CALCITE - AMPHIBOLE - CLINOPYROXENE ROCK FROM THE AFRIKANDA, KOLA PENINSULA, RUSSIA: MINERALOGY AND A POSSIBLE LINK TO CARBONATITES. III. SILICATE MINERALS

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dc.contributor.author Chakhmouradian A.R.
dc.contributor.author Zaitsev A.N.
dc.date.accessioned 2021-06-10T12:09:26Z
dc.date.available 2021-06-10T12:09:26Z
dc.date.issued 2002
dc.identifier https://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=13399189
dc.identifier.citation The Canadian Mineralogist, 2002, 40, 5, 1347-1374
dc.identifier.issn 0008-4476
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/28921
dc.description.abstract A calcite - amphibole - clinopyroxene rock (CAPR) occurs as branching veins and segregations in ultramafic alkaline lithologies of the Afrikanda complex, Kola Peninsula, in Russia. The rock is composed predominantly of diopside, magnesiohastingsite, calcite, titanite, chlorite and oxide phases. In the present study, a complete characterization of morphology, interrelations, and compositional variation of the oxide minerals is given, and eleven phases are described at Afrikanda for the first time. Three parageneses are distinguished among the oxide minerals, based on their geochemical features and relative position in the crystalization history. These are (in order of formation): primitive (early magnetite, lamellar ilmenite, primary perovskite, baddeleyite, calzirtite, zirconolite), evolved (secondary perovskite, loparite, lueshite, betafite, late magnetite, discrete ilmenite, thorutite, thoruminite) and replacement (rutile, hematite, fersmite, pyrochlore, an unidentified REE-Ti oxide) associations. The primitive and evolved associations formed in the temperature range 500-550°C at f(O2) approximately 10-20-10-22 bar, and a(SiO2) generally below 10-1.2. The replacement assemblage crystallized immediately prior to the precipitation of calcite under increasing a(SiO2) and f(O2) (? decreasing temperature). This assemblage is closely associated with late silicate minerals, including titanite, chlorite and Zr-bearing silicates. The complex mineralogy of CAPR cannot be explained in terms of simple differentiation of a parental silicocarbonatitic melt. The textural and mineralogical features indicate that the evolution of CAPR involved substantial interaction between a CO2-rich liquid (? fluid) and the ultramafic wallrocks.
dc.subject clinopyroxene
dc.subject amphibole
dc.subject schorlomite
dc.subject phlogopite
dc.subject titanite
dc.subject cerite-(Ce)
dc.subject chlorite
dc.subject zircon
dc.subject zirconosilicates
dc.subject Ca–Al silicates
dc.subject zeolites
dc.subject carbonatite
dc.subject Afrikanda
dc.subject Kola Peninsula
dc.subject Russia
dc.title CALCITE - AMPHIBOLE - CLINOPYROXENE ROCK FROM THE AFRIKANDA, KOLA PENINSULA, RUSSIA: MINERALOGY AND A POSSIBLE LINK TO CARBONATITES. III. SILICATE MINERALS
dc.type Статья


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