zoning from the core to the rim; and (iii) groundmass crystals with distinct growth zones marked by discontinuous compositional zoning from the core to the rim. Four growth zones (zones I-IV) of spinel are recognized. Phenocrysts and microphenocrysts are designated as zone I spinels which have 55.0-65.7 wt% Cr2O3, 2.7-7.2 wt% Al2O3, <0.4 wt% TiO2, and record a decrease in Al/(Al+Cr) from the core to the rim. Zone II spinels either occur as overgrowth rims on xenocrystal and zone I spinels or form cores to zone III rims in discrete grains, and have higher TiO2 (1.2-3.6 wt%), lower Al2O3 (1.2-2.9 wt%) and similar Cr2O3 (55.0-63.8 wt%) contents compared to zone I spinels. Zone III spinels either occur as overgrowth rims on xenocrystal and zone II spinels or form cores to zone IV rims in discrete grains, and contain higher Al2O3 (5.7-10.2 wt%), lower Cr2O3 (45.9-56.0 wt%) and similar TiO2 (1.6-3.4 wt%) compared to zone II spinels. Overgrowth rims of zone II and zone III spinels locally exhibit oscillatory zoning with characteristics of diffusion controlled magmatic growth. Zone IV spinels are marked by low Cr2O3 (17.4-25.5 wt%) and Al2O3 (1.6-2.0 wt%), and high Fe2O3 (28.8-35.4 wt%) and TiO2 (4.0-7.1 wt%) contents. Xenocrystal spinels are distinguished from magmatic spinels by high Al2O3 content (11.3-22.4 wt%) and uniform composition of individual grains. The wide range of composition and the zonation pattern of magmatic spinels suggest that the mineral was on the liquidus through most part of the lamproite crystallisation. The abrupt changes in composition between the zones indicate hiatus in crystallisation and/or sudden changes in the environmental conditions, resulting from crystallisation of associated minerals and periodic emplacement of certain elements into the magma. Diopside occurs in groundmass segregations and has low contents of Na2O (<0.77 wt%), Al2O3 (<1.2 wt%), Cr2O3 (<0.25 wt%) and TiO2 (<1.7 wt%), although higher values of TiO2 (up to 3.0 wt%) are locally encountered. Phenocrystal phlogopite has Mg/(Mg+Fe2+) ratios in the range of 0.76-0.83, and a Cr-rich composition (3.2-3.6 wt% Cr2O3) that indicates its crystallisation at mantle pressures. Co-precipitation of this phlogopite with phencocrystal spinel can explain the observed Al-Cr zoning in the latter.
Abstract: Lamproites are commonly found in post-collisional or intracontinental environments and characterized by unique elemental and radiogenic isotopic signatures that signify derivation from the subcontinental lithospheric mantle. An improved understanding on their genesis is important regarding the dynamics of the Earth’s mantle lithosphere, and requires knowledge in identifying source components and magmatic processes. In order to better constrain the mechanism producing the geochemical diversity of lamproites, we measure the elemental and Mg isotopic compositions of a suite of lamproites from the well-known locality Leucite Hills, Wyoming, U.S.A. The two types of lamproites therein, madupitic and phlogopite lamproites, display distinct characteristics in many element and Mg isotope diagrams. These variations cannot be ascribed to crustal contamination, fractional crystallization or source heterogeneity. Instead, the strong correlations between melting-sensitive elemental ratios (e.g., Sm/Yb and La/Yb) and indices of carbonatitic metasomatism (e.g., CaO/Al2O3, Hf/Hf*, and Ti/Ti*) with ?26Mg indicate that variable degrees of partial melting of a common carbonated mantle source have generated the observed geochemical distinctions of the Leucite Hills lamproites. Our study reveals that geochemical variations in a given lamproite suite might have been controlled mainly by the degree of mantle melting.
Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology, Vol. 173, doi.org/10.1007/ s00410-018-1493-y 27p.
India
lamproites
Abstract: Numerous lamproite dykes are hosted by the Eastern Dharwar Craton, southern India, particularly towards the northwestern margin of the Cuddapah Basin. We present here a comprehensive mineralogical and geochemical (including Sr and Nd isotopic) study on the lamproites from the Vattikod Field, exposed in the vicinity of the well-studied Ramadugu lamproite field. The Vattikod lamproites trend WNW-ESE to NW-SE and reveal effects of low-temperature post-magmatic alteration. The studied lamproites show porphyritic texture with carbonated and serpentinized olivine, diopside, fluorine-rich phlogopite, amphibole, apatite, chromite, allanite, and calcite. The trace-element geochemistry (elevated Sr and HFSE) reveals their mixed affinity to orogenic as well as anorogenic lamproites. Higher fluorine content of the hydrous phases coupled with higher whole-rock K2O highlights the role of metasomatic phlogopite and apatite in the mantle source regions. Trace-element ratios such as Zr/Hf and Ti/Eu reveal carbonate metasomatism of mantle previously enriched by ancient subduction processes. The initial 87Sr/86Sr-isotopic ratios (calculated for an assumed emplacement age of 1350 Ma) vary from 0.7037 to 0.7087 and ?Nd range from ??10.6 to ??9.3, consistent with data on global lamproites and ultrapotassic rocks. We attribute the mixed orogenic-anorogenic character for the lamproites under study to multi-stage metasomatism. We relate the (1) earlier subduction-related enrichment to the Paleoproterozoic amalgamation of the Columbia supercontinent and the (2) second episode of carbonate metasomatism to the Mesoproterozoic rift-related asthenospheric upwelling associated with the Columbia breakup. This study highlights the association of lamproites with supercontinent amalgamation and fragmentation in the Earth history.
Doklady Earth Sciences, Vol. 481, 2, pp. 1008-1012.
Russia, Aldan shield
lamproite
Abstract: Obtained data shows that high-potassic dyke rocks of the Ryabinoviy massif (Central Aldan) belong to low-titanium lamproite series (Mediterranean type) and are distinct with “classic” high-titanium lamproites. Based on Al-in-olivine thermometer, temperature of olivine-chrome-spinel pair crystallization varies in range between 1100 and 1250°C. This suggests lithospheric mantle source for the parental melt and makes role of mantle plume insignificant. High-precision data on olivine composition and bulk rock traceelement composition imply mixed source for the parental melt, consisted of depleted peridotite and enriched domains, originated during ancient subduction.
Abstract: MARID (Mica-Amphibole-Rutile-Ilmenite-Diopside) and PIC (Phlogopite-Ilmenite-Clinopyroxene) rocks are unusual mantle samples entrained by kimberlites and other alkaline volcanic rocks. The formation of MARID rocks remains hotly debated. Although the incompatible element (for example, large ion lithophile element) enrichment in these rocks suggests that they formed by mantle metasomatism, the layered textures of some MARID samples (and MARID veins in composite xenoliths) are more indicative of formation by magmatic processes. MARID lithologies have also been implicated as an important source component in the genesis of intraplate ultramafic potassic magmas (e.g., lamproites, orangeites, ultramafic lamprophyres), due to similarities in their geochemical and isotopic signatures. To determine the origins of MARID and PIC xenoliths and to understand how they relate to alkaline magmatism, this study presents new mineral major and trace element data and bulk-rock reconstructions for 26 MARID and PIC samples from the Kimberley-Barkly West area in South Africa. Similarities between compositions of PIC minerals and corresponding phases in metasomatised mantle peridotites are indicative of PIC formation by pervasive metasomatic alteration of peridotites. MARID genesis remains a complicated issue, with no definitive evidence precluding either the magmatic or metasomatic model. MARID minerals exhibit broad ranges in Mg# (e.g., clinopyroxene Mg# from 82 to 91), which may be indicative of fractionation processes occurring in the MARID-forming fluid/melt. Finally, two quantitative modelling approaches were used to determine the compositions of theoretical melts in equilibrium with MARID rocks. Both models indicate that MARID-derived melts have trace element patterns resembling mantle-derived potassic magma compositions (e.g., lamproites, orangeites, ultramafic lamprophyres), supporting inferences that these magmas may originate from MARID-rich mantle sources.
Russian Geology and Geophysics, Vol. 59, 11, pp. 1450-1460.
Russia, Aldan
lamproite
Abstract: We consider a hypothesis for the origin of PGE-bearing ultramafic rocks of the Inagli massif (Central Aldan) through fractional crystallization from ultrabasic high-potassium magma. We studied dunites and wehrlites of the Inagli massif and olivine lamproites of the Ryabinovy massif, which is also included into the Central Aldan high-potassium magmatic area. The research is focused on the chemistry of Cr-spinels and the phase composition of Cr-spinel-hosted crystallized melt inclusions and their daughter phases. Mainly two methods were used: SEM-EDS (Tescan Mira-3), to establish different phases and their relationships, and EPMA, to obtain precise chemical data on small (2-100 ?m) phases. The obtained results show similarity in chromite composition and its evolutionary trends for the Inagli massif ultramafites and Ryabinovy massif lamproites. The same has been established for phlogopite and diopside from crystallized melt inclusions from the rocks of both objects. Based on the results of the study, the conclusion is drawn that the ultramafic core of the Inagli massif resulted from fractional crystallization of high-potassium melt with corresponding in composition to low-titanium lamproite. This conclusion is consistent with the previous hypotheses suggesting an ultrabasic high-potassium composition of primary melt for the Inagli ultramafites.
