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JOURNAL OF PETROLOGY VOLUME 41 NUMBER 12 PAGES 1743–1757 2000 Crystal Fractionation and the Evolution of Intra-plate hy-normative Igneous Suites: Insights from their Feldspars H. NEKVASIL∗, A. SIMON AND D. H. LINDSLEY DEPARTMENT OF GEOSCIENCES AND THE CENTER FOR HIGH PRESSURE RESEARCH, STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK, STONY BROOK, NY 11794-2100, USA RECEIVED JANUARY 14, 1999; REVISED TYPESCRIPT ACCEPTED APRIL 26, 2000 Feldspars and normative feldspar constituents of bulk magma show trends supportive of fractional crystallization in the three main types of hy-normative intraplate suites that contain qz-oversaturated rocks: ocean island and continental alkalic suites, ocean island tholeiitic suites and continental tholeiitic suites. These suites are characterized by the presence of a single feldspar in each suite member, a shift of this feldspar from plagioclase to alkali feldspar, and K enrichment of alkali feldspar with decreasing temperature in the trachytic members. The modal feldspars provide evidence for a reaction relationship between feldspars and indicate a build-up of magmatic volatile content towards saturation with progressive fractionation of a parental magma having low initial volatile content. The feldspar and normative feldspar evolutionary paths are unique for each of the three suite types but similar for different suites within the same type. This characteristic extends to the felsic members, making it easy to distinguish between rhyolitic or granitic rocks from the different suite types. The feldspars in natural volcanic suites commonly show evidence for a polybaric history, particularly in the least-evolved suite members. Late-stage feldspars of the intermediate members and feldspars of the most evolved members show paths indicative of significantly lower temperature and pressure regimes. Significant igneous activity, as manifested by intraplate oceanic volcanic sequences, continental bimodal volcanism, alkalic volcanic sequences, massif anorthosite complexes and ‘anorogenic’ granites, is associated with hotspot and continental rift environments. A major characteristic of this magmatism is the production of suites of compositionally diverse rocks that are temporally and spatially associated. Much is still unknown about the processes that have led to the diversity of magmas within such suites or to the global diversity of intra-plate suite types. Many ocean island and continental hotspot (and continental rift) related suites are characterized by rocks with high alkali/silica ratios that fall into the alkalic field of Irvine & Baragar (1971; Fig. 1) regardless of their state of silica saturation. Such alkalic suites range from those that are strongly silica undersaturated, containing rocks such as nephelinites (or leucitites in the more potassic suites), to mildly silica-undersaturated suites [the Kennedy series of Miyashiro (1978)] containing alkali basalts, silica-undersaturated trachytes and phonolites, and, finally, to hy-normative suites [the Coombs trend of Miyashiro (1978)] that include olivine basalts, trachytes and rhyolites. Hy-normative alkalic suites that contain silica-oversaturated rocks on ocean islands are widespread and include those from Ascension Island (e.g. Harris, 1983), the Samoan Islands (MacDonald, 1968), Terceira, Azores (e.g. White et al., 1979) and Clarion Island, Mexico (Bryan, 1967). Some hy-normative suites of the ocean islands that contain silica-oversaturated members are subalkalic (Fig. 1) and show the classic tholeiitic Fe-enrichment trend (e.g. the Thingmuli volcanic suite, Iceland, Carmichael, 1964; the Alcedo and Pinzon suites, Galapagos, Baitis & Lindstrom, 1980; Geist et al., 1995; eastern Canary ∗Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected] Oxford University Press 2000 KEY WORDS: alkalic; intra-plate; feldspars; fractionation; suites INTRODUCTION JOURNAL OF PETROLOGY VOLUME 41 Fig. 1. Variation of total alkalis with silica in lavas of the hy-normative alkalic suites of Ascension Island (Harris, 1983), Clarion Island, Mexico (Bryan, 1967) and Terceira, Azores (Schmincke, 1973; Self & Gunn, 1976; White et al., 1979; Mungall & Martin, 1995), in lavas of the tholeiitic ocean island suites of Thingmuli, Iceland (Carmichael, 1964) and Volcan Alcedo and Pinzon, Galapagos (Baitis & Lindstrom, 1980; Geist et al., 1995) and in lavas of the transitional Easter Island suite (Haase et al., 1997). Average calc-alkaline rocks from Best (1995) are shown for reference by the crosses. The continuous line represents the alkalic–tholeiitic boundary of Irvine & Baragar (1971). Islands, Schminke, 1973). Such suites contain rocks that range from olivine tholeiites to ferrobasalts and sodic rhyolites. At any selected silica content of an intermediate or felsic member, these tholeiitic rocks differ from those of the alkalic suites not only by their lower alkali contents, but also by their higher MgO, CaO and total iron contents (Fig. 2). Some suites, like that of Easter Island (Haase et al., 1997; Fig. 2), exhibit compositional characteristics intermediate to the hy-normative alkalic and tholeiitic trends. Hy-normative alkalic rocks of the continental hotspot regions (e.g. the Nandewar Volcano, N.S.W., Australia, Abbott, 1969; Stolz, 1985) share many features with the hy-normative ocean island alkalic suites that reach silicaoversaturated compositions (e.g. Ascension Island, Harris, 1983). Both display higher Na2O, lower CaO, higher Al2O3 and higher total alkali contents (for a given silica content) than lavas of the ocean island tholeiitic suites (Figs 3 and 4). The Na2O/K2O ratios, however, can vary significantly between different alkalic suites (e.g. Nandewar and Ascension Island lavas). A third distinctive type of hy-normative suite is restricted to continental settings. It is characterized most commonly by bimodal tholeiitic basalt–potassic rhyolite volcanism [e.g. Yellowstone, Hildreth et al., 1981; Snake