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Igneous Petrol. EPSC-423; Francis, 2013 Lab 6: Plutonic Rocks II: A Zoned Dyke Until now, we have focused on magmas and their liquid line of descent during crystal fractionation as reflected in the spectrum of erupted lava compositions. We have largely ignored the solid crystal assemblage that must be extracted from the magma to produce the compositional variation seen in the lavas that erupt at the surface. The crystal fractionation that produced the spectrum of lava compositions occurred at depth in intrusive plutonic bodies within the crust and/or at the crust-mantle interface. Plutonic (intrusive) rocks crystallize more slowly than volcanic rocks. As a result, they are typically coarser-grained and more equigranular than volcanic rocks, with the actual grain-size reflecting an interplay between cooling rate, and therefore the depth of crystallization, volatile content and major element composition. The solid crystal assemblages that crystallized from cooling magmas in plutonic bodies form rocks that are known as cumulates. Their compositions reflect the mechanical accumulation of crystals rather than a frozen liquid. Some plutonic rocks are almost completely cumulate in nature, while others reflect a mixture of accumulated crystals and frozen interstitial liquid. When examining plutonic rocks, it is important to try to distinguish between minerals that are interpreted to be cumulus versus those which are post-cumulus, crystallizing from the interstitial liquid between the primary cumulus grains. The cumulus minerals represent early crystals that accumulated from a magma to form the framework of the rock and are commonly sub-equant (tabular cumulate plagioclase is an exception) and/or subeuhedral in habit. Inter-cumulous minerals crystallize from the residual trapped liquid between the cumulus crystals. They are typically anhedral and occur as either small crystals interstitial to the larger cumulus minerals, or as large oikocrysts that poikilitically enclose smaller chadocrysts of earlier cumulus minerals. Some cumulate rocks can be recognized in hand specimen by the "flash" of large oikocryst cleavage surfaces containing numerous chadocryst inclusions when the sample is rotated in the light. Olivine chadocrysts in an orthopyroxene oikocryst. 1 Igneous Petrol. EPSC-423; Francis, 2013 In this week’s lab, we will examine a relatively simple zoned dyke approximately 80 meter in width (see figure). The Dash body is a late Archean dyke-like intrusion, cutting Archean granitoid rocks (DH-02, DH08-1 and DH08-2). The samples in the attached table have been collected from a transect across the dyke. Dash Dyke Major Elements in wt% Sample: DH-02 Meter 252.00 DH-03 186.00 DH-06 163.00 DH-08 128.00 DH-09 110.00 DH-10 107.00 DH08-1 DH08-2 00.00 82.00 SiO2 TiO2 Al2O3 FeO MgO MnO CaO Na2O K2O P2O5 LOI 71.45 0.06 15.91 1.60 0.54 0.01 2.76 4.53 2.08 0.12 0.91 56.86 0.22 11.56 6.80 9.03 0.12 8.29 2.86 1.76 0.03 1.76 51.86 0.25 5.69 8.94 18.46 0.17 10.34 0.98 0.61 0.06 1.57 39.24 0.09 2.53 13.48 32.60 0.16 1.09 0.18 0.17 0.03 9.15 38.23 0.07 2.03 13.29 30.01 0.18 3.12 0.20 0.11 0.03 11.11 50.47 0.10 4.16 8.34 22.29 0.12 7.96 0.62 0.23 0.04 3.92 67.43 0.44 16.07 3.45 1.29 0.03 3.63 4.47 1.90 0.16 0.64 68.84 0.25 16.16 2.09 1.37 0.03 4.24 4.71 1.31 0.10 0.63 Total 99.98 99.35 99.19 99.15 98.75 98.97 99.51 99.75 Trace Elements in ppm Ni Cr Zr Ce 7.0 17.1 227.6 43.6 88.0 346.6 39.6 44.2 507.0 1496.0 23.4 31.2 1572.0 1648.0 11.1 6.5 Major Elements in wt% Sample:DH08-3 Meter 88.00 DH08-8 152.00 DH08-10 DH08-11 169.00 167.00 SiO2 TiO2 Al2O3 FeO MgO MnO CaO Na2O K2O P2O5 LOI 56.18 0.25 5.84 8.00 15.63 0.15 8.98 1.17 1.85 0.05 0.84 42.29 0.15 2.97 11.20 28.09 0.20 5.30 0.37 0.14 0.03 7.93 42.64 0.18 