Ph.d Thesis Macquarie University, researchgate.com 250p. Pdf available
Mantle
lamproites
Abstract: In total, subduction zones span 40,000 km across Earth’s surface and recycle an average thickness of 500 m of sediment. During burial and heating these sediments eventually start melting at T >675 °C, following which Si-rich hydrous melts infiltrate the peridotites of the mantle wedge above the subducting slab. In this thesis, a high-pressure experimental approach is used to examine the reaction of sediments and peridotites at 2-6 GPa in subduction zones and its consequences on the generation of K-rich magmatism and on deep nitrogen cycling. All experiments are conducted in a layered arrangement, where the depleted peridotite is placed above the sediments in a 1:1 ratio. At 2-3 GPa, the reaction of melts of sediment with depleted peridotite, simulating the fore-arc of a subduction zone, leads to the formation of layered phlogopite pyroxenites and selective incorporation of major and trace elements in these metasomatic layers. Partial melting of these phlogopite pyroxenites produces melts rich in K2O (>9 wt%) with K/Na >>2 and a trace element pattern comparable to “orogenic lamproites”. At similar pressures, the reaction of hydrous mantle melts with depleted peridotites produces metasomatic layers that show K/Na ~1 and a trace element pattern that closely resembles “anorogenic lamproites”. In both cases, K-enrichment is facilitated by the crystallization of an eclogitic residue rich in Na, poor in K, and consequently with low K/Na. At 4-6 GPa, the reaction of melts of sediment with depleted peridotite is does not produce mica, instead resulting in alkali chlorides with K/Na ratios similar to saline fluid inclusions in diamonds. Besides the chlorides, magnesite also crystallises in the peridotite. Both phases are important ingredients for the generation of salty kimberlites such as Udachnaya East. The change in metasomatic style from mica- to chloride formation between 3 to 4 GPa corresponds to the depth of the mid-lithospheric discontinuity, a zone of low seismic velocities that is found intermittently beneath all continents at a depth of 80-100 km. The subduction of sediment is the main mechanism that recycles nitrogen back to Earth’s mantle. The partitioning of nitrogen between fluid and melt (DN(Fluid/Melt)) and fluid and bulk residue (melt+mica) (DN(Fluid/Bulk)) was found to increase linearly with temperature normalized to pressure. Using the new partition coefficients, the amount of N recycled to Earth’s mantle since the onset of subduction is calculated as 50 ±6 %.
Journal of Asian Earth Sciences, Vol. 177, pp. 76-88.
Mantle
lamproite
Abstract: Potassium-rich lavas with K/Na of >2 are common in orogenic and anorogenic intraplate magmatic provinces. However, in the primitive mantle, the concentration of Na exceeds that of K by 10 times. The source of K-rich lavas thus needs to be either K-enriched or Na-depleted to account for high K/Na ratios. The geochemical and isotopic compositions of high 87Sr/86Sr post-collisional lavas show that their mantle source contains a recycled crustal component. These highly K-enriched lavas with crustal like trace element patterns are termed “orogenic lamproites” and are compositionally distinct from K-rich “anorogenic lamproites” that show lower 87Sr/86Sr and a trace element pattern that resembles that of primary mantle melts. For both groups the processes of K-enrichment within their source are uncertain and are thought to be linked to melts of sedimentary rocks for “orogenic lamproites” and low-degree melts of ultramafic mantle rocks for “anorogenic lamproites”. In both cases, metasomatism of the mantle lithosphere is the precursor to K-rich magmatism. In this study we experimentally determine the effects of mantle metasomatism by sediment- and hydrous mantle melts. The experiments simulate the interaction of refractory lithospheric mantle and metasomatizing melt in a 2-layer reaction experiment. The sediment/dunite reaction experiments lead to formation of a strongly K-enriched phlogopite-pyroxenite layer sandwiched between the two starting materials. The low temperature of the sediment/dunite reaction runs at <1000?°C simulates a fore-arc subduction environment, in which the melts of sediment are consumed during interaction with dunite as the temperature is below the solidus of the produced phlogopite-pyroxenites. The hydrous mantle melt/dunite reaction run is simulated by reacting a hydrated basanite with dunite. Since the temperature of the reaction is higher than the solidus of the resulting phlogopite-pyroxenites (1200?°C), the hydrous melt is not consumed but flows further, increasing in K2O and K/Na as it reacts with the refractory peridotite. In both cases, melts are enriched in K and K/Na increases by crystallizing a low K and low K/Na eclogitic residue. Compositions of glass and phlogopite from both types of reactions are comparable to glasses and phlogopites found within post-collisional lavas. Since the enrichment of K within the reaction zone is strongly controlled by the formation of low K/Na and low-K residues, metasomatic enrichment of the mantle lithosphere in K does not need a highly K-enriched metasomatic agent.
International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development, Vol. 2, 2, pp. 964-975. pdf
India
lamproite
Abstract: The pedogenic carbonates, found mainly in arid and semi-arid regions of the world, are commonly referred to as calcretes or caliche or kankar authigenic carbonate products which occur in association with soil, forming the residual regolith. Many rock types can produce calcretes upon weathering and denudation, but calcrete derived from certain rocks like kimberlite/lamproite acts as an exploration guide. Calcrete is a prominent sampling medium in diamond-rich countries like Australia and South Africa whereas it has not received popularity in the Indian context. Kimberlites being ultrapotassic in nature and owing to the enrichment of olivine and serpentine often produce calcrete duricrust as a capping. Recently more than twenty lamproites have been discovered in the Telangana state by the Geological Survey of India. These occurrences unravel a new panorama that the state has a substantial potential for occurrence of more kimberlite/lamproite clan rocks. An attempt has been made here to test the geochemical affinity of calcretes from various locations within Nalgonda district. The geochemical data of calcrete samples of this study has been compared with published geochemical data of lamproites of Ramadugu Field, to understand their geochemical association to kimberlite/lamproite. The calcretes are low in SiO2 (33.92-45.1 wt %), high in K2O (1.07-2.21 wt %) and CaO (0.78 When compared to other major elements, MgO displays low concentration. The trace elements are found to be enriched in some of the samples collected in close vicinity of known lamproite occurrences. The samples show high degree of chemic alteration and compositional variation indices. It is observed that enrichment of elements like Cr, Nb, Ba, Ti, Zr etc. indicates, similar to parent kimberlite/lamproite rock, favourable targets for further ground exploration in virgin areas present study, two samples, towards five kilometers northeast of Vattikodu Lamproite Field, possess higher concentrations of Nb (>25ppm), Ba (>400 ppm), Zr (>650 ppm) and Ti (>3500 ppm) which stand out as plausible explorable targets for further ground investigations. Further investigations on these two locations are suggested to ascertain whether or not these two targets unveil new kimberlites/lamproite occurrences in the area.
The state cannot move into second stage of diamond exploration at the Crater of Diamonds State Park until it prepares an environmental impact statement.
Chemical Geology, doi: 10.1016/ j.chemgeo .2019.119290 46p. Pdf
Europe, Czech Republic, Germany, Poland, Austria
lamproites
Abstract: Orogenic lamproites represent a group of peralkaline, ultrapotassic and perpotassic mantle-derived igneous rocks that hold the potential to sample components with extreme compositions from highly heterogeneous orogenic mantle. In our pilot study, we present highly siderophile element (HSE) and ReOs isotope systematics of Variscan orogenic lamproites sampled in the territories of the Czech Republic, Austria and Poland, i.e., from the termination of the Moldanubian and Saxo-Thuringian zones of the Bohemian Massif. Orogenic lamproites of the Bohemian Massif are distinguished by variably high contents of SiO2, high Mg# and predominant mineral associations of K-rich amphibole and Fe-rich microcline. The HSE show (i) consistently very low contents in all investigated orogenic lamproites compared to the estimated concentrations in majority of mid-ocean ridge basalts, hotspot-related volcanic rocks (e.g., ocean island basalts, continental flood basalts, komatiites, some intraplate alkaline volcanic rocks such as kimberlites and anorogenic lamproites) and arc lavas, and (ii) marked differences in relative and absolute HSE abundances between the samples from the Moldanubian and Saxo-Thuringian Zone. Such a regional dependence in HSE from mantle-derived melts is exceptional. Orogenic lamproites have highly variable and high initial suprachondritic 187Os/188Os values (up to 0.631) compared with rather chondritic to subchondritic Os isotope values of the young lithospheric mantle below the Bohemian Massif. The highly radiogenic Os isotope component in orogenic lamproites may be derived from preferential melting of metasomatised vein assemblages sitting in depleted peridotite mantle. This process appears to be valid generally in the petrogenesis of orogenic lamproites both from the Bohemian Massif and from the Mediterranean area. As a specific feature of the orogenic lamproites from the Bohemian Massif, originally ultra-depleted mantle component correlative with remnants of the Rheic Ocean lithosphere in the Moldanubian Zone was metasomatised by a mixture of evolved and juvenile material, whereas the lithospheric mantle in the Saxo-Thuringian Zone was enriched through the subduction of evolved crustal material with highly radiogenic Sr isotope signature. As a result, this led to observed unique regionally dependent coupled HSE, RbSr and ReOs isotope systematics.