River Plain (SRP), Stout & Nicholls, 1977; Leeman, 1982]. Only rarely are lavas of intermediate composition associated with these bimodal suites. The mafic rocks include highly distinctive ferrobasalts with low silica contents (but which are not necessarily ne-normative) and high Fe and alkali NUMBER 12 DECEMBER 2000 contents [e.g. Craters of the Moon suite (COM), Idaho, Kuntz et al., 1992; Stout et al., 1994]. These ferrobasalts are also associated with potassic trachytes and rhyolites. Such units are classified as potassic by us not because of exceptionally high K2O contents, but because of high K2O/Na2O ratios. They are also termed ‘tholeiitic’ (despite the presence of many alkalic members within the suites) because of the tholeiitic nature of the associated least-evolved mafic units. Figure 3a shows the variation of alkalis with silica in Snake River Plain (SRP) basalts, rhyolites, and spatially and temporally associated intermediate COM rocks. These units form a trend with increasing mg-number (Fig. 3b) that extends from the subalkalic field towards lower silica contents and more alkalic compositions (Fig. 3a), and to higher-silica rocks that lack the strong sodium enrichment typical of alkalic suites (Fig. 4a). This trend begins at its low-silica end with a distinctive strong decrease in SiO2 and concomitant increase in FeOT, P2O5 and K2O abundance with decreasing mg-number. Massif anorthosite or rapakivi-type granite suites and large layered tholeiitic intrusions (e.g. Skaergaard) may represent plutonic counterparts to the volcanic continental tholeiitic suites (Duchesne, 1990; Frost & Frost, 1997). Fine-grained dikes within anorthosite suites consist of ‘high-Al’ gabbro, ferrodiorite ( jotunite) and monzonite. The associated syenites and potassic granites at least in part reflect liquid compositions (e.g. in the Laramie Anorthosite Complex, Scoates et al., 1996). Although the associated fine-grained gabbros are commonly subalkalic, the intermediate liquid compositions are typically alkalic (Figs 5 and 6). Figure 5a shows the similarities between (1) high-Al gabbros of the Laramie Anorthosite Complex (LAC), Wyoming and SRP basalts; (2) LAC ferrodiorites and COM ferrobasalts; and (3) potassic granites of the LAC and rhyolites of the Snake River Plain. Syenites from the Sybille pluton (Figs 5 and 6) contain up to 30 modal % of accumulated alkali feldspar (Scoates et al., 1996; this accounts for their compositional deviation from the COM trachytes towards higher K2O and Al2O3 contents (Fig. 6b and f ). The granites associated with massif anorthosites strongly resemble ‘anorogenic’ granite batholiths such as the Wolf River batholith, the main body of the Pikes Peak Batholith (e.g. Emslie, 1978, 1991; Frost & Frost, 1997), and the wiborgite of the Fennoscandian regions (e.g. Vorma, 1976). These similarities, shown particularly well by the Na2O and CaO variations with silica (Fig. 7a and d), suggest common elements in the evolutionary history of potassic granites and massif anorthosites. Likewise, similarities in the evolutionary history of late-stage alkalic intrusions (e.g. of the Pikes Peak batholith, Barker et al., 1975) and felsic rocks of the volcanic alkalic suites (e.g. of the Nandewar suite, Fig. 7) are suggested by the 1744 NEKVASIL et al. EVOLUTION OF INTRA-PLATE IGNEOUS SUITES Fig. 2. Variation of major oxides with silica in lavas of the hy-normative alkalic suites of Ascension Island, Clarion Island, Mexico, and Terceira, Azores, in lavas of the tholeiitic ocean island suites of Thingmuli, Iceland, and Pinzon, Galapagos, and in the lavas of the transitional Easter Island suite. Average calc-alkaline rocks from Best (1995) are shown for reference by the crosses. Symbols are described in the legend. Sources of data are as in Fig. 1. similarities in bulk compositions and mineral assemblages. The role of crystal fractionation Ocean islands Crystal fractionation has been repeatedly called upon as the mechanism for inducing compositional diversity in ocean island lavas. This interpretation is aided by the isotopic similarity among associated suite members (e.g. Geist et al., 1995; Mungall & Martin, 1995; Kar et al., 1998). Fractionation is supported by continuous major and trace element trends within suites, continuous mineral compositional trends, preservation of specific trace element characteristics of the basalts in the rhyolites within a suite, and the results of a variety of petrogenetic modeling efforts. It has been proposed that fractionation of first plagioclase, titanaugite and olivine from a basalt, followed by an olivine-free, magnetite-bearing assemblage and, finally, a fayalite, ferroaugite, alkali feldspar and perhaps kaersutite-bearing assemblage explains the salient geochemical features of the hy-normative alkalic suites from the ocean islands (White et al., 1979; Harris, 1983; Haase et al., 1997). Crystal fractionation is also considered the dominant process producing the tholeiitic ocean island associations that consist of olivine basalt, tholeiite, ferrobasalt, icelandite, oceanic dacite and oceanic rhyolite. In 1745 JOURNAL OF PETROLOGY VOLUME 41 Fig. 3. (a) Variation of total alkalis with silica in lavas of the hynormative alkalic suites of the Nandewar Volcano, N.S.W., Australia (Abbott, 1969; Stolz, 1985), Ascension Island (Harris, 1983) and Clarion Island, Mexico (Bryan, 1967), in lavas of the tholeiitic ocean island suites of Thingmuli, Iceland (Carmichael, 1964), and in the continental tholeiitic suite of the Snake River Plain (SRP, Stout & Nicholls, 1977; Leeman, 1982) and Craters of the Moon (COM), Idaho (Leeman et al., 1976; Stout et al., 1994). The continuous line represents the alkalic–tholeiitic boundary of Irvine & Baragar (1971). (b) Variation in molar mg-number with silica content for the SRP basalts and COM rocks. Sources of data are as in (a). these rocks, however, olivine, rather than clinopyroxene, plays a more dominant role during the early stages of fractionation (e.g. Carmichael, 