The typochemical features of pyroxenes from Paleozoic
picrite dikes within Spitsbergen Archipelago
Burnaeva
M.Yu.*, Antonov A.V.**, Sirotkin A.N. ***
*FGUP
VNIIOkeangeologiya,
Picrite dikes
are located within the
A pyroxene is
one of the main rock-forming minerals for dikes of the both types. Discerned
are three generations of the mineral: phenocrysts, groundmass microlites and
xenocrysts. The pyroxene makes 20 to 60 % in the total, consisting mainly of
microlites; phenocrysts and xenocrysts being under 1 %. Considered below is the
composition of precisely the pyroxenes from dikes without regard for those from
xenoliths..
Phenocrysts
represent short-prism grains 0.4 to
The
groundmass pyroxene is present as long-prism grains colored brown, 0.05 to
Microprobe analysis of the grains has been performed to reveal the
features of composition of the pyroxenes (analysts: A.V.Antonov (FGUP
“VSEGEI”), Ju.L.Kretser (LLC “PC +”)). The results are shown in Table 1.
Table 1. Average contents of major
elements and calculated Fe3+, Fe2+ and Kok in pyroxenes
of ultramafic Paleozoic dikes
within Spitsbergen Archipelago by generations |
|||||||||||
Type 1 |
SiO2 |
Al2O3 |
TiO2 |
FeOt |
MgO |
CaO |
Na2O |
Cr2O3 |
Fe2+ |
Fe3+ |
ëÏË |
Microlites (n=11) |
48,49 |
5,08 |
2,30 |
6,34 |
13,54 |
23,70 |
0,05 |
0,16 |
0,15 |
0,05 |
0,26 |
Phenocrysts (n=18) |
50,59 |
5,16 |
1,23 |
6,33 |
14,61 |
20,99 |
0,69 |
0,11 |
0,15 |
0,07 |
0,32 |
Type 2 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Microlites (n=9) |
45,92 |
6,55 |
3,19 |
7,44 |
13,06 |
23,41 |
0,57 |
0,08 |
0,07 |
0,15 |
0,66 |
Phenocrysts (n=16) |
49,74 |
5,57 |
1,40 |
7,43 |
14,11 |
20,54 |
1,15 |
0,03 |
0,11 |
0,12 |
0,52 |
n – quantity of analyses; Kok = Fe3+/(Fe3++Fe2+);
FeOt – total ferrum defined as FeO; Fe2+ and Fe3+- calculated
with stoichiometry. |
Started with
phenocryst crystallization the process of mineragenesis had been completed by
forming groundmass microlites. Along the same direction, the composition of
pyroxenes shows decrease in SiO2, MgO, Na2O and increase
in TiO2, CaO, Cr2O3 in dikes of the both
types; contents of Al2O3 being slightly lower in dikes of type 1 and much
higher in dikes of type 2. FeOt shows nearly no variations in quantity, but
samples from dikes of type 1 contain for the most part ferrous oxide. A share
of ferric oxide increases in pyroxenes from picrites of type 2 (table 1). It
should be noted from the latter that oxidation of the environment for pyroxene
generation in dikes of type 1 was of lower potential.
As a whole,
the elements in pyroxenes of dikes of the both types demonstrate a similar
nature. The difference is observed but in the content of Al2O3
that may be a result of its high content in the melt and undersaturation of the
melt in SiO2 at final stages of its crystallization.
All the
pyroxenes studied concern Ca-Mg-Fe-clinopyroxenes. Three mineral varieties
(diopside, augite, fassaite) are discerned by crystallochemical formulae
(Mineraly, 1981). Among minals, dominating are diopside (20-77 %), tschermakite
(3-25 %), hedenbergite (0-43 %), enstatite (0-27 %). The highest average
contents of the first two and the latter two components have been revealed in
microlites and in megacrysts of dikes of the both types, respectively.
Large
phenocrysts of pyroxenes are characterized by zoning resulted from rapid change
in crystallization conditions when the mineral composition has not managed to
come to equillibrium with the surrounding melt. To study the zoning, 6 grains
from 3 samples (table 2) were analyzed. Three zones are pronounced as a whole.
Distribution of the elements within the zones shows a similar pattern in all
the samples. The content of SiO2 and MgO is established to increase
toward the second zone then decreasing toward the rim. Al2O3
and FeOt in most part of the grains decrease toward the second zone then
increasing toward the rim (exception is one grain from dike of type 1 showing
subsequent core-to-rim increase in aluminia). TiO2 and CaO increase
from core to rim. The composition of the rim zone and in part of the second
zone of grains is similar to that of microlites that indicates their syngenetic
pattern.
Table 2. Average composition of pyroxenes for the zones of dikes of the both types |
||||||||||
Type of dike, zone |
SiO2 |
Al2O3 |
TiO2 |
FeOt |
MnO |
MgO |
CaO |
Na2O |
K2O |
Cr2O3 |
Type 1 (n=5) |
||||||||||
core |
50,74 |
6,14 |
0,87 |
6,39 |
0,00 |
14,28 |
20,15 |
1,23 |
0,00 |
0,00 |
Zone 2 |
51,23 |
3,26 |
0,77 |
5,64 |
0,00 |
15,32 |
22,80 |
0,12 |
0,00 |
0,18 |
rim |
47,02 |
6,19 |
2,32 |
6,58 |
0,00 |
13,26 |
23,89 |
0,10 |
0,00 |
0,00 |
type 2 (n=1) |
||||||||||
core |
51,24 |
6,14 |
0,88 |
7,30 |
0,15 |
15,73 |
16,80 |
1,80 |
0,00 |
0,00 |
2 zone |
52,82 |
2,76 |
0,68 |
5,45 |
0,00 |
17,47 |
20,62 |
0,00 |
0,00 |
0,00 |
rim |
45,81 |
7,05 |
3,27 |
6,94 |
0,00 |
13,15 |
23,70 |
0,00 |
0,00 |
0,00 |
|
Fig.1 The correlation
between pyroxenes from dikes of Pyroxene fields from:
1 – picrite dikes of |
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N.L., Kochkin Yu.N., Krivenko A.P., Kutolin V.A. The rock-forming pyroxenes.
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A.N. et al. The first occurrence of accessory minerals of kimberlites in
Paleozoic dikes of
Mal’kov B.A.
The petrology of dike series of alkaline gabbroids of
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Nikishov K.N.
The petrologic-mineralogical model of kimberlite process.
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A.F.The typochemistry of rock-forming dark-color minerals of alkaline rocks.