Geologica Carpathica *** In Eng, Vol. 70, pp. 9-11.
Europe
lamproite
Abstract: Orogenic (high-silica) lamproites represent a group of post-collisional mantle-derived igneous rocks that hold the potential to sample components with extreme compositions from highly heterogeneous mantle. In our pilot study, we explore highly siderophile element (HSE) and Re-Os isotope systematics of Variscan orogenic lamproites sampled from the termination of the Moldanubian and Saxo-Thuringian zones of the Bohemian Massif. Orogenic lamproites of the Bohemian Massif are distinguished by variably high contents of SiO2, high Mg# and predominant mineral associations of K-rich amphibole and Fe-rich microcline. The HSE show (i) consistently very low contents in all investigated orogenic lamproites compared to the estimated concentrations in majority of mid- ocean ridge basalts, hotspot-related volcanic rocks and arc lavas, and (ii) marked differences in relative and absolute HSE abundances between the samples from the Moldanubian and Saxo-Thuringian Zone. Such a regional dependence in HSE from mantle-derived melts is exceptional. Orogenic lamproites have highly variable and high initial suprachondritic 187Os/188Os values (up to 0.631) compared with rather chondritic to subchondritic Os isotope values of the young lithospheric mantle below the Bohemian Massif. The highly radiogenic Os isotope component in orogenic lamproites may be derived from preferential melting of metasomatised vein assemblages sitting in depleted peridotite mantle. This process appears to be valid generally in the petrogenesis of orogenic lamproites both from the Bohemian Massif (Variscan lamproites) and from the Mediterranean area (Alpine lamproites). As a specific feature of the orogenic lamproites from the Bohemian Massif, originally ultra-depleted mantle component correlative with remnants of the Rheic Ocean lithosphere in the Moldanubian Zone was metasomatised by a mixture of evolved and juvenile material, whereas the lithospheric mantle in the Saxo-Thuringian Zone was enriched through the subduction of evolved crustal material with highly radiogenic Sr isotope signature. As a result, this led to observed unique regionally dependent coupled HSE, Rb-Sr and Re-Os isotope systematics.
Abstract: Orogenic lamproites represent a group of peralkaline, ultrapotassic and perpotassic mantle-derived igneous rocks that hold the potential to sample components with extreme compositions from highly heterogeneous orogenic mantle. In our pilot study, we present highly siderophile element (HSE) and ReOs isotope systematics of Variscan orogenic lamproites sampled in the territories of the Czech Republic, Austria and Poland, i.e., from the termination of the Moldanubian and Saxo-Thuringian zones of the Bohemian Massif. Orogenic lamproites of the Bohemian Massif are distinguished by variably high contents of SiO2, high Mg# and predominant mineral associations of K-rich amphibole and Fe-rich microcline. The HSE show (i) consistently very low contents in all investigated orogenic lamproites compared to the estimated concentrations in majority of mid-ocean ridge basalts, hotspot-related volcanic rocks (e.g., ocean island basalts, continental flood basalts, komatiites, some intraplate alkaline volcanic rocks such as kimberlites and anorogenic lamproites) and arc lavas, and (ii) marked differences in relative and absolute HSE abundances between the samples from the Moldanubian and Saxo-Thuringian Zone. Such a regional dependence in HSE from mantle-derived melts is exceptional. Orogenic lamproites have highly variable and high initial suprachondritic 187Os/188Os values (up to 0.631) compared with rather chondritic to subchondritic Os isotope values of the young lithospheric mantle below the Bohemian Massif. The highly radiogenic Os isotope component in orogenic lamproites may be derived from preferential melting of metasomatised vein assemblages sitting in depleted peridotite mantle. This process appears to be valid generally in the petrogenesis of orogenic lamproites both from the Bohemian Massif and from the Mediterranean area. As a specific feature of the orogenic lamproites from the Bohemian Massif, originally ultra-depleted mantle component correlative with remnants of the Rheic Ocean lithosphere in the Moldanubian Zone was metasomatised by a mixture of evolved and juvenile material, whereas the lithospheric mantle in the Saxo-Thuringian Zone was enriched through the subduction of evolved crustal material with highly radiogenic Sr isotope signature. As a result, this led to observed unique regionally dependent coupled HSE, RbSr and ReOs isotope systematics.
Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology, Vol. 175, 18p. Pdf
China
lamproites
Abstract: Lamproites and kimberlites are natural probes of the subcontinental lithospheric mantle providing insights into the Earth’s continental lithosphere. Whole-rock major-, trace-element and Sr-Nd-Pb isotopic compositions of the Paleozoic (~?253 Ma) lamproite dikes from the Baifen zone of the Zhenyuan area in southeastern Guizhou Province (in the southern Yangtze Block, South China) are presented. The Baifen lamproites are characterized by high MgO (7.84-14.1 wt%), K2O (3.94-5.07 wt%) and TiO2 (2.69-3.23 wt%) contents, low SiO2 (41.3-45.7 wt%), Na2O (0.21-0.28 wt%) and Al2O3 (6.10-7.20 wt%) contents. All lamproites have elevated Cr (452-599 ppm) and Ni (485-549 ppm) abundances, as well as high Ba (1884-3589 ppm), La (160-186 ppm), Sr (898-1152 ppm) and Zr (532-632 ppm) concentrations. They show uniform REE distribution patterns that are strongly enriched in light REEs relative to heavy REEs [(La/Yb)N?=?71.1-87.6], and exhibit OIB-like geochemical features with obvious enrichment of both LILEs and HFSEs in the primitive mantle-normalized multi-element distribution diagram. Moderately radiogenic Sr (87Sr/86Sri?=?0.706336-0.707439), unradiogenic Nd (143Nd/144Ndi?=?0.511687-0.511704 and ?Nd(t)?=????12.2 to???11.9), and low initial Pb (206Pb/204Pbi?=?16.80-16.90, 207Pb/204Pbi?=?15.34-15.35 and 208Pb/204Pbi?=?37.43-37.70) isotopic compositions are obtained from the rocks. They yield old model ages of TDM(Nd)?=?1.48-1.54 Ga. These signatures suggest that the Baifen lamproite magmas are alkaline, ultrapotassic and ultramafic in character and mainly represent mantle-derived primary melts, which have undergone insignificant crustal contamination and negligible fractional crystallization. The Baifen lamproites originated from a veined metasomatized lithospheric mantle source. We envisage that they were derived by partial melting of old, mineralogically complex metasomatic vein assemblages in the subcontinental lithospheric mantle beneath the southern Yangtze Block. The source region experienced ancient mantle metasomatism with complex modification by enriched fluids and melts. The metasomatic agents are most likely to originate from pre-existing slab subduction beneath the southeastern margin of the Yangtze Block. Tectonically, the Baifen lamproites were emplaced at the southern margin of the Yangtze Block, and they formed in an intraplate extensional setting, showing an anorogenic affinity. In terms of time and space, the genesis of Baifen lamproites is presumably related to the Emeishan large igneous province. The Emeishan mantle plume is suggested as an effective mechanism for rapid extension and thinning of the lithosphere, followed by decompression melting of the subcontinental lithospheric mantle. Combined with the thermal perturbation from asthenospheric upwelling induced by the Emeishan mantle plume, the lamproite magmas, representing small volume and limited partial melts of ancient enriched mantle lithosphere, arose. We propose that the generation of the Baifen lamproite dikes probably was a consequence of the far-field effects of the Emeishan mantle plume.
Abstract: Bunder diamond-bearing lamproite cluster, located in Madhya Pradesh, India, was discovered in 2004. The Precambrian lamproites are intruding Paleoproterozoic and Mesoproterozoic intracratonic sedimentary rocks covering the Archean Bundelkhand craton. The study of Bundelkhand craton through global dVs% TX2011 model (1D and 2D) led us to recognize that it is underlain by Archean lithospheric mantle as is observed in other locations, in mines with medium to very high diamond-grade (greater than 100 cpht). The Bunder Archean lithospheric mantle has 35 mW/m2 surface heat flow, typical of Archons with pipes with a very high degree of diamonds such as the Argyle lamproite and the kimberlites Internationalnaya, Mir, Ekati, among others. In the Bunder lamproite cluster, the Rio Tinto Exploration estimates for the pipes diamond-grade are below 100 cpht. To understand why Bunder lamproite pipes are low grade in diamonds, we combined comparative gravimetric studies to study the structural architecture model of the crystalline basement. In fact, very-rich diamond pipes develop in different crystalline basement architecture when compared to the pipes discovered in the Bunder cluster; for example the pipe Atri. The pipes next to the Argyle lamproite, the kimberlites pipes International, Mir, Diavik and others were located in the most depressed center of graben/micro graben structures; while the pipe Atri would have positioned on the edges of a graben. It is expected that additional exploration focused on the structural configuration of Bundelkhand craton basement may help to discover new lamproite pipes with a much greater diamond degree than the Bunder cluster.