1964; Baitis & Lindstrom, 1980). Olivine followed by titanomagnetite crystallization would enrich the liquid in silica until the olivine-free, plagioclase-, diopsidic augite- and pigeonite-bearing assemblage of icelandite is attained. Fractionation of plagioclase would further enrich the liquid in alkalis and silica to produce rhyolitic compositions (e.g. Carmichael, 1964; Baitis & Lindstrom, 1980). Partial melting is a less commonly invoked process, not only because of the inherent thermal problems of melting basaltic crust, but also because it is inconsistent with the observed trace element characteristics of many suites (e.g. White et al., 1979; Geist et al., 1995; Mungall & Martin, 1995). Continental hotspots and rifts There is much less of a consensus about relationships among suite members in continental settings, NUMBER 12 DECEMBER 2000 particularly for tholeiitic suites in which isotopic variability between members is characteristic (e.g. Laramie Anorthosite Complex, Scoates et al., 1996; Craters of the Moon, Idaho, Leeman et al., 1976) and may even occur in units of the same lithology. Leeman et al. (1976) and Stout et al. (1994) suggested a fractionation relationship for the COM suite, but the relationship of the COM rocks to the SRP basalts remains unclear. The ubiquity of cumulate rocks in the plutonic continental tholeiitic suites such as the massif anorthosite suites is direct evidence for crystal accumulation, but whether this process links associated rocks is still much debated. Scoates et al. (1999) experimentally investigated the relationship of associated rocks of the LAC at 9 kbar—a pressure appropriate for the aluminous pyroxene megacrysts common in least-evolved members of continental tholeiitic suites. They determined that fractionation of clinopyroxene + olivine + plagioclase from an anhydrous high-Al gabbroic melt (compositionally similar to continental tholeiite, such as from the SRP) could produce the silica depletion and strong Fe enrichment before silica enrichment that characterizes continental tholeiitic suites. If fractionation of a high-Al gabbroic magma can generate the rocks of continental tholeiitic suites, then it must occur primarily at depths greater than that of emplacement to account for the commonly observed isotopic heterogeneities. Such heterogeneities could perhaps arise by interaction of discrete batches of fractionated magma with isotopically different wallrock during ascent to the final level of emplacement. The relationship of rhyolites to basalts of continental bimodal suites remains problematic. Nash et al. (1996) pointed out the compositional similarities of the older (>16 Ma) Yellowstone silicic tuffs to the interstitial glass of the Columbia River Plateau basalts. This, along with the unlikelihood of a wholly crustal source for many potassic rhyolites (e.g. Hildreth et al., 1981), suggests at least the possibility of crystal fractionation from basalt. If the fractionation path yields rocks similar to those of the SRP–COM suite, then the high Fe contents of the intermediate magmas would make their eruption very difficult (and such intermediate fractionation products rare at the surface), thereby accounting for the commonly bimodal nature of such suites. Continental hy-normative alkalic suites containing qzoversaturated rocks (e.g. Tertiary and Quaternary volcanoes of the Massif Central, France, Downes, 1987; the Miocene volcanic field of New South Wales, Australia, Stolz, 1985; the Gardar Province, Southern Greenland, Upton & Emeleus, 1987; silica-oversaturated volcanics of the Kenya rift, MacDonald, 1987) retain many of the characteristics of ocean island alkalic suites. As is the case for ocean island alkalic suites, members of the continental alkalic suites exhibit significantly less isotopic 1746 NEKVASIL et al. EVOLUTION OF INTRA-PLATE IGNEOUS SUITES Fig. 4. Variation of major oxides with silica in SRP and COM lavas compared with those of the Nandewar, Thingmuli and Ascension Island suites. Symbols are as described in legend. Sources of data are as in Fig. 3. diversity than members of continental tholeiitic suites. Crystal fractionation is commonly invoked to link associated mafic and intermediate rocks in continental alkalic suites (e.g. Abbott, 1969; Dondolini & Nekvasil, 1999). The origin of the commonly associated peralkaline rhyolites and granites, however, remains problematic. They may arise from a combination of processes involving crystal fractionation and compositional changes during volatile exsolution (MacDonald, 1987; Upton & Emeleus, 1987). Clearly, crystal fractionation is considered by many to play a major role in the evolution of magmas from a variety of hy-normative suites. As direct evidence for this process is generally not available, indirect support for or against it must come from a variety of directions. One is the nature of mineralogical variations among associated rocks, particularly of minerals that demonstrate strong compositional sensitivity to intensive and extensive conditions and to evolutionary process. Feldspar is uniquely suited for study of hy-normative suites in that it shows strong compositional changes as the host changes from mafic. Furthermore, its composition is highly sensitive to the potassium content of the host magma, a compositional variable that remains distinct for each of the suite types. The discussion that follows focuses on the compositions of feldspar from rocks of natural hy-normative suites to evaluate the following: (1) whether the least-evolved feldspars in rock units of hy-normative suites show any trends that support a cogenetic origin of suite members; (2) if any such trends are similar for suites of the same type, and how different they are between the three suite types; (3) whether feldspar compositions preserve evidence for a multi-stage history (e.g. polybaric fractionation). 