CONTRASTS IN GEM CORUNDUM CHARACTERISTICS, EASTERN AUSTRALIAN BASALTIC FIELDS: TRACE ELEMENTS, FLUID/MELT INCLUSIONS AND OXYGEN ISOTOPES

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dc.contributor.author Zaw K.
dc.contributor.author Dellapasqua F.
dc.contributor.author Sutherland F.L.
dc.contributor.author Ryan C.G.
dc.contributor.author Yui T.-F.
dc.contributor.author Mernagh T.P.
dc.contributor.author Duncan D.
dc.date.accessioned 2025-04-12T04:42:19Z
dc.date.available 2025-04-12T04:42:19Z
dc.date.issued 2006
dc.identifier https://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=14442368
dc.identifier.citation Mineralogical Magazine, 2006, 70, 6, 669-687
dc.identifier.issn 0026-461X
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/48904
dc.description.abstract Corundum xenocrysts from alkaline basalt fields differ in characteristics and hence lithospheric origins. Trace element, fluid/ melt inclusion and oxygen isotope studies on two eastern Australian corundum deposits are compared to consider their origins. Sapphires from Weldborough, NE Tasmania, are magmatic (high-Ga, av. 200 ppm) and dominated by Fe (av. 3300 ppm) and variable Ti (av. 400 ppm) as chromophores. They contain Cl, Fe, Ga, Ti and CO2-rich fluid inclusions and give δ18O values (5.1-6.2‰) of mantle range. Geochronology on companion zircons suggests several sources (from 290 Ma to 47 Ma) were disrupted by basaltic melts (47 ± 0.6 Ma). Gem corundums from Barrington, New South Wales, also include magmatic sapphires (Ga av. 170 ppm; δ18O 4.6-5.8‰), but with more Fe (av. 9000 ppm) and less Ti (av. 300 ppm) as chromophores. Zircon dating suggests that gem formation preceded and was overlapped by Cenozoic basaltic melt generation (59-4 Ma). In contrast, a metamorphic sapphire-ruby suite (low-Ga, av. 30 ppm) here incorporates greater Cr into the chromophores (up to 2250 ppm). Fluid inclusions are CO2-poor, but melt inclusions suggest some alkaline melt interaction. The δ18O values (5.1-6.2‰) overlap magmatic sapphire values. Interactions at contact zones (T = 780-940°C) between earlier Permian ultramafic bodies and later alkaline fluid activity may explain the formation of rubies. © 2006 The Mineralogical Society.
dc.subject BASALTS
dc.subject EASTERN AUSTRALIA
dc.subject FLUID/MELT INCLUSIONS
dc.subject GEM CORUNDUM
dc.subject MANTLE
dc.subject OXYGEN ISOTOPES
dc.subject TRACE ELEMENTS
dc.subject Permian
dc.title CONTRASTS IN GEM CORUNDUM CHARACTERISTICS, EASTERN AUSTRALIAN BASALTIC FIELDS: TRACE ELEMENTS, FLUID/MELT INCLUSIONS AND OXYGEN ISOTOPES
dc.type Статья
dc.identifier.doi 10.1180/0026461067060356
dc.subject.age Paleozoic::Permian
dc.subject.age Палеозой::Пермская


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