Abstract: Kimberlites are volatile-rich deep mantle-derived rocks that often contain diamonds. Numerous Grenvillian (ca. 1.1 Gyr) diamondiferous kimberlites, ultramafic lamprophyres, and lamproites are exposed in the Eastern Dharwar Craton and the Bastar Craton, India, and are aligned almost parallel to the Eastern Ghats (granulite) Mobile Belt (EGMB). The trigger for these kimberlite and related magmatic events still remains an open question. We review the available geochronological and radiogenic isotopic data for the ~1.1 Gyr kimberlites, lamproites, and ultramafic lamprophyres from the Eastern Dharwar Craton and the Bastar Craton of the Indian shield. We show that kimberlites and associated magmas were emplaced for a longer duration (ca. 130 Myr) in the Indian shield during the Mesoproterozoic and sampled distinct mantle source regions. The kimberlites and ultramafic lamprophyre are characterized by slightly depleted to chondritic Nd isotopic ratios revealing their origin at deeper sub-lithospheric regions, whereas the lamproites essentially show an enriched Nd isotopic signature suggesting their derivation from enriched sub-continental lithospheric mantle. We argue that the absence of linear age progression, prolonged magmatic activity compared to the time span of coeval large igneous provinces (the Umkondo, the Keweenawan, and the Warakurna) and a cooler ambient mantle as revealed from the entrained xenoliths, constitute important limitations for a plume model earlier proposed for the genesis of these kimberlites and related magmas. These observations together with a geographical and temporal (Grenvillian) link to the EGMB points towards edge-driven convection as a trigger for kimberlite magmatism- similar to the model proposed for the Mid-Cretaceous kimberlite corridor in North America. However, this model can't explain the coeval formation of sub-continental lithospheric mantle-derived lamproites. As the timing of kimberlite and related magmatism coincides with that of the Grenvillian orogeny and succeeded a magmatic lull of ~360 Myr in the Dharwar Craton during the Mesoproterozoic, we instead, propose that small scale partial melting of heterogeneous mantle caused by plate reorganization during Columbia to Rodinia supercontinent extroversion served as a trigger for this ca. 1.1 Gyr magmatism in the southeastern Indian shield.
Proceedings Natural Science Academy, Vol. 86, 1, pp. 301-311.
India
kimberlite, lamproites
Abstract: Highlights of researches on kimberlites, lamproites and lamprophyres (and their entrained xenoliths) during 2016-2019 from the Indian context are presented. A few previously unknown occurrences have been brought to light, and a wealth of petrological, geochemical and isotopic data on these rocks became available. All these studies provided new insights into the nomenclatural as well as geodynamic aspects such as subduction-tectonics, mantle metasomatism, lithospheric thickness, supercontinent amalgamation, and break-up and nature of the sub-continental lithospheric mantle from the Indian shield.
Abstract: The presence and speciation of volatile C-H-O elements in the silicate systems play an important role in the genesis of magmas on the Earth’s mantle, due to the fact that these elements, mainly in the form of H2O, CO2, CH4 and CxHy, decrease the solidi temperatures of source rocks, making magmatism possible in Earth’s present day thermal conditions [1]. Among those elements, carbon is the only element that changes its valence according to the oxygen fugacity (fO2) conditions of the environment, resulting in different speciation, as: CO3 -2, CO2, Cgraphite/diamond, CH4 or heavier hydrocarbons. In the present work, we are determining phase stability of minerals, water, CO2 and CH4 in the system Nefeline-Kalsilite-Diopside. Our experiments are conducted under 4.0 GPa and temperatures up to 1300°C, using a 1000 tonf hydraulic press coupled with toroidal chambers. Preliminary experiments performed at 1300°C and 4.0GPa (initial composition in the Olivine-Quartz- Kalsalite/Nepheline system: 40mol% Ol90, 40mol% Nph50Kls50 and 20mol% Qz, PH2O,CO2=Ptotal) resulted in the formation of forsterite (Fo90) in equilibrium with phlogopite (Phl), melt and volatile phases (CO2 and CH4). Closer to the Diopside vertice, the addition of CO3 to the sample resulted in a imisibility of a carbonatitic and a silicatic melt, in which the carbonititic melt is enriched in sodium, while the silcate melt is enriched in potassium. Appart from that, experiments in different parts of the diagram suggest compositions from nephelinite-kalsilitite to lamproites composition for the silicate melt in equilibrium with diopside (solid solution with omphacite) and phlogopite. This work is a continuation of previous work in the anhydrous diagram and future works will provide the addition of CH4 as the volatile phase
Neues Jahbuch fur Mineralogie, Vol. 196, 3, pp. 193-196.
Europe, Spain
lamproite
Abstract: Al analogue of chayesite (with Al > Fe3+) was found in a lamproite from Cancarix, SE Spain. The mineral forms green thick-tabular crystals up to 0.4 mm across in cavities. The empirical formula derived from EMP measurements and calculated on the basis of 17 Mg + Fe + Al + Si apfu is (K0.75 Na0.20 Ca0.11)Mg3.04 Fe0.99 Al1.18 Si11.80 O30. The crystal structure was determined from single crystal X-ray diffraction data ( R = 2.38%). The mineral is hexagonal, space group P 6/ mcc, a = 10.09199(12), c = 14.35079(19) Ĺ, V = 1265.78(3) Ĺ3, Z = 2. Fe is predominantly divalent. Al is mainly distributed between the octahedral A site and the tetrahedral T 2 site. The crystal chemical formula derived from the structure refinement is C (K0.73 Na0.16 Ca0.11) B (Na0.02)4 A (Mg0.42 Al0.29 Fe0.29)2 T 2(Mg0.71 Fe0.16 Al0.13)3 T 1(Si0.985 Al0.015)12 O30.
Abstract: Variscan orogenic lamproites in the Bohemian Massif predominantly occur as 1 to 2?m wide and petrographically uniform dykes along the eastern borders of the Moldanubian and Saxo-Thuringian zones. Variscan orogenic lamproites were derived by preferential melting of subduction-related olivine-free metasomatic vein assemblages stabilised in the lithospheric mantle. These lamproitic melts may subsequently undergo extensive differentiation. In this study, we present the first combined petrographic and Sr-Nd-Pb-Li isotope characteristics of a complex lamproite exposed at ca 100?m long profile near Horní Rokytnice (Czech Republic) in the Saxo-Thuringian Zone. This lamproite is characterised by the primary mineral assemblage of K-amphibole + K-feldspar ± aegirine and quartz that petrographically varies from relatively primitive (fine-grained, mafic) to more differentiated (medium- to coarse-grained, felsic) pegmatitic lamproite domains. These domains may represent the product of crystallisation of immiscible liquids that had separated from the mafic melt. The primitive lamproite zone is characterised by the typomorphic minerals - baotite, benitoite, and henrymeyerite. The more differentiated pegmatitic domains are free of aegirine and show replacement of primary red-luminescent (Fe3+-rich) K-feldspar by blue-luminescent (Fe-poor) K-feldspar. Residual fluids rich in Ca, Ti, and HFSE in combination with the decreasing peralkalinity of the lamproite system resulted in the local formation of secondary zircon, titanite and quartz at the expense of the primary Ti-Ba-Zr-K lamproitic mineral assemblages. Lamproites from the Moldanubian and Saxo-Thuringian zones fall on separate mixing trends in the 87Sr/86Sr(t) - ?Nd(t) diagram, which indicates that the mantle beneath these two zones had been metasomatised by different crustal material. The scatter in the peralkalinity index vs. ?7Li diagram indicates that the Li isotope composition is not controlled by mixing of two end members metasome and ambient depleted mantle alone, but may also be affected by late-stage magmatic and hydrothermal processes. The compositionally zoned Horní Rokytnice dyke is special as the petrographically different types show a variation of about 4 ?-units in ?7Li due to dyke-internal processes, such as fractionation, which increases ?7Li in late-stage lamproitic melts, and post-emplacement interaction with fluids that reduced ?7Li in samples that have lost Li. Post-emplacement alteration also led to the disturbance in the Pb isotope systematics of the differentiated orogenic lamproite as indicated by variable over-correction of in situ radiogenic Pb ingrowth.