1747 JOURNAL OF PETROLOGY VOLUME 41 Fig. 5. (a) Variation of total alkalis with silica in non-cumulate rocks of the Laramie Anorthosite Complex, Wyoming (LAC), compared with lavas from the SRP, COM and Nandewar. Sources of data: high-Al gabbro, Mitchell et al. (1995); Maloin Ranch Pluton, Kolker & Lindsley (1989); Sybille Pluton, Fuhrman et al. (1988), Scoates et al. (1996) and J. S. Scoates (personal communication, 1999); ferrodiorite, Mitchell et al. (1996); monzodiorite, Scoates et al. (1996); Sherman Granite, Zielinski et al. (1981), Edwards (1993) and Frost et al. (1999). (b) Variation in molar mg-number with SiO2 content. Arrows indicate the path of decreasing mg-number. Data for the Nandewar, COM and SRP lavas as in Figs 1 and 3. THE EVOLUTION OF FELDSPAR COMPOSITIONS IN MAGMAS OF LOW BULK WATER CONTENT Water-undersaturated conditions are prevalent in basalts of all three types of hy-normative suites. Basalts from ocean island and continental tholeiitic suites generally contain less water (<1 wt %; e.g. Anderson & Brown, 1993; H. Nekvasil, unpublished data, 2000) than those of the alkalic suites, which may reach >2 wt % in some hawaiites (H. Nekvasil, unpublished data, 2000). Even the higher water contents of the alkalic magmas are low enough to ensure water-undersaturated conditions until decompression to low pressures or until a significant amount of fractionation has occurred at elevated pressure. A large temperature interval of crystallization is expected if the water content starts low and builds up towards saturation in the more evolved units. That the more evolved rocks of hy-normative suites contain higher volatile contents than their less evolved counterparts is NUMBER 12 DECEMBER 2000 readily seen in analyses of the rhyolites, comendites and pantellerites of the alkalic suites (MacDonald, 1987), and by the presence of hydrous minerals in the most evolved units of the tholeiitic suites (e.g. Carmichael, 1964; Frost et al., 1999). If fractional crystallization forms such suites, then this increase in water content would arise through fractionation under H2O-unbuffered conditions. During H2O-unbuffered crystallization, the water content builds up towards saturation as anhydrous minerals precipitate. Under H2O-buffered conditions, changes in the activity of water during crystallization are greatly restricted. This is caused by precipitation of hydrous minerals or exsolution of a large amount of a fluid phase. During H2O-unbuffered crystallization, feldspar compositions can change markedly because of the large crystallization temperature interval. If the melts are still hot when the feldspar reaches the compositional region around the ‘nose’ of the ternary feldspar solvus, ternary feldspar will form. Changes in ternary feldspar compositions are sensitive not only to small changes in temperature and melt composition (Nekvasil, 1990), but also to H2O-unbuffered or H2O-buffered conditions (Nekvasil, 1994). If the melt is saturated with two ternary feldspars, and if a peritectic rather than a coprecipitational (cotectic) relationship exists between the coexisting feldspars, feldspar compositional evolution takes on particularly distinctive characteristics (Nekvasil, 1992b). In the peritectic region of the two-feldspar multiple-saturation field of a multicomponent system, sequences of ternary feldspar compositions that are generated by equilibrium crystallization are very different from those generated by fractional crystallization (Nekvasil, 1994). Figure 8 shows calculated feldspar lines-of-descent for a model trachyte (compositionally within the four-component system Ab–Or–An–H2O) of low bulk water content, during H2O-unbuffered and H2O-buffered equilibrium and fractional crystallization [modified from Nekvasil (1994)]. Both the equilibrium and fractional crystallization cases assume equilibrium between coexisting phases. For equilibrium crystallization, the precipitating phases remain in contact with melt; for fractional crystallization, minerals are removed from the melt soon after they crystallize. The major differences in the paths of feldspar evolution at low bulk H2O content (Fig. 8) result from odd (peritectic) and even (eutectic) regions along the plagioclase–alkali feldspar–L (PAL) surface. At low water contents, saturation with alkali feldspar can occur in either the cotectic or the peritectic region of the PAL surface. In the former case, upon reaching saturation in two feldspars, these will co-precipitate until the peritectic region is reached. In the latter case (and also if the melt reaches the peritectic portion of the PAL surface), alkali feldspar is produced only by reaction between plagioclase and liquid. If plagioclase 1748 NEKVASIL et al. EVOLUTION OF INTRA-PLATE IGNEOUS SUITES Fig. 6. Variation of major oxides with silica for non-cumulate rocks of the LAC compared with lavas of the SRP and COM. Symbols as described in legend. Sources of data as in Figs 3 and 5. Arrows indicate the path of decreasing mg-number. crystals remain available for reaction during equilibrium crystallization, the melt will stay on the PAL surface (Fig. 8a and b); once plagioclase is used up, only alkali feldspar precipitates. During ideal fractional crystallization (i.e. crystals are removed immediately upon precipitation), the melt leaves the PAL surface as soon as the peritectic region is reached and alkali feldspar crystallizes instead of plagioclase (Fig. 8c and d). During the final stages of H2O-unbuffered equilibrium crystallization at pressures above >5 kbar in the simple haplogranite system (Luth et al., 1964) and the low temperatures of nearly H2O-saturated conditions, the melt may reach the cotectic region of the albitic part of the PAL surface (dark gray curves, Fig. 8a and c). If two feldspars are still present (e.g. Fig. 8a), the reaction between plagioclase and melt is replaced by coprecipitation of both feldspars. If only alkali feldspar is present at this stage (e.g. Fig. 8c), its solidus intersects the wide low-temperature portion of the ternary feldspar solvus and two feldspars will be in the final assemblage. These feldspars will have the