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Mineralogical Magazine; June 2000; v. 64; no. 3; p. 525-537
© 2000 Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland
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The mafic mineralogy of the Pandé massif, Tikar plain, Cameroon: implications for a peralkaline affinity and emplacement from highly evolved alkaline magma

E. Njonfang1 and C. Moreau2,*

1 Laboratoire de Géologie, École Normale Supérieure, Université de Yaoundé I, BP 47, Cameroun
2 Département des Sciences de la Terre, Pôle Sciences et Technologie, Université de la Rochelle, Avenue Michel Crépeau, 17402, La Rochelle Cedex 1, France

* E-mail: cmoreau{at}univ-lr.fr

The Pandé massif is a small (4.9 x 3.4 km) subvolcanic complex of the Cameroon Line striking W–E and intrudes a Panafrican granite basement. It comprises a syenite-granite suite, where coarse- to fine-grained syenites are predominant and the granites are the product of residual melt after syenite crystallization, and two volcanic (trachyte-rhyolite and trachyte) sequences. Amphibole and pyroxene are the dominant mafic silicates, the first occurring mainly in rhyolites and coarse- to medium-grained syenites, and the second, principally in all syenites, trachytes and granites. Rare biotite flakes are encountered in the coarse-grained or alkaline syenites and fayalite rimmed with oxides occurs in trachyte from the first volcanic sequence (T1). Apatite and zircon are common accessories, whereas some titanite occurs in the medium-grained syenites. The plutonic rocks are drusy, intrude the first volcanic sequence but pre-date the second (T2).

All the mafic minerals are Fe-rich. Detailed studies of amphibole and pyroxene show that their compositions define relatively limited trends, amphibole varying from ferrorichterite to arfvedsonite and pyroxenes along the acmite-hedenbergite join of the Ac-Hd-Di diagram, in both the intrusive suite and volcanic rocks. Where the two minerals coexist, pyroxene crystallized subsequent to amphibole, a situation generally found in late-stage or subsolidus aegirines. The overlap in plutonic and volcanic pyroxene trends suggests their crystallization from magmas of the same composition. However, the presence of quartz and fayalite in T1 and of pure aegirine in T2 and the occurrence of Zr-bearing aegirine (NaZr0.5Fe2+0.5Si2O6) in the early crystallizing alkaline syenites evolving towards pure aegirine from medium- to fine-grained quartz syenites and granites, are consistent with changes in oxygen fugacities during magmatic differentiation. Two stages are distinguished: fO2 increasingly decreased from T1 to alkaline syenite emplacement (from 10–16 to 10–24 bracketed by WM and QFM buffers) where a disequilibrium, probably caused by water dissociation with volatile loss (H2) during magma degassing, favoured crystallization of Zr-bearing aegirine; a decrease in amphibole proportions towards medium-grained quartz syenites and an increase in fO2 from the medium-grained quartz syenites to granites and T2 sequence.

The Mg-poor nature of all the mafic silicates, subsolidus origin of amphiboles, crystallization of pyroxene subsequent to amphibole and subsolidus trends defined by pyroxenes are compatible with the parental magma having itself been a late-stage derivative magma, e.g. the last product of an alkaline melt from which the voluminous Mayo Darlé granite bodies crystallized.

KEYWORDS: Plutono-volcanism, Pandé, Tikar plain, Cameroon Line, syenite-granite, trachyte-rhyolite, amphiboles, clinopyroxenes, peralkaline affinity




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E. NJONFANG and A. NONO
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