Mineralogy and Petrology, doi.org/10.1007/s00710-020-00722-y 26p. Pdf
India
lamproite
Abstract: Mesoproterozoic lamproite dykes occurring in the Banganapalle Lamproite Field of southern India show extensive hydrothermal alteration, but preserve fresh spinel, apatite and rutile in the groundmass. Spinels belong to three genetic populations. Spinels of the first population, which form crystal cores with overgrowth rims of later spinels, are Al-rich chromites derived from disaggregated mantle peridotite. Spinels of the second population include spongy-textured grains and alteration rims of titanian magnesian aluminous chromites that formed by metasomatic interactions between mantle wall-rocks and precursor lamproite melts before their entrainment into the erupting lamproite magma. Spinels that crystallised directly from the lamproite magma constitute the third population and show five distinct compositional subtypes (spinel-IIIa to IIIe), which represent discrete stages of crystal growth. First stage magmatic spinel (spinel-IIIa) includes continuously zoned macrocrysts of magnesian aluminous chromite, which formed together with Al-Cr-rich phlogopite macrocrysts from an earlier pulse of lamproite magma at mantle depth. Crystallisation of spinel during the other four identified stages occurred during magma emplacement at crustal levels. Titanian magnesian chromites (spinel-IIIb) form either discrete crystals or overgrowth rims on spinel-IIIa cores. Further generations of overgrowth rims comprise titanian magnesian aluminous chromite (spinel-IIIc), magnetite with ulvöspinel component (spinel-IIId) and lastly pure magnetite (spinel-IIIe). Abrupt changes of the compositions between successive zones of magmatic spinel indicate either a hiatus in the crystallisation history or co-crystallisation of other groundmass phases, or possibly magma mixing. This study highlights how different textural and compositional populations of spinel provide important insights into the complex evolution of lamproite magmas including clues to elusive precursor metasomatic events that affect cratonic mantle lithosphere.
Geoscience Canada OPEN ACCESS, Vol. 47, pp. 119-143.
Global
lamproites
Abstract: Lamproite is a rare ultrapotassic alkaline rock of petrological importance as it is considered to be derived from metasomatized lithospheric mantle, and of economic significance, being the host of major diamond deposits. A review of the nomenclature of lamproite results in the recommendation that members of the lamproite petrological clan be named using mineralogical-genetic classifications to distinguish them from other genetically unrelated potassic alkaline rocks, kimberlite, and diverse lamprophyres. The names “Group 2 kimberlite” and “orangeite” must be abandoned as these rock types are varieties of bona fide lamproite restricted to the Kaapvaal Craton. Lamproites exhibit extreme diversity in their mineralogy which ranges from olivine phlogopite lamproite, through phlogopite leucite lamproite and potassic titanian richterite-diopside lamproite, to leucite sanidine lamproite. Diamondiferous olivine lamproites are hybrid rocks extensively contaminated by mantle-derived xenocrystic olivine. Currently, lamproites are divided into cratonic (e.g. Leucite Hills, USA; Baifen, China) and orogenic (Mediterranean) varieties (e.g. Murcia-Almeria, Spain; Afyon, Turkey; Xungba, Tibet). Each cratonic and orogenic lamproite province differs significantly in tectonic setting and Sr-Nd-Pb-Hf isotopic compositions. Isotopic compositions indicate derivation from enriched mantle sources, having long-term low Sm/Nd and high Rb/Sr ratios, relative to bulk earth and depleted asthenospheric mantle. All lamproites are considered, on the basis of their geochemistry, to be derived from ancient mineralogically complex K-Ti-Ba-REE-rich veins, or metasomes, in the lithospheric mantle with, or without, subsequent contributions from recent asthenospheric or subducted components at the time of genesis. Lamproite primary magmas are considered to be relatively silica-rich (~50-60 wt.% SiO2), MgO-poor (3-12 wt.%), and ultrapotassic (~8-12 wt.% K2O) as exemplified by hyalo-phlogopite lamproites from the Leucite Hills (Wyoming) or Smoky Butte (Montana). Brief descriptions are given of the most important phreatomagmatic diamondiferous lamproite vents. The tectonic processes which lead to partial melting of metasomes, and/or initiation of magmatism, are described for examples of cratonic and orogenic lamproites. As each lamproite province differs with respect to its mineralogy, geochemical evolution, and tectonic setting there is no simple or common petrogenetic model for their genesis. Each province must be considered as the unique expression of the times and vagaries of ancient mantle metasomatism, coupled with diverse and complex partial melting processes, together with mixing of younger asthenospheric and lithospheric material, and, in the case of many orogenic lamproites, with Paleogene to Recent subducted material.
Abstract: We report the first occurrence of magmatic haggertyite (BaFe6Ti5MgO19) from the Miocene lamproites of the West Kimberley region of Western Australia. This contrasts with the metasomatic formation reported in an olivine lamproite host at the type locality, Prairie Creek, Arkansas. Haggertyite occurs in the groundmass of a diamondiferous olivine lamproite pipe in the Ellendale field, and within the large zoned Walgidee Hills lamproite where it forms part of an extensive suite of Ba- and K-bearing titanate and Ti-rich silicate minerals. The haggertyite co-exists with chromian spinel, perovskite, and ilmenite in the Ellendale lamproite, and with priderite and perovskite and, in one locality, with priderite, jeppeite, ilmenite, and perovskite, in the Walgidee Hills lamproite. Unlike priderite and perovskite, which are common groundmass phases in the Ellendale olivine lamproites and present throughout the Walgidee Hills lamproite, haggertyite appears restricted in its occurrence and crystallization interval, with sparse ilmenite apparently mostly crystallizing as an alternative phase. In the Walgidee Hills lamproite the haggertyite-bearing assemblage is succeeded by the Ba-titanate assemblage priderite plus jeppeite in the evolved central part of the body. The haggertyite in the main zone of the Walgidee Hills lamproite has an average composition of (Ba0.7K0.3)1.0(Ti5.0Fe3+2.1Cr0.1Fe2+3.8Mn0.2Mg0.6Na0.1)12O19 and is thus very similar to the original haggertyite described from xenoliths in the Prairie Creek lamproite apart from being poorer in Cr and Ni. Haggertyite in the groundmass of the Ellendale olivine lamproite and the central zone of the Walgidee Hills lamproite, in addition to variations in Mg and Cr, show significant variation in Ti and Fe contents and in calculated Fe3+ and Fe2+. A linear inverse relationship between Ti and Fe, and Ti and Fe3+, indicates that Fe3+ is accommodated by the coupled substitution Ti4+ + Fe2+ ? 2 Fe3+. A marked trend to higher Fe3+ in the haggertyite in Ellendale 9 olivine lamproite is ascribed to increasing oxidation during crystallization, with fO2 estimated from the olivine-spinel thermometer and oxygen barometer at Dlog FMQ = -1 to +3 at temperatures of 790-660 °C. The haggertyite in the central zone of the Walgidee Hills lamproite, in contrast, shows a marked trend to Fe2+ enrichment, which is associated with decreasing Fe in perovskite. This is inferred to indicate formation under more reducing conditions, but sufficiently oxidized to permit Fe3+ in co-existing priderite and jeppeite. Trace-element analysis by LA-ICP-MS shows the Walgidee Hills haggertyite contains minor amounts of Na, Si, Ca, V, Co, Zn, Sr, Zr, Nb, and Pb, and only traces of Al, P, Sc, Rb, REE, Hf, and Ta. Moreover, the haggertyite is preferentially enriched in certain lithophile (Ba, Sr), siderophile (Mn, Fe, Co, Ni), and chalcophile (Zn, Pb) elements relative to co-existing priderite. Haggertyite crystallization appears to be a consequence not only of the very high Ba, Ti, and K contents of the lamproite, but of relatively high-Fe concentrations and low temperatures in evolved olivine lamproite magma with the Fe3+/Fe2+ ratio determined by the prevailing fO2. The new data suggest that haggertyite might also be present but previously unrecognized in the evolved groundmass of other olivine lamproites. Haggertyite is one of an increasing number of new minerals in upper mantle rocks and volcanics derived from the upper mantle hosting large-ion-lithophile and high field strength cations.