compositions of those at the ternary eutectic of the haplogranite system. Alkali feldspar that crystallizes under H2O-unbuffered conditions in melts with low H2O content undergoes a period of Or enrichment because of the continual expansion of the solvus with decreasing temperature. This effect is enhanced at higher pressures because of greater water solubility and lower solidus temperature. The expansion of the solvus also affects the composition of plagioclase that is in equilibrium with alkali feldspar 1749 JOURNAL OF PETROLOGY VOLUME 41 NUMBER 12 DECEMBER 2000 Fig. 7. Variation of major oxides with silica for sodic and potassic rocks of the Pikes Peak (PP) Batholith and Wolf River (WR) Batholith compared with those of the LAC and Nandewar. Sources of data: PP—Gross & Heinrich (1965), Barker et al. (1975), Wobus & Anderson (1978), Simmons et al. (1986), D. Smith (personal communication, 1997); WR—Van Schmus et al. (1975) and Anderson & Cullers (1978); LAC and Nandewar rocks as in Figs 3 and 5. during H2O-unbuffered equilibrium crystallization (Fig. 8a). Its composition decreases in Or content with decreasing temperature as the melt crosses the PAL surface. Although this model system is limited to the fivecomponent system Ab–Or–An–Qz–H2O, feldspars from numerous rock suites follow one or more of these paths. To a first approximation, additional components act mainly as diluents that depress melting temperatures but do not affect the main compositional trends of the model system. Relating the model results to natural feldspars requires a further consideration. Crystal fractionation obviously removes crystals from contact with the melt from which they crystallized. Under conditions of ideal fractionation, either the liquid or crystals would be absent, and the rocks would represent either accumulated phases or removed liquids. However, it is likely that in nature fractionation is stepwise and polybaric, with periods of in situ crystallization punctuated by removal of batches of liquid (with perhaps some entrained crystals). Therefore, the phenocrysts in any specific unit of a fractionated suite may reflect the cooling history during the last in situ crystallization stage of the fractionation process, rather than represent relict grains entrained in the liquid during a stage of liquid removal at higher pressure. In other words, although a bulk magma (crystals + liquid) may represent the composition of a liquid derived by crystal 1750 NEKVASIL et al. EVOLUTION OF INTRA-PLATE IGNEOUS SUITES Fig. 8. Generalized evolutionary paths of liquid (L), plagioclase (P) and alkali feldspar (A) of a model trachyte of low bulk water content in the system Ab–Or–H2O undergoing H2O-unbuffered (a, c) or H2Obuffered (b, d) equilibrium or fractional crystallization. Black curves in (a) and (c) show the feldspar paths anticipated for pressures below >5 kbar; the dark gray curves are for >5 kbar or higher. Light gray curve indicates the path of liquid evolution at the lower pressure. Dashed lines connect coexisting feldspars. Diagrams are modified from Nekvasil (1990, 1992b, 1994) and Brown (1993). fractionation at a greater pressure, the minerals actually seen in the respective lava or plutonic body would not necessarily represent the fractionated mineral assemblage. Only the compositionally least-evolved (i.e. highest-temperature) mineral phases in a lava could represent accidentally entrained phases that reflect the mineral phases involved in the higher-pressure fractionation. This is of particular relevance when using phenocryst assemblages to model liquid lines of descent arising from polybaric fractionation, and should be kept in mind during the ensuing discussion. FELDSPAR–LIQUID RELATIONS IN OCEAN ISLAND SUITES Tholeiitic suites Normative feldspar constituents of lavas from the ocean island tholeiitic suites of Pinzon, Galapagos (Baitis & Lindstrom, 1980) and Thingmuli, Iceland (Carmichael, 1964) projected into the system Ab–Or–An define a tight trend with falling temperature across the plagioclase saturation surface toward the Ab–Or sideline (gray arrows, Fig. 9). Different ocean island tholeiitic suites deviate little from this path. Even lavas from the ‘transitional’ Easter Island suite show a trend indistinguishable from that of Thingmuli and Pinzon. This suggests that compositional differences like those shown in Figs 1 and 2 among ocean island tholeiitic suites Fig. 9. Projected normative feldspar constituents of bulk lavas (not of the glass coexisting with feldspar) from the tholeiitic suites of Thingmuli, Iceland (Carmichael, 1964, 1967) and Pinzon, Galapagos (Baitis & Lindstrom, 1980) and from the ‘transitional’ Easter Island lavas (Haase et al., 1997). Gray arrows show the generalized liquid line-of-descent of the bulk lavas. The most An-rich feldspar from each lava from Thingmuli and Easter Island is shown by the black symbols. The black arrows were constructed such that the back-tangent to the liquid path of descent at any particular lava intersects the feldspar line-of-descent at the composition of the highest-temperature feldspar present in the lava. Solvus isotherms calculated using the thermodynamic model of Elkins & Grove (1990), and the program SOLVCALC (Wen & Nekvasil, 1994) are shown for 1 kbar and 1000–800°C. A portion of the consolute curve of the solvus at this pressure is shown by the bold gray curve. The calculated 5 kbar plagioclase (P)–alkali feldspar (A)–liquid (L) surface in the system Ab–Or–An–H2O from Nekvasil (1992a) is outlined by the dry and H2O-saturated limiting curves (fine gray lines). have little effect on the evolution of normative feldspar compositions. Compositions of the highest-temperature modal feldspar (as indicated by phenocrysts or phenocryst cores) in each lava flow from Thingmuli (Carmichael, 1967) range from bytownite to oligoclase (Fig. 9). The feldspar path (as well as the liquid path, Fig. 9) is fully consistent with crystal fractionation of a parental magma of low K2O content. Such magmas should