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1 U.S. Geological Survey, 956 National Center, Reston, VA 20192, USA
2 IGMiP Faculty of Geology, University of Warsaw, Al.
wirki i Wigury 93,
02-089 Warsaw, Poland
3 Environment Centre, Lancaster University, Lancaster LA1 4YQ, UK
4 Department of Earth Sciences, University of Maine, 5790 Bryand Center, Orono,
ME 04469, USA
* E-mail: hbelkin{at}usgs.gov
Electron microprobe data are presented for chevkinite-group minerals from
granulite-facies rocks and associated pegmatites of the Napier Complex and
Mawson Station charnockite in East Antarctica and from the Eastern Ghats,
South India. Their compositions conform to the general formula for this group,
viz.
A4BC2D2Si4O22
where, in the analysed specimens A = (rare-earth elements
(REE), Ca, Y, Th), B = Fe2+, Mg, C =
(Al, Mg, Ti, Fe2+, Fe3+, Zr) and D = Ti and
plot within the perrierite field of the total Fe (as FeO) (wt.%) vs.
CaO (wt.%) discriminator diagram of Macdonald and Belkin
(2002). In contrast to most
chevkinite-group minerals, the A site shows unusual enrichment in the
MREE and HREE relative to the LREE and Ca. In one
sample from the Napier Complex, Y is the dominant cation among the total
REE + Y in the A site, the first reported case of
Y-dominance in the chevkinite group. The minerals include the most Al-rich yet
reported in the chevkinite group (
9.15 wt.% Al2O3),
sufficient to fill the C site in two samples. Conversely, the amount
of Ti in these samples does not fill the D site, and, thus, some of
the Al could be making up the deficiency at D, a situation not
previously reported in the chevkinite group. Fe abundances are low, requiring
Mg to occupy up to 45% of the B site. The chevkinite-group minerals
analysed originated from three distinct parageneses: (1) pegmatites containing
hornblende and orthopyroxene or garnet; (2) orthopyroxene-bearing gneiss and
granulite; (3) highly aluminous paragneisses in which the associated minerals
are relatively magnesian or aluminous. Chevkinite-group minerals from the
first two parageneses have relatively high FeO content and low MgO and
Al2O3 contents; their compositions plot in the field for
mafic and intermediate igneous rocks. In contrast, chevkinite-group minerals
from the third paragenesis are notably more aluminous and have greater Mg/Fe
ratios.
KEYWORDS: chevkinite-group, perrierite, Antarctica, Eastern Ghats, India
This article has been cited by other articles:
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R. Macdonald, H. E. Belkin, F. Wall, and B. baginski Compositional variation in the chevkinite group: new data from igneous and metamorphic rocks Mineralogical Magazine, November 19, 2009; 73(5): 777 - 796. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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