Abstract: Mesozoic diamondiferous lamproite pipes occur along the Kapamba River within the Luangwa Valley of eastern Zambia, which is a ca. 300-200?Ma old Karoo-age precursor branch to the East African Rift System. The Luangwa Rift developed above a reactivated mega-shear zone that cuts through the Proterozoic Irumide Belt between the Congo-Tanzania-Kalahari cratons and thus it provides a rare snapshot of early-stage cratonic rift evolution. The primary mineralogy of the fresh volcanic rocks suggests that they represent a continuum between primitive olivine lamproites and slightly more evolved olivine-leucite lamproites. Mineral compositions and evolutionary trends, such as the strong Al-depletion at Tisingle bondF enrichment in groundmass phlogopite and potassic richterite, resemble those of classic lamproite provinces in circum-cratonic settings (e.g., the Leucite Hills of Wyoming and the West Kimberley field in Australia). However, there are some similarities to orangeites from the Kaapvaal craton (formerly Group-2 kimberlites), type kamafugites from the East African Rift, and ultramafic lamprophyres from a key region of the rifted North Atlantic craton, which implies a complex interplay between source-forming and tectonic processes during Karoo-age lamproite magma formation beneath south-central Africa. The bulk compositions of the Kapamba volcanic rocks fall within the range of ‘cratonic’ low-silica lamproites, but there is overlap with orangeites, in particular with the more evolved leucite- and sanidine-bearing orangeite varieties. Modelling of the process by which most of the original leucite was transformed into analcime suggests that the primitive alkaline magmas at Kapamba contained ~6-9?wt% K2O and had high K2O/Na2O ratios between ~1.6-6.2 at >10?wt% MgO - confirming the ultrapotassic nature of the mantle-derived magmatism beneath the Luangwa Rift. The virtually CO2-free, H2O-F-rich Kapamba lamproites present an extension of the geochemical continuum displayed by the members of the CO2-H2O-rich kamafugite / ultramafic lamprophyre group. Hence, we suggest that the Kapamba lamproites and the type kamafugites, located within separate branches of the East African Rift System, represent melting products of similar K-metasomatized cratonic mantle domains, but their formation occurred under contrasting volatile conditions at different stages during rift development (i.e., incipient versus slightly more advanced rifting). Temperature estimates for peridotite-derived olivine xenocrysts from the Kapamba lamproites suggest that the Luangwa Valley is an aborted cratonic rift that retained a relatively cold (?42?mW/m2) lithospheric mantle root down to ~180-200?km depth during the Mesozoic. Olivine major and trace element compositions support the presence of an Archean mantle root (up to 92.4?mol% forsterite contents) that is progressively metasomatized toward its base (e.g., increasing Tisingle bondCu contents with depth). For south-central Africa, it appears that significant volumes of Archean cratonic mantle domains ‘survived’ beneath strongly deformed and granite-intruded Proterozoic terranes, which suggests that the continental crust is more strongly impacted during collisional or rift tectonics than the ‘stabilizing’ mantle lithosphere.
Abstract: Lamproites and lamprophyres from Ryabinovoye gold deposit (Aldan Shield, Siberia) were studied. We demonstrate that these rocks, varying from Ol-Di-Phl-lamproites to syenite-porphyries, form a continuous series of lamproite magma differentiation. At the stage of phlogopite and clinopyroxene crystallization, silicate-carbonate and then carbonate-salt immiscibilities occur. A suggestion is that during these processes LREE, Y, U, Sr and Ba distribute to a phosphate-fluoride fraction and probably accumulate in apatite-fluorite gangues. Based on our results and considering existing data onore-bearing massifs within Central Aldan (lnagli, Ryabinoviy) and also of the Nam-Xe ore-bearing province (Vietnam), we concluded that Au, PGE and Th-U-Ba-REE deposits can be genetically connected with low-titanium lamproite magmas.
Geological Society, London, Special Publication , 10.1144/SP513- 2020-247 53p. Pdf
India
lamproites
Abstract: We report Mesoproterozoic 40Ar-39Ar (whole-rock) ages of lamproites from (i) the Ramadugu field (R4 dyke : 1434 ± 19 Ma and R5 dyke: 1334 ± 12 Ma) and the Krishna field (Pochampalle dyke: 1439 ± 3 Ma and Tirumalgiri dyke: 1256 ± 12 Ma) from the Eastern Dharwar Craton (EDC) and (ii) the Garledinne (1433 ± 8 Ma) and the Chelima (1373 ± 6 Ma) dykes from within the Paleo-Mesoproterozoic Cuddapah Basin, southern India. The ages reported for the Ramadugu and Tirumalgiri lamproites constitute their first radiometric dates. Ages of the Pochampalle and the Chelima lamproites from this study are broadly comparable to their previously reported 40Ar-39Ar (phlogopite) ages of c. 1500 Ma and 1418 ± 8 Ma, respectively. The ages of all these lamproites are much older than those of the (i) c. 1.1 Ga kimberlites from the Wajrakarur and Narayanpet fields of the EDC and (ii) c. 1.09 Ga lamproitic dykes at Zangamarajupalle which intrude the Cumbum Formation of the Cuddapah Basin. However, the age of the Tirumalgiri lamproite (c. 1256 Ma) is similar to that of the Ramannapeta lamproite (c. 1224 Ma) within the Krishna field. Our study provides evidence for protracted ultrapotassic (lamproitic) magmatism from c. 1.43 to 1.1 Ga over a widespread area (c. 2500 km2) in and around the Cuddapah Basin and the EDC. Implications of the obtained new ages for the diamond provenance of the Banganapalle Conglomerates, the age of the Kurnool Group and for the timing of break-up of the Paleo-Mesoproterozoic supercontinent of Columbia/Nuna are explored.
Mineralogy and Petrology, Vol. 115, pp. 87-112. pdf
India
lamproite
Abstract: Mesoproterozoic lamproite dykes occurring in the Banganapalle Lamproite Field of southern India show extensive hydrothermal alteration, but preserve fresh spinel, apatite and rutile in the groundmass. Spinels belong to three genetic populations. Spinels of the first population, which form crystal cores with overgrowth rims of later spinels, are Al-rich chromites derived from disaggregated mantle peridotite. Spinels of the second population include spongy-textured grains and alteration rims of titanian magnesian aluminous chromites that formed by metasomatic interactions between mantle wall-rocks and precursor lamproite melts before their entrainment into the erupting lamproite magma. Spinels that crystallised directly from the lamproite magma constitute the third population and show five distinct compositional subtypes (spinel-IIIa to IIIe), which represent discrete stages of crystal growth. First stage magmatic spinel (spinel-IIIa) includes continuously zoned macrocrysts of magnesian aluminous chromite, which formed together with Al-Cr-rich phlogopite macrocrysts from an earlier pulse of lamproite magma at mantle depth. Crystallisation of spinel during the other four identified stages occurred during magma emplacement at crustal levels. Titanian magnesian chromites (spinel-IIIb) form either discrete crystals or overgrowth rims on spinel-IIIa cores. Further generations of overgrowth rims comprise titanian magnesian aluminous chromite (spinel-IIIc), magnetite with ulvöspinel component (spinel-IIId) and lastly pure magnetite (spinel-IIIe). Abrupt changes of the compositions between successive zones of magmatic spinel indicate either a hiatus in the crystallisation history or co-crystallisation of other groundmass phases, or possibly magma mixing. This study highlights how different textural and compositional populations of spinel provide important insights into the complex evolution of lamproite magmas including clues to elusive precursor metasomatic events that affect cratonic mantle lithosphere.
Geological Society, London Special Publication, doi.org/10.1144/SP513-2021-36 49p. Pdf
Europe, Italy, France, Spain, Serbia, Macedonia, Turkey
lamproites
Abstract: High-MgO lamproite and lamproite-like (i.e., lamprophyric) ultrapotassic rocks are recurrent in the Mediterranean and surrounding regions. They are associated in space and time with ultrapotassic shoshonites and high-K calc-alkaline rocks. This magmatism is linked with the geodynamic evolution of the westernmost sector of the Alpine-Himalaya collisional margin, which followed the closure of the Tethys ocean. Subduction-related lamproites, lamprophyres, shoshonites and high-K calc-alkaline suites were emplaced in the Mediterranean region in the form of shallow level intrusions (e.g., plugs, dykes, and laccoliths), and small volume lava flows, with very subordinate pyroclastic rocks, starting from the Oligocene, in the Western Alps (Northern Italy), through the Late Miocene in Corsica (Southern France) and in Murcia-Almeria (South-Eastern Spain), to the Plio-Pleistocene in Southern Tuscany and Northern Latium (Central Italy), in the Balkan peninsula (Serbia and Macedonia), and in the Western Anatolia (Turkey). The ultrapotassic rocks are mostly lamprophyric, but olivine latitic lavas with a clear lamproitic affinity are also found, as well as dacitic to trachytic differentiated products. Lamproite-like rocks range from slightly silica under-saturated to silica over-saturated composition, have relatively low Al2O3, CaO, and Na2O contents, resulting in plagioclase-free parageneses, and consist of abundant K-feldspar, phlogopite, diopsidic clinopyroxene and highly forsteritic olivine. Leucite is generally absent and it is rarely found only in the groudmasses of Spanish lamproites. Mediterranean lamproites and associated rocks share an extreme enrichment in many incompatible trace elements and depletion in High Field Strength Elements and high, and positively correlated Th/La and Sm/La ratios. They have radiogenic Sr and unradiogenic Nd isotope compositions, high 207Pb over 206Pb and high time integrated 232Th/238U. Their composition requires an originally depleted lithospheric mantle source metasomatised by at least two different agents: i) a high Th/La and Sm/La (i.e., SALATHO) component deriving from lawsonite-bearing, ancient crustal domains likely hosted in mélanges formed during the diachronous collision of the northward drifting continental slivers from Gondwana; ii) a K-rich component derived from a recent subduction and recycling of siliciclastic sediments. These metasomatic melts produced a lithospheric mantle source characterised by network of felsic and phlogopite-rich veins, respectively. Geothermal readjustment during post-collisional events induced progressive melting of the different types of veins and the surrounding peridotite generating the entire compositional spectrum of the observed magmas. In this complex scenario, orogenic Mediterranean lamproites represent rocks that characterise areas that were affected by multiple Wilson cycles, as observed in the the Alpine-Himalayan realm.