contain plagioclase as the sole feldspar over much of the crystallization interval (Fig. 9; Brown, 1993; Nekvasil, 1994). Alkali feldspar would appear only at the end-stages of fractionation as either the sole feldspar or with plagioclase (if the solvus were intersected) depending upon the pressure. At low pressures, saturation with alkali feldspar would not occur until the temperature was below 800°C. Hy-normative alkalic suites The normative feldspar constituents of lavas from Ascension Island (Harris, 1983) and Terceira, Azores (Schmincke, 1973; Self & Gunn, 1976; White et al., 1979; Mungall & Martin, 1995) form a trend that extends from compositions more potassic than those of tholeiitic suites 1751 JOURNAL OF PETROLOGY VOLUME 41 Fig. 10. Projected normative feldspar constituents of the alkalic lavas and least-evolved feldspars of Ascension Island (Harris, 1983) and normative feldspar constituents of lavas from Terceira, Azores (Schmincke, 1973; Self & Gunn, 1976; White et al., 1979; Mungall & Martin, 1995). The black arrows indicate the feldspar line-of-descent based on the highest-temperature feldspar within each lava. The gray arrows indicate the feldspar-line-of descent within an individual lava. Feldspar–liquid relations of lavas from Thingmuli, Iceland (Carmichael, 1964) and Pinzon, Galapagos (Baitis & Lindstrom, 1980) are shown for comparison. Solvus isotherms calculated using the thermodynamic model of Elkins & Grove (1990), and the program SOLVCALC (Wen & Nekvasil, 1994) are shown for 10 kbar and 1000–800°C. A portion of the consolute curve of the solvus at this pressure is shown by the bold gray curve. (e.g. Pinzon) at high normative An content, to compositions that are virtually indistinguishable (Fig. 10) from those of tholeiitic suites at low An contents. The highest-temperature modal feldspar of each lava, when taken over the entire suite, forms a trend (black arrows in Fig. 10) different from that of the tholeiitic suites. Each lava contains only a single feldspar; the feldspar changes from plagioclase in the less evolved units to alkali feldspar in the more evolved units. The details of feldspar zoning at the trachytic stage—the highly informative part of the crystallization history—are complex because of the presence of exsolved ternary feldspars. However, Harris (1986) described cognate quartz syenite blocks that contain feldspars with andesine–oligoclase cores and anorthoclase rims, as well as granitic blocks that contain cryptoperthite more potassic than anorthoclase. These features suggest reverse zoning of alkali feldspar during the trachytic stage, a trend that is shown by the black arrows in Fig. 10. The presence of a single least-evolved feldspar that changes from plagioclase to alkali feldspar (at the dotted line in Fig. 10) supports fractional crystallization at low bulk magmatic water contents (Fig. 8c) as a process leading to diversity of Ascension Island magmas. If the phases in the plutonic ejecta accumulated during stepwise crystal fractionation, then the anorthoclase-rimmed oligoclase is direct evidence for a peritectic relationship NUMBER 12 DECEMBER 2000 between the feldspars. The trend of the highest-temperature feldspars suggests that the temperature of intersection of the solvus, and thus the onset of this peritectic reaction, may be as high as 850°C. The cryptoperthitic alkali feldspar probably crystallized soon after this stage, while temperatures were still high enough to form strongly ternary feldspars. The higher potassium content of the cryptoperthite relative to the anorthoclase implies H2Ounbuffered conditions (Fig. 8c), as is also suggested by the volatile-rich nature of the late-stage rhyolites. Although the projected trend of least-evolved feldspars in the alkalic suites shows a fractionation topology (Fig. 10), this need not imply that these least-evolved feldspars were actually involved in the supposed fractionation events that led to the diversification of the magmas within the suite. They might instead form during the earliest stages of low-pressure differentiation of batches of magma that have already been produced at higher pressures by differentiation of what may even be a feldspar-free assemblage. As low-pressure liquidus phases, the feldspars would reflect the fractionation relationship of the bulk magmas even if they played no role in the actual fractionation events. The experiments of Dondolini & Nekvasil (1999) support this possibility. They determined that the best match between bulk lava compositions and experimental fractionation-derived hy-normative alkalic liquids occurs at >9 kbar under ‘no volatiles added’ conditions (>2 wt % bulk H2O content). At this pressure kaersutite dominates the fractionating assemblage and plagioclase does not appear until the very last (trachytic) stages of crystallization. If feldspar were among the first phases to crystallize at a lesser pressure from the melts derived by stepwise fractionation at 9 kbar, the firstformed feldspar compositions, taken over all successive batches of melt, would describe a path that merely emulated fractionation, owing to the relationship of the bulk lava compositions. Further cooling of each magma at the lower pressure of feldspar saturation would result in feldspar lines-of-descent for the magma that would deviate from the main path of least-evolved feldspars across the suite. Such deviations are readily seen in alkalic suites and exemplified by feldspars from Ascension Island lavas (Fig. 10), and suggest significantly lower temperatures (and hence, lower pressure) than the main fractionation event. The low-temperature feldspar linesof-descent are similar to the lines-of-descent shown by feldspars of the more evolved members of tholeiitic suites (Fig. 9). FELDSPAR–LIQUID RELATIONS IN CONTINENTAL SUITES Hy-normative alkalic suites Hy-normative alkalic suites from continental settings vary from low-K sodic ones (e.g. Aden and Little Aden, Cox 1752 NEKVASIL et al. EVOLUTION OF INTRA-PLATE IGNEOUS SUITES Fig. 