3.40 12.24 25.06 0.18 7.98 0.46 0.11 0.03 5.95 52.05 0.29 5.74 7.82 16.86 0.16 12.66 1.04 0.92 0.05 1.43 Total 99.23 99.09 98.66 99.31 Trace Elements in ppm Ni Cr Zr Ce 699.0 1434.0 68.0 69.0 980.0 1993.0 12.0 19.0 1684.0 1560.0 11.9 25.0 375.0 1643.4 33.4 42.0 2 1283.0 1358.0 7.7 6.1 651.0 3642.0 14.3 8.6 8.0 27.6 214.2 151.0 17.0 30.7 96.8 76.0 Igneous Petrol. EPSC-423; Francis, 2013 Tasks: 1. Examine each of the rocks across the Dash dyke, as well as the two host rock samples. Identify the minerals present and give each rock a name based on your visual estimate of the modal mineralogy according to the classification scheme in the appendix. 2. For each rock, try to determine the order in which the mineral phases crystallized using the following textural criteria: “If grains of one mineral typically occur enclosed in another, then the former crystallized before the latter. A good example is the occurrence of early olivine chadocrysts in later pyroxene or feldspar oikocrysts. Exceptions include phenomena such as exsolution lamellae, cotectic intergrowths, late-stage alteration minerals, and accessory phases. Phenocrysts have crystallized before their fine-grained matrices. In general, larger crystals have crystallized earlier than smaller crystals. This criteria best applied to volcanic rocks, and is commonly problematic in plutonic rocks. Free-forming early crystals tend to be more euhedral (show crystal faces) than later crystals. Again this criteria is best applied in volcanic rocks. In plutonic rocks it is compromised by the decreasing tendency of the silicates to be euhedral, in the order orthosilicate > chain silicate> sheet silicate> framework silicate. In plutonic rocks, late crystallizing phases such as zircon, titanite and even apatite are often euhedral.” Paraphrased after Williams et al., 1954 3. Calculate the normative mineralogy of each of the Dash samples, and plot the variation in the normative abundance of olivine, orthopyroxene, clinopyroxene, and plagioclase with distance across the dyke. 4. Construct plots of the variation of Mg, Ca, Al, Ni, Cr, Ce, and Zr in the whole compositions with distance across the dyke. 3 Igneous Petrol. EPSC-423; Francis, 2013 5. Construct variation diagrams of Mg versus Ca, Al, Ni, and Zr or both minerals and whole rock compostions. Rationalize the variation in each element with Mg in terms of its relative compatibility. 6. Describe the likely crystallization history of the Dash Dyke as inferred from the zonation that it exhibits. How does the crystallization history of the dyke as a whole compare to the crystallization sequence seen within individual samples of the dyke’s interior. How might this discrepancy be explained? 7. Use the composition of the olivine in the most magnesian Dash cumulate rock (DH-08) to calculate the Fe/Mg ratio of the liquid from which the rock crystallized, assuming the KFe/Mg oliv/liq = 0.3. Use the composition of the clinopyroxene in the least magnesium cumulate rock (DH-03) to estimate the Fe/Mg ratio of the liquid from which it crystallized, assuming the KFe/Mg cpx/liq ~ 0.3. How do these numbers compare? 8. Obtain an estimate of the parental magma composition for the Dash Dyke by using AlphaMelts to partially melt the most magnesian cumulate rock (DH-08) to the point at which pyroxenes melt-out, leaving only olivine, plus or minus spinel, in the residue, assuming that fO2 is buffered at FMQ-1. 9. Use Alphamelts to fractionally crystallize this parental melt composition at a pressure of 5 kbs and a water content of 2%. Plot the liquid line of descent, as well as the compositions of the cumulous phases, in your previous variation diagrams (#5) and explicitly compare the model results to the observed results. 