Geological Society London Special Publication, doi.org/10.1144/SP513-2021-36. pdf
Mantle
lamproite
Abstract: High-MgO lamproite and lamproite-like (i.e., lamprophyric) ultrapotassic rocks are recurrent in the Mediterranean and surrounding regions. They are associated in space and time with ultrapotassic shoshonites and high-K calc-alkaline rocks. This magmatism is linked with the geodynamic evolution of the westernmost sector of the Alpine-Himalaya collisional margin, which followed the closure of the Tethys ocean. Subduction-related lamproites, lamprophyres, shoshonites and high-K calc-alkaline suites were emplaced in the Mediterranean region in the form of shallow level intrusions (e.g., plugs, dykes, and laccoliths), and small volume lava flows, with very subordinate pyroclastic rocks, starting from the Oligocene, in the Western Alps (Northern Italy), through the Late Miocene in Corsica (Southern France) and in Murcia-Almeria (South-Eastern Spain), to the Plio-Pleistocene in Southern Tuscany and Northern Latium (Central Italy), in the Balkan peninsula (Serbia and Macedonia), and in the Western Anatolia (Turkey). The ultrapotassic rocks are mostly lamprophyric, but olivine latitic lavas with a clear lamproitic affinity are also found, as well as dacitic to trachytic differentiated products. Lamproite-like rocks range from slightly silica under-saturated to silica over-saturated composition, have relatively low Al2O3, CaO, and Na2O contents, resulting in plagioclase-free parageneses, and consist of abundant K-feldspar, phlogopite, diopsidic clinopyroxene and highly forsteritic olivine. Leucite is generally absent and it is rarely found only in the groudmasses of Spanish lamproites. Mediterranean lamproites and associated rocks share an extreme enrichment in many incompatible trace elements and depletion in High Field Strength Elements and high, and positively correlated Th/La and Sm/La ratios. They have radiogenic Sr and unradiogenic Nd isotope compositions, high 207Pb over 206Pb and high time integrated 232Th/238U. Their composition requires an originally depleted lithospheric mantle source metasomatised by at least two different agents: i) a high Th/La and Sm/La (i.e., SALATHO) component deriving from lawsonite-bearing, ancient crustal domains likely hosted in mélanges formed during the diachronous collision of the northward drifting continental slivers from Gondwana; ii) a K-rich component derived from a recent subduction and recycling of siliciclastic sediments. These metasomatic melts produced a lithospheric mantle source characterised by network of felsic and phlogopite-rich veins, respectively. Geothermal readjustment during post-collisional events induced progressive melting of the different types of veins and the surrounding peridotite generating the entire compositional spectrum of the observed magmas. In this complex scenario, orogenic Mediterranean lamproites represent rocks that characterise areas that were affected by multiple Wilson cycles, as observed in the the Alpine-Himalayan realm.
Geological Society of London Special Publications, doi:https://dori.org/10.1144/SP513-2021-84 30p. Pdf proof
Africa, South Africa
lamproite
Abstract: Orangeites are a significant source of diamonds, yet ambiguity surrounds their status among groups of mantle-derived potassic rocks. This study reports mineralogical and geochemical data for a ca. 140 Ma orangeite dyke swarm that intersects the Bushveld Complex on the Kaapvaal craton in South Africa. The dykes comprise distinctive petrographic varieties that are linked principally by olivine fractionation, with the most evolved members containing minor amounts of primary carbonate, sanidine and andradite garnet in the groundmass. Although abundant groundmass phlogopite and clinopyroxene have compositions that are similar to those of cratonic lamproites, these phases show notable Ti-depletion, which we consider a hallmark feature of type orangeites from the Kaapvaal craton. Ti-depletion is also characteristic for the bulk rock compositions and is associated with strongly depleted Th-U-Nb-Ta contents at high Cs-Rb-Ba-K concentrations. The resultant high LILE/HFSE ratios of orangeites suggest that mantle source enrichment occurred by metasomatic processes in the proximity of ancient subduction zones. The Bushveld-intersecting orangeite dykes have strongly enriched Sr-Nd-Hf isotopic compositions (initial 87Sr/86Sr = 0.70701-0.70741; ?Nd = ?10.6 to ?5.8; ?Hf = ?14.4 to ?2.5), similar to those of other orangeites from across South Africa. Combined with the strong Ti-Nb-Ta depletion, this ubiquitous isotopic feature points to the involvement of ancient metasomatized mantle lithosphere in the origin of Kaapvaal craton orangeites, where K-rich metasomes imparted a ‘fossil’ subduction geochemical signature. Previous geochronology studies identified ancient K-enrichment events within the Kaapvaal cratonic mantle lithosphere, possibly associated with collisional tectonics during the 1.2-1.1 Ga Namaqua-Natal orogeny of the Rodinia supercontinent cycle. It therefore seems permissible that the cratonic mantle root was preconditioned for ultrapotassic magma production by tectonomagmatic events that occurred along convergent plate margins during the Proterozoic. However, reactivation of the K-rich metasomes had to await establishment of an extensional tectonic regime, such as that during the Mesozoic breakup of Gondwana, which was accompanied by widespread (1000 × 750 km) small-volume orangeite volcanism between 200 and 110 Ma. Although similarities exist between orangeites and lamproites, these and other potassic rocks are sufficiently distinct in their compositions such that different magma formation processes must be considered. In addition to new investigations of the geodynamic triggers of K-rich ultramafic magmatism, future research should more stringently evaluate the relative roles of redox effects and volatile components such as H2O-CO2-F in the petrogeneses of these potentially diamondiferous alkaline rocks.
Abstract: Kaapvaal lamproites, also known as orangeites, are H2O-rich, diamondiferous, highly micaceous, ultrapotassic rocks. Olivines in kimberlites have been shown to be extremely useful in tracking melt evolution, highlighting the importance of the chemical effects of SCLM assimilation on asthenosphere-derived melts. Kaapvaal lamproites are derived from melting metasomatised SCLM and may be expected to form an endmember to the asthenosphere melt-SCLM trend defined by kimberlites. In this contribution, we use olivine composition in Kaapvaal lamproites to further understand melt evolution in the SCLM and assess the similarity between Kaapvaal lamproite, other diamondiferous lamproites, and kimberlite petrogenesis in cratonic regions. We present olivine composition for representative on- and off-craton Kaapvaal lamproites from Finsch and Melton Wold, respectively. Olivines from these Kaapvaal lamproites are characterized by distinct core and rim zones, regardless of the size of individual grains. Polycrystalline grains are abundant at Finsch but relatively rare at Melton Wold. The olivine cores from both occurrences are predominantly Mg-rich (Fo>89) whereas Fe-rich cores (Fo<89) are rare. Mg-rich cores are interpreted to be derived from the disaggregation of mantle peridotites, including sheared peridotites, whereas Fe-rich cores are derived from olivines of the Cr-poor megacryst suite. The average Fo and NiO concentrations of the Melton Wold cores are lower than Finsch cores, likely related to less refractory off-craton mantle. The olivine rims at Finsch and Melton Wold are characterized by reverse zoning with ranges of Fo89-92 and Fo90-91, respectively. The rims are interpreted to represent crystallisation related to a complex interplay between increasing oxidation, assimilation of orthopyroxene, and increasing alkali content of the melt during evolution. The average core and rim compositions of Finsch and Melton Wold, in conjunction with data from diamondiferous lamproites of other cratonic regions, define a broad positive correlation. Kaapvaal lamproites have Mg-rich core and rim compositions, similar to that of Lac de Gras kimberlites, and interpreted to reflect sampling and equilibration of low volume Kaapvaal lamproite melt with refractory mantle. In contrast to Lac de Gras kimberlites, Kaapvaal lamproites have high abundances of groundmass phlogopite that reflect metasomatic material in the SCLM source, likely present as veins within refractory peridotite. This suggests that increasing proportions of melt-metasomatised SCLM interactions are not always linked with increasing Fe content of melts. We show that the petrogenesis of Kaapvaal lamproites is similar to that of kimberlites and lamproites from other cratonic regions, however, the high abundance of phlogopite and Fo-rich olivine rims suggest a distinct metasomatic lithology in the source and that olivine composition; i.e., a proxy for melt composition, may be strongly controlled by melt volume during melt-SCLM interactions.
Geological Society of London Special Publication 513, pp. 45-70.