11. Projected normative feldspar constituents of alkalic lavas and compositions of highest-temperature crystalline feldspars from the Nandewar lavas from Stolz (1985, 1986). Lavas from Ascension Island (Harris, 1983) and Aden and Little Aden (Cox et al., 1970) are shown for comparison. Black arrows indicate the main path of feldspar evolution based on more complete data from Stolz (1986). The dotted line indicates the compositions of plagioclase rimmed by alkali feldspar in a mafic trachyte. Gray arrows indicate the possible line of descent of the groundmass feldspars of the hawaiites and trachyandesites. Solvus isotherms and consolute curve are as in Fig. 10. A portion of the consolute curve of the solvus at this pressure is shown by the bold gray curve. The calculated 5 kbar plagioclase (P)–alkali feldspar (A)–liquid (L) surface in the system Ab–Or–An–H2O from Nekvasil (1992a) is outlined by the dry and H2O-saturated limiting curves (gray lines). Some feldspars from mafic trachytes are zoned from Ab-rich cores to Or-rich rims. This trend is extended to more potassic compositions by groundmass feldspar (Stolz, 1986). Feldspars of peralkaline trachytes and comendites also show K enrichment, albeit at temperatures close to 100°C lower, with compositions reaching Or50An2 before reversing. Late-stage feldspars of the alkali rhyolites and comendites become more albitic and close to binary (Or38An0). Both feldspar paths of the Nandewar suite indicate the presence of a single stable feldspar throughout much of the crystallization history. This direct evidence for a reaction relation between plagioclase and liquid, together with reverse zoning of alkali feldspar, is suggestive of H2O-unbuffered fractional crystallization at low initial water contents (Fig. 8c) for each path. However, as discussed for Ascension Island lavas, the first-formed feldspar need not have been part of the fractionating assemblage at depth. The low mg-number of 65 for the hawaiite suggests that it is not a primitive melt. Furthermore, at the pressure of best agreement between experimentally produced liquids and bulk lavas of the suite (9 kbar, Dondolini & Nekvasil, 1999, unpublished data, 2000) plagioclase is not a liquid phase and does not appear until trachytic melts are produced. et al., 1970) that resemble the ocean island suites of Ascension Island (Harris, 1983) and of Terceira, Azores (Schmincke, 1973; Self & Gunn, 1976; White et al., 1979; Mungall & Martin, 1995) to potassic ones such as the Nandewar volcano (Stolz, 1985). Both are shown in Fig. 11. The more potassic Nandewar lavas contain more potassic feldspars. Within the suite of hawaiites, trachyandesites, tristanites and mafic trachytes, least-evolved feldspars show continua of compositional evolution around the nose of the feldspar with little evidence for stable coexistence of two feldspars at any stage of cooling (Stolz, 1986). For the most part, the feldspar line-ofdescent for each lava is superimposed upon the trend of least-evolved feldspars across the suite to mafic trachytes, with differences only in the abundance of specific feldspars and in the compositions of least-evolved feldspars. Exceptions to this occur for several trachyandesites in which plagioclase phenocrysts show strong reverse zoning and the groundmass phenocrysts display higher An contents than the phenocryst cores (Stolz, 1986). These reversely zoned plagioclase phenocrysts coexist with partially resorbed aluminous subcalcic augite and aluminous bronzite, both of which are absent from the groundmass. These textural features and mineral assemblages record a major decompression event (e.g. Fram & Longhi, 1992) in some of the least-evolved lavas. This lower-pressure trend continues in feldspars from units more felsic than mafic trachyte (Fig. 11). Least-evolved feldspars of the continental tholeiitic suite represented by SRP basalts and rhyolites and COM lavas (Stout et al., 1994) form a trend similar to that of the hynormative alkalic suites (Fig. 11), albeit with more extreme K enrichment of feldspar compositions. Only a single feldspar is present in each lava. This feldspar changes from potassic plagioclase in basalt, to highly ternary feldspar in trachyte and, finally, to more albitic low-Ca alkali feldspar in rhyolite. Normative feldspar constituents of the lavas also follow a path similar to that of alkalic suites, except at the lower-temperature stages of evolution. The less evolved SRP and Yellowstone rhyolites are clearly more potassic than those of alkalic suites, and this is reflected in the higher temperature of alkali feldspar saturation (close to 1000°C for the COM suite, Fig. 12). Both the paths of least-evolved feldspars and liquid are consistent with crystal fractionation at low bulk water contents under H2O-unbuffered conditions. Just as for the hy-normative alkalic suites, feldspar rims and groundmass of SRP basalts show evidence for a secondary path that trends to significantly lower Or contents (Fig. 12). Between the cores and rims of feldspars from basalt to tristanite lavas is commonly a region with higher An and lower Or than the cores of the phenocrysts (Stout et al., 1994). The lower Or content is also found in phenocryst rims and groundmass feldspar (Fig. 12). Continental tholeiitic suites 1753 JOURNAL OF PETROLOGY VOLUME 41 Fig. 12. Feldspar–melt relations for the SRP basalts and rhyolites (Stout & Nicholls, 1977; Leeman, 1982), COM lavas (Leeman et al., 1976; Stout et al., 1994) and Yellowstone rhyolites (Hildreth et al., 1981). The SRP–COM liquid line-of-descent is shown by the dark gray arrows. The solid black arrows connect the cores of feldspar phenocrysts within the lavas. The thin black arrows show the compositional evolution of feldspars’ rims and groundmass feldspar in basalts through tristanites (Stout et al., 1994). Shown for comparison are normative feldspar contents of non-cumulate rocks of the LAC. Data from Scoates et al. (1996) and Frost et al. (1999). Other features are as in Fig. 