CRYSTALLISATION OF MELA-AILLIKITES OF THE NARSAQ REGION, GARDAR ALKALINE PROVINCE, SOUTH GREENLAND AND RELATIONSHIPS TO OTHER AILLIKITIC-CARBONATITIC ASSOCIATIONS IN THE PROVINCE

dc.contributor.authorUpton B.G.J.
dc.contributor.authorCraven J.A.
dc.contributor.authorKirstein L.A.
dc.date.accessioned2025-01-04T06:13:59Z
dc.date.available2025-01-04T06:13:59Z
dc.date.issued2006
dc.description.abstractAillikites (carbonated, melilite-free ultramafic lamprophyres grading to carbonatites) are minor components of the Gardar alkaline igneous province. They occur principally as minor intrusions and as clasts in diatremes, but more voluminous aillikitic intrusions crop out near the Ilímaussaq Complex, which they predate by a few million years. These larger intrusions were emplaced at 1160 ± 5 Ma. They are essentially carbonate-free and, consisting almost wholly of ferromagnesian silicate and oxide minerals, are mela-aillikites. Typically the mela-aillikites are fine-grained rocks composed largely of olivine, clinopyroxene, phlogopite and magnetite that crystallised in open systems, permitting loss of volatile-rich residues. The petrography is highly complex, involving at least 28 mineral species. Pyroxenitic veins were emplaced while the host-rocks were still at high temperatures and represent channels through which fluorinated silico-carbonatitic residual melts escaped, with exsolving CO2 as propellant. Precipitation of Ca-rich minerals including monticellite, perovskite, vesuvianite, wollastonite and cuspidine was a result of dissociation of the calcium carbonate in the residual melts. Late-stage crystallisation was in a highly oxidising environment in which the 'common minerals' attain extreme compositions (almost pure forsterite, ferrian-diopside, highly magnesian ilmenite, Ba-Ti-rich phlogopite and Sr-rich kaersutite). Spatially associated diatremes may be vents through which CO2-rich gases erupted. The whole-rock compositions are considered to be well removed from those of co-existing melts: compaction and expulsion of highly mobile residual melts is inferred to have left the mela-aillikites as aberrant cumulates. The mela-aillikites are a late-Gardar manifestation of the aillikitic magmatism that occurred intermittently in the province for over 120 Ma. Repetitive formation of metasomite vein systems in the deep lithospheric mantle is postulated. These readily fusible metasomites had short residence histories, experiencing either adiabatic melting or thermal melting as a result of plume activity. The abnormally large volumes of ultramafic lamprophyre magma, from which the mela-aillikites crystallised, may denote the culmination of metasomatic processes in the closing stages of the evolution of the Gardar Province. © 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
dc.identifierhttps://www.elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=14018628
dc.identifier.citationLithos, 2006, 92, 1-2, 300-319
dc.identifier.doi10.1016/j.lithos.2006.03.046
dc.identifier.issn0024-4937
dc.identifier.urihttps://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/47270
dc.subjectALKALINE PROVINCE
dc.subjectCARBONATITE
dc.subjectMANTLE METASOMATISM
dc.subjectMELA-AILLIKITE
dc.subjectULTRAMAFIC LAMPROPHYRE
dc.titleCRYSTALLISATION OF MELA-AILLIKITES OF THE NARSAQ REGION, GARDAR ALKALINE PROVINCE, SOUTH GREENLAND AND RELATIONSHIPS TO OTHER AILLIKITIC-CARBONATITIC ASSOCIATIONS IN THE PROVINCE
dc.typeСтатья

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