Russia
lamproites
Abstract: Ingashi lamproite dykes are the only known primary sources of diamond in the Irkutsk district (Russia) and the only non-kimberlitic one in the Siberian craton. The Ingashi lamproite field is situated in the Urik-Iya graben within the Prisayan uplift of the Siberian craton. The phlogopite-olivine lamproites contain olivine, talc, phlogopite, serpentine, chlorite, olivine, garnet, chromite, orthopyroxene, clinopyroxene as well as Sr-F-apatite, monazite, zircon, armolcolite, priderite, potassium Mg-arfvedsonite, Mn-ilmenite, Nb-rutile and diamond. The only ultramafic lamprophyre dyke is composed mainly of serpentinized olivine and phlogopite in the talc-carbonate groundmass and is similar to Ingashi lamproites accessory assemblage with the same major element compositions. Trace element and Sr-Nd isotopic relationships of the Ingashi lamproites are similar to classic lamproites. Different dating methods have provided the ages of lamproites: 1481 Ma (Ar-Ar phlogopite), 1268 Ma (Rb-Sr whole rock) and 300 Ma (U-Pb zircon). Ingashi lamproite ages are controversial and require additional study. The calculated pressure of 3.5 GPamax for clinopyroxenes indicates that lamproite magma originated deeper than 100 km. A Cr-in-garnet barometer shows a 3.7-4.3 GPamin and derivation of Ingashi lamproites deeper than 120 km in depth. Based on the range of typical cratonic geotherms and the presence of diamonds, the Ingashi lamproite magma originated at a depth greater than 155 km.
Geological Society of London Special Publication 513, pp. 1-16.
Global
lamproites
Abstract: Proterozoic to Cenozoic lamprophyres, lamproites and related rock types hold a unique potential for the investigation of processes affecting mantle reservoirs. They originated from primary mantle-derived melts that intruded both cratons and off-craton regions, which were parts of former supercontinents - Columbia, Rodinia and Gondwana-Pangaea. Well known for hosting economic minerals and elements such as diamonds, base metals, platinum-group elements and Au, they are also significant for our understanding of deep-mantle processes, such as mantle metasomatism and mantle plume-lithosphere interactions, as well as large-scale geodynamic processes, including subduction-related tectonics and supercontinent amalgamation and break-up. This Special Publication presents an overview of the state of the art and recent advances as achieved by individual research groups from different parts of the world, and outlines future research directions. Mineralogical, geochemical, geochronological and isotope analyses are used to decipher the complex petrogenetic and metallogenetic evolution of these extraordinary rocks and unravel a complete history of tectonic events related to individual supercontinent cycles. The Special Publication including this introductory chapter also deals with some issues related to the classification of these rocks.
Geological Society of London Special Publication 513, pp. 157-178.
India
lamproites
Abstract: We report Mesoproterozoic 40Ar-39Ar (whole-rock) ages of lamproites from (i) the Ramadugu field (R4 dyke : 1434 ± 19 Ma and R5 dyke: 1334 ± 12 Ma) and the Krishna field (Pochampalle dyke: 1439 ± 3 Ma and Tirumalgiri dyke: 1256 ± 12 Ma) from the Eastern Dharwar Craton (EDC) and (ii) the Garledinne (1433 ± 8 Ma) and the Chelima (1373 ± 6 Ma) dykes from within the Paleo-Mesoproterozoic Cuddapah Basin, southern India. The ages reported for the Ramadugu and Tirumalgiri lamproites constitute their first radiometric dates. Ages of the Pochampalle and the Chelima lamproites from this study are broadly comparable to their previously reported 40Ar-39Ar (phlogopite) ages of c. 1500 Ma and 1418 ± 8 Ma, respectively. The ages of all these lamproites are much older than those of the (i) c. 1.1 Ga kimberlites from the Wajrakarur and Narayanpet fields of the EDC and (ii) c. 1.09 Ga lamproitic dykes at Zangamarajupalle which intrude the Cumbum Formation of the Cuddapah Basin. However, the age of the Tirumalgiri lamproite (c. 1256 Ma) is similar to that of the Ramannapeta lamproite (c. 1224 Ma) within the Krishna field. Our study provides evidence for protracted ultrapotassic (lamproitic) magmatism from c. 1.43 to 1.1 Ga over a widespread area (c. 2500 km2) in and around the Cuddapah Basin and the EDC. Implications of the obtained new ages for the diamond provenance of the Banganapalle Conglomerates, the age of the Kurnool Group and for the timing of break-up of the Paleo-Mesoproterozoic supercontinent of Columbia/Nuna are explored.
Geological Society of London Special Publication 513, pp. 17-44.
Africa, South Africa
lamproites
Abstract: Orangeites are a significant source of diamonds, yet ambiguity surrounds their status among groups of mantle-derived potassic rocks. This study reports mineralogical and geochemical data for a c. 140 Ma orangeite dyke swarm that intersects the Bushveld Complex on the Kaapvaal craton in South Africa. The dykes comprise distinctive petrographic varieties that are linked principally by olivine fractionation, with the most evolved members containing minor amounts of primary carbonate, sanidine and andradite garnet in the groundmass. Although abundant groundmass phlogopite and clinopyroxene have compositions that are similar to those of cratonic lamproites, these phases show notable Ti-depletion, which we consider a hallmark feature of type orangeites from the Kaapvaal craton. Ti-depletion is also characteristic of bulk rock compositions and is associated with strongly depleted Th-U-Nb-Ta contents at high Cs-Rb-Ba-K concentrations. The resultant high large ion lithophile element/high field strength element ratios of orangeites suggest that mantle source enrichment occurred by metasomatic processes in the proximity of ancient subduction zones. The Bushveld-intersecting orangeite dykes have strongly enriched Sr-Nd-Hf isotopic compositions (initial 87Sr/86Sr = 0.70701-0.70741; ?Nd = ?10.6 to ?5.8; ?Hf = ?14.4 to ?2.5), similar to those of other orangeites from across South Africa. Combined with the strong Ti-Nb-Ta depletion, this ubiquitous isotopic feature points to the involvement of ancient metasomatized mantle lithosphere in the origin of Kaapvaal craton orangeites, where K-rich metasomes imparted a ‘fossil’ subduction geochemical signature. Previous geochronology studies identified ancient K-enrichment events within the Kaapvaal cratonic mantle lithosphere, possibly associated with collisional tectonics during the 1.2-1.1 Ga Namaqua-Natal orogeny of the Rodinia supercontinent cycle. It therefore seems permissible that the cratonic mantle root was preconditioned for ultrapotassic magma production by tectonomagmatic events that occurred along convergent plate margins during the Proterozoic. However, reactivation of the K-rich metasomes had to await establishment of an extensional tectonic regime, such as that during the Mesozoic breakup of Gondwana, which was accompanied by widespread (1000 × 750 km) small-volume orangeite volcanism between 200 and 110 Ma. Although similarities exist between orangeites and lamproites, these and other potassic rocks are sufficiently distinct in their compositions such that different magma formation processes must be considered. In addition to new investigations of the geodynamic triggers of K-rich ultramafic magmatism, future research should more stringently evaluate the relative roles of redox effects and volatile components such as H2O-CO2-F in the petrogeneses of these potentially diamondiferous alkaline rocks.
Abstract: Pyrope xenocrysts (N = 52) with associated inclusions of Ti- and/or Cr-rich oxide minerals from the Aldanskaya dyke and Ogonek diatreme (Chompolo field, southeastern Siberian craton) have been investigated. The majority of xenocrysts are of lherzolitic paragenesis and have concave-upwards (normal) rare earth element (REEN) patterns that increase in concentration from light REE to medium-heavy REE (Group 1). Four Ca-rich (5.7-7.4 wt.% CaO) pyropes are extremely low in Ti, Na and Y and have sinusoidal REEN spectra, thus exhibiting distinct geochemical signatures (Group 2). A peculiar xenocryst, s165, is the only sample to show harzburgitic derivation, whilst demonstrating a normal-to-weakly sinusoidal REEN pattern and the highest Zr (93 ppm) and Sc (471 ppm). Chromite-magnesiochromite, rutile, Mg-ilmenite and crichtonite-group minerals comprise a suite of oxide mineral inclusions in the pyrope xenocrysts. These minerals are characteristically enriched in Cr with 0.6-7.2 wt.% Cr2O3 in rutile, 0.7-3.6 wt.% in Mg-ilmenite and 7.1-18.0 wt.% in the crichtonite-group minerals. Complex titanates of the crichtonite group enriched in large ion lithophile elements (LILE) are high in Al2O3 (0.9-2.2 wt.%), ZrO2 (1.5-5.4 wt.%) and display a trend of compositions from the Ca-Sr-specific varieties to the Ba-dominant species (e.g. lindsleyite). In the pyrope xenocrysts the oxides coexist with silicates (clino- and orthopyroxene and olivine), hydrous silicates (talc, phlogopite and amphibole), carbonate (magnesite), sulfides (pentlandite, chalcopyrite, breakdown products of monosulfide and bornite solid solutions), apatite and graphite. P-T estimates imply the inclusion-bearing pyrope xenocrysts have been derived from low-temperature peridotite assemblages that resided at temperatures of ~600-800°C and a pressure range of ~25-35 kbar in the graphite stability field. Pyrope genesis is linked to the metasomatic enrichment of peridotite protoliths by Ca-Zr-LILE-bearing percolating fluid-melt phases containing significant volatile components. These metasomatic agents are probably volatile-rich melts or supercritical C-O-H-S fluids that were released from a Palaeo-subduction slab.