11. This secondary path is consistent with a late-stage decompression event. The dominance of plagioclase and olivine phenocrysts in the SRP and COM basalts, yet the impossibility of obtaining the major element trends observed in the lavas (Fig. 4) by fractionation of these phases without also fractionating a significant amount of clinopyroxene (e.g. Thompson, 1972), lends further support for a secondary low-pressure crystallization event that led to the formation of most of the observed phenocrysts. The normative feldspar compositions of the finegrained rocks of the Laramie Anorthosite Complex and its associated granitic rocks form a trend that resembles that of the SRP–COM (Fig. 12). Intermediate compositions of the former, however, show slightly higher Or contents than do the COM trachytes. This may reflect both higher-temperature and higher-pressure conditions for the LAC rocks, consistent with the plutonic nature of the LAC rocks and extrusive nature of the COM suite. This difference is less clear for the most evolved rocks. However, the overall similarities suggest that a similar process induced the compositional diversity for both the plutonic and volcanic suites. The intermediate and silicic rocks of the continental tholeiitic suites are clearly more potassic than are those of the alkalic suites. This difference discriminates between silicic members of alkalic and continental tholeiitic suites if both types are present or only a few lithologies are exposed. The Pikes Peak batholith presents a good example of both cases. The main unit consists predominantly of granite, whereas the late-stage units are a NUMBER 12 DECEMBER 2000 Fig. 13. Normative feldspar compositions of sodic and potassic rocks of the Pikes Peak Batholith compared with those the LAC and Nandewar rocks. The sodic and potassic liquid lines-of-descent are indicated by the black and gray arrows, respectively. Sources of data: PP—Gross & Heinrich (1965), Barker et al. (1975), Wobus & Anderson (1978), Simmons et al. (1986), D. Smith (personal communication, 1997); LAC—Fuhrman et al. (1988), Kolker & Lindsley (1989), Mitchell et al. (1995), Scoates et al. (1996) and Frost et al. (1999). variety of alkalic rock types, including granite (Barker et al., 1975). The normative feldspar constituents of the whole rocks clearly differentiate between members of the two suite types (Fig. 13). The sodic members (Noblett et al., 1993) lie along the alkalic trend exemplified by the Nandewar lavas (Fig. 13), but the potassic units lie along the LAC trend. Also shown in Fig. 13 are rocks from the Honkajoki Rapakivi Granite Complex (HC) of southern Finland (Rämö, 1986). The rocks with intermediate An contents in the HC complex display higher normative Or contents than do the main units of the LAC. Some members of both the COM and the LAC units show this degree of Or enrichment (Figs 11 and 13). The highK character of the mafic rocks from the HC is preserved in the granites. These similarities in trends of normative feldspar constituents between the rocks of anorthosite and rapakivi-type granite suites suggest a common evolutionary history (e.g. Frost & Frost, 1997). SUMMARY Trends of both feldspar compositions and bulk magma normative feldspar constituents in the three main types of hy-normative magmatic suites reflect the uniqueness of peritectic vs cotectic relations between feldspars and liquids in magmas with low bulk water content. Because these are unlikely to reflect random correlation, the trends are consistent with (albeit not proof of ) polybaric fractional crystallization as the primary process that induces diversity in basaltic through intermediate members of hy-normative intraplate suites. Furthermore, the continuous nature of the trends between intermediate rocks (e.g. trachytes) and felsic rocks in many suites suggests a 1754 NEKVASIL et al. EVOLUTION OF INTRA-PLATE IGNEOUS SUITES cogenetic link to the less evolved suite members. Feldspar– liquid relations cannot preclude a combination of partial melting and fractional crystallization of the resulting liquid, but make it likely that the source of any partial melts is related to the suite, not a random member of the associated crust. Evolutionary trends of feldspar compositions and normative feldspar constituents of the bulk rocks are unique for each suite type, yet strikingly similar for different suites of the same type. This implies that feldspar compositions and the normative feldspar constituents of the whole rocks can be used to evaluate the suite type of a partly exposed subgroup of magmatic rocks. Therefore, this tool can be used to assess the origin of anorogenic granite bodies even if few intermediate or mafic units are exposed. Feldspars of many volcanic suites show strong evidence for a major decompression event. If crystal fractionation induces the compositional evolution of these hy-normative suites, this fractionation is likely to be polybaric. Because the phase relations of hynormative suites appear strongly affected by pressure (e.g. Scoates et al., 1999; A. Dondolini & H. Nekvasil, unpublished data, 2000), a polybaric history implies that the phases involved in the fractionation may not be preserved in the lavas. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS We would like to acknowledge the helpful reviews of J. Longhi, S. A. Morse and R. Wiebe. We would also like to thank the numerous workers whose major efforts to characterize the chemistry of the myriad of suites discussed in this paper made this manuscript possible. Particular thanks go to Diane Smith and her colleagues who shared invaluable unpublished information on the Pikes Peak batholith, to Ben Edwards for data from his M.S. thesis on the Sherman Granite, and to Carol and Ron Frost for a pre-publication copy of their 1997 paper. This work was supported by National Science Foundation grants EAR9614322 to H.N., EAR9304699 to D.H.L. and the Center for High Pressure Research (EAR8920329). 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