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

dc.contributor.authorZaitsev A.N.
dc.contributor.authorChakhmouradian A.R.
dc.date.accessioned2021-06-11T04:57:54Z
dc.date.available2021-06-11T04:57:54Z
dc.date.issued2002
dc.description.abstractCarbonate – amphibole – clinopyroxene rocks and carbonatites from the Afrikanda complex, in the Kola Peninsula, Russia, contain a number of oxysalt minerals, including major calcite (15–95 vol.%), subordinate hydroxylapatite, ancylite-(Ce), calcio-ancylite-(Ce), and minor burbankite, khanneshite, nyerereite, shortite, bradleyite, strontianite, britholite-(Ce) and barite. Three mineral parageneses differing in the mode of occurrence of calcite are distinguished: (1) calcite – magnesiohastingsite – diopside rock, (2) segregations of perovskite and titanite, and (3) calcite carbonatite. Cathodoluminescence studies document a complex evolutionary history of primary Sr-enriched calcite (0.6–1.4 wt.% SrO) involving late-stage resorption and replacement by a low-Sr variety (<0.5 wt.% SrO). The presence of nyerereite, shortite, bradleyite, burbankite and khanneshite as solid inclusions in the early-crystallized minerals (primarily oxides and hydroxylapatite) indicates initially high activities of Na in the system. The transition from nyerereite (inclusions in magnetite) to shortite (in perovskite) signifies evolution of the carbonatite system toward Ca-enriched compositions. Crystallization of ancylite-(Ce) and calcio-ancylite-(Ce) is related to low-temperature hydrothermal processes, whereas burbankite and khanneshite probably represent primary magmatic phases. Low-temperature (200–250°C) hydrothermal alteration accompanied by isotope-exchange processes produced variations in the oxygen isotopic composition of the Afrikanda rocks (18 O in the range 9.3 to 12.1‰ SMOW). Subtle variations in the isotopic composition of carbon (13 C in the range –2.5 to –1.7‰ PDB) suggest interaction with a meteoric-hydrothermal fluid with a low CO 2 :H 2 O ratio. The observed high 13 C values of the calcite are consistent with heterogeneity of the mantle beneath the Kola Craton; the heterogeneity probably was due to a subduction-related source of contamination.
dc.identifierhttps://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=13413024
dc.identifier.citationThe Canadian Mineralogist, 2002, 40, 1, 103-120
dc.identifier.issn0008-4476
dc.identifier.urihttps://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/29008
dc.subjectcalcite
dc.subjectancylite-(Ce)
dc.subjectcalcio-ancylite-(Ce)
dc.subjectburbankite
dc.subjectkhanneshite
dc.subjectnyerereite
dc.subjectshortite
dc.subjectbradleyite
dc.subjectC–O isotopic composition
dc.subjectRaman spectroscopy
dc.subjectcarbonatite
dc.subjectAfrikanda
dc.subjectKola Peninsula
dc.subjectRussia
dc.titleCALCITE - AMPHIBOLE - CLINOPYROXENE ROCK FROM THE AFRIKANDA COMPLEX, KOLA PENINSULA, RUSSIA: MINERALOGY AND A POSSIBLE LINK TO CARBONATITES. II. OXYSALT MINERALS
dc.typeСтатья

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