Petrology of
Teschenites and alkaline picrites associated with them
In Carpathians and
Caucasian regions
Mamedov M.N.,
Babayeva G.J., Kerimov V.M.
Geology
Institute of ANAS, Baku, Azerbaijan.
Teschenites
and genetically connected with them volcanogenic-alkaline picrites, tephrites,
basanites, analcimites and others are of restricted development among alkaline
basic and ultrabasic rocks. According to data available (Wilkinson, 1956;
Grobovski et al., 2003; Jan Spicak et al., 2004; šSkhirtladze N.I., 1943; Borsuk A.M., 1979 et
al.) this volcanoplutonic association is mainly Late Cretaceous, Eocene and
sometimes is Oligocene.
Cretaceous
teschenites and associated with them alkaline picrites, tephrites, basanites
are mainly developed in northwest and west provinces of Carpathian region
(Spisak, Hovorka, 2004; Wladyka, Karwonski, 2006; Grabovski, 2003) and in north
and south slopes of the Greater Caucasus (Borsuk, 1979; Skhirtladze, 1943;
Dudauri, 1989, 2003) and the Lesser Caucasus (Mamedov, 1999).
Above-mentioned
association of rocks is localized among Jurassic and Cretaceous tuffogenic
sedimentary and volcanogenic formations. According to data of absolute
geochronology they refer to the Late Cretaceous (Dudauri, 1989; Borsuk, 1979).
Teschenite
intrusives form small bed-like, sil, laccolith-like outcrops among jurassic and
Cretaceous geological complexes.
Macroscopic
rocks of intrusives of lying flank are dark-grey, sometimes – dark fully.
From
lying flank to hanging one dark and dark grey colours become grey and light
grey. Microscopic research showed that these colours changes in rocks of
studied intrusives are caused by quantitative variation of femic and salic
rockforming minerals. In this – from lying flank to hanging one – quantity of
olivine elinopyroxene, titanomagnetite and sometimes Kaersutite gradually
reduces and quantity of plagioclase, potassium feldspars, analcime increases.
Chrysolite-hyalosiderite
olivine, salite-fassaite clinopyroxene, labradorite-bytownite plagioclase,
kaersulite-barkevikite amphibole, ulvospinel titanomagnetite and analcime
participate in melanocratic teschenites composition confined to lying flank of
intrusives. Small amount of apatite, granate, and biotite and other minerals is
available as well.
Content
of melanocratic minerals reduces from melanocratic teschenite to normal one. In
this direction content of plagioclase increases which is gradually enriched by
albite molecule. In final differentiate of teschenite intrusives which consists
of teschenite – sienite and sienite, salite and fassaite clinopyxenes alternate
by ferrosalite and hedenbergite and the basic plagioclase – by oligoclase
andesine. In some cases this paragenesis takes tabular, leistolike grains of
nepheline. In mesostasis of these rocks content of xenomorph analcime and
potassium feldspar (50-60%) increases noticeably.
Volcanicš facies of teschenite intrusives is
represented by volcanic breccia and lavobreccia, flows of tephrites, basanites,
melanocratic analcimites, alkaline picrites, analcime trachybasalts and
trachydolerites.
Golden-brown
megacrystal of phlogopite, size 3x5 sm, is found in lavobreccia of tephrites.
Here the crystallization process occurring in relatively deeper intermediate
focus is connected also with formation of large accumulative megacrystal of
phlogopite. The next stage of crystallization of alkaline picritic melting
probably occured in less deep intermediate focus where porphyric paragenesis of
minerals were forming. They consist of hyalosiderite olivine, salite
clinopyroxene and aluminous titanomagnetite. Final stage of crystallization of
alkaline picritic melt is represented by formation interstitial analcime with
potassium feldspar. The latter is confined to analcime as the needles.
So,
volcanoplutonic associations of rocks in Caucasus and Carpathians regions are
comagmatic between each other. Volcanic facies of teschenite melt formed at
earlier stage of Late Cretaceous evolution stage of Caucasus-Carpathians
regions. Probably instrusive magmatism formed a bit later.
Evolution
of teschenite melt was controlled by crystallized differentiation in intrusive
chamber and intermediate focuses. Availability of water (analcime) and hydroxyl
(biotite, kaersutite, barkevikite) minerals in rocks composition of teschenite
melt prove the oxidizing conditions of crystallization. In these cases
crystallization of aluminous titanomagnetite exceeds crystallization salite
clinopyroxene and frequently is confined to latter as inclusion.
Along
with mentioned the other larger cations such as potassium, rubidium, barium of
intrusive chamber and intermediate focuses accumulate in residual melting anmd
isomorphically include into content of potassium feldspar.
Due
to duration of crystallization processes in intrusive chamber titanomagnetite
is more enriched by ulvospinel molecule. In this case alumina more concentrates
in composition of bytownite plagioclase.
Unlike
intrusive chamber in intermediate focus mineral parageneses of intratelluric
stage of alkaline picritic melt crystallization were probably controlled by
water fluids. Here impregnations of high aluminous titanomaagnetite were
crystallized before porphyric emissions of salite clinopyroxene and were enriched
by proper spinel minal (MgAl2O4= 8-12%).
Reference:
Borsuk A.M.
Mesozoic and Cenozoic magmatic formations of the Greater Caucasus. Moscow: Nauka,
1979, p.299 (in Russian).
Dudauri O.Z.,
Togonidze M.G., Bortnitsky Y.N.š Potassium
– argon age of teschenites in West Georgia // Reports of AS of GSSR, 1989, 134,
N1, p.137-140 (in Russian).
Dudauri O.Z.
Petrology of Mesozoic intrusive complexes of Georgia. Dissertation for doing
Doctor Degree (geology and Mineralogy), Tbilisi, 2003, p.192-261.
Gugushvili
V.I. Cretaceous volcanism of Georgian Block //Proceedings of Research
Institute of as a GSSR, 1989, 134, ¹1, p.137-140 (in Russian)
Spisiak J.,
Hovorka D. Teschenite clan rocks and their possible analogues in the Western
Carpathians // Mineralogical society of Poland – Spesial papers. Volume 24,
2004, p.32-35 (in English).
Mamedov M.N.
Petrology and geochemistry of Late Cretaceous and Eocene Formations of the
Lesser Caucasus and Talysh, 1999, p.400 (in Russian).
Rustamov M.I.
South Caspian basin – geodynamic events and processes. Baku: Nafta-Press, 2005,
345 p. (in Russian).
Skhirtladze
N.I., Teschenite formation of West Georgia //Proceedings of AS of GSSR, series
Mineralogy and Petrography, v II, 1943,p.102 (in Russian)
Wilkinson
J.F.C. Clinopyroxenes of alkali olivine-basalt magma //Amer. Miner., 41, 1956,
p.p.724-743 (in English).
Wlodyka R.
Clinopyroxene and amphibole zoning patterns in teschenite rocks from the outer
Western Polish Carpatiean.
Grabowski I
et al. Geochronology of teschenitic intrusion in the outer Western Carpatian of
Poland constrains from 40K40Ar ages and biostratigraphy
// Geologica Carpathica, 54, 2003, p. 385-393 (in English). šš