4 Igneous Petrol. EPSC-423; Francis, 2013 Dash Minerals Major Elements in wt% Sample: DH-03 Min: Plag DH-03 Cpx DH08-11 DH08-11 DH08-11 Plag Cpx Opx SiO2 TiO2 Al2O3 Cr2O3 MgO NiO FeO MnO CaO Na2O K2O 62.17 0.00 23.49 0.00 0.01 0.00 0.01 0.00 5.24 8.39 0.22 53.33 0.07 0.86 0.02 14.57 0.00 8.14 0.27 22.97 0.46 0.00 58.19 0.03 26.38 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.08 0.00 8.37 6.62 0.16 52.71 0.07 1.46 0.19 16.60 0.00 4.11 0.11 23.95 0.19 0.01 54.93 0.00 0.74 0.03 29.30 0.00 14.51 0.31 0.25 0.00 0.02 54.28 0.01 2.51 0.12 30.08 0.14 11.14 0.25 0.24 0.01 0.00 39.10 0.00 0.00 0.00 44.12 0.17 16.37 0.22 0.00 0.00 0.00 52.91 0.08 1.50 0.18 16.77 0.00 3.66 0.12 24.07 0.16 0.01 Total 99.51 100.70 99.82 99.41 100.10 99.51 100.00 99.46 Major Elements in wt% Sample: DH-09 Min: Oliv DH-10 Plag DH-10 Cpx DH08-3 Plag DH08-3 Cpx SiO2 TiO2 Al2O3 Cr2O3 MgO NiO FeO MnO CaO Na2O K2O 39.73 0.01 0.01 0.00 43.00 0.16 17.12 0.29 0.01 0.00 0.00 60.84 0.02 24.79 0.00 0.02 0.00 0.13 0.00 6.38 7.76 0.16 53.65 0.11 1.23 0.37 16.40 0.00 4.74 0.12 23.00 0.49 0.00 62.08 0.00 23.88 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.09 0.02 5.67 8.27 0.32 54.08 0.11 1.06 0.20 15.83 0.00 5.65 0.15 22.92 0.49 0.01 Total 100.31 100.11 100.11 100.34 100.51 5 DH-08 Opx DH-08 Oliv DH-09 Cpx Igneous Petrol. EPSC-423; Francis, 2013 Appendix: Nomenclature and Classification of Plutonic Rocks Figure 4.1 6 Igneous Petrol. EPSC-423; Francis, 2013 Ultramafic Rocks: Ultramafic rocks contain over 85 % mafic minerals, and feldspar is either absent or so low in abundance that it can not be seen in hand specimen. If present, feldspar is always an interstitial mineral. Most ultramafic plutonic rocks are at least in part cumulates. They do not represent silicate melts, but rather the accumulation of crystals that have crystallized from a silicate melt in a large magma chamber, along the walls of a dyke, etc. Cumulus minerals represent early crystals that accumulated to form the framework of the rock. They typically have subhedral to euhedral habits. Inter-cumulus minerals crystallize from the residual trapped liquid between the cumulus crystals. They are typically anhedral and occur as either small crystals interstitial to the larger cumulus minerals, or as large oikocrysts that poikilitically enclose smaller chadocrysts of earlier cumulus minerals. Some cumulate rocks can be recognized in hand specimen by the "flash" of large oikocryst cleavage surfaces containing numerous chadocryst inclusions when the sample is rotated in the light. In addition, cumulate rocks are generally characterized by their low number of prominent mineral species (1-3) and the common presence of layering in terms of variations in modal mineralogy and sometimes grain-size. Olivine-rich rocks in which clinopyroxene and/or orthopyroxene cannot be distinguished are best called by the more general name peridotite. In the field, especially if the rock is altered, often all you can say is that the rock is ultramafic. 7 Igneous Petrol. EPSC-423; Francis, 2013 Gabbroic Rocks: Mafic or ‘gabbroic’ rocks contain more than 15%, but less than 60% feldspar. If hornblende is present in moderate amounts, then the prefix hormblende is used: hornblende gabbro, hornblende peridotite, etc. Mafic rocks with over 60% hornblende are termed hornblendites. 8 Igneous Petrol. EPSC-423; Francis, 2013 Granitoids: Granitoids are felsic plutonic rocks that contain more than 60% felsic minerals. They are classified according the nature of the feldspar and the presence or absence of quartz or nepheline, depending on whether the rock is silica-saturated or silica-undersaturated. Syenites near the boundary between the two typically contain either small quantities of quartz or feldspathoids (but never both) that commonly cannot be detected in hand specimen. 9