Sf. Foley, GEOCHEMICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES OF T HE ORIGIN OF ULTRAPOTASSIC IGNEOUS ROCK, Neues Jahrbuch fur Mineralogie. Abhandlungen, 167(1), 1994, pp. 1-55
The geochemistry and experimental petrology of the three ultrapotassic
igneous rock groups can be explained by an origin by hybridization of
melts from alkali-rich veins and peridotitic wall-rocks. Lamproites f
orm from primary magmas ranging in SiO2 content between about 42 (oliv
ine lamproite) and 53 wt % (leucite lamproite). Source rocks are mica-
rich, but poor in Ca, Al and Na in comparison to primitive mantle. Hig
h-pressure experiments support the hypothesis that the range of primar
y lamproite magmas can be explained by difference in their pressure of
origin: leucite lamproites form at pressures below 20 kbar, whereas d
iamond-bearing olivine lamproites originate at more than 55 kbar. Expe
riments at the same pressure and temperature with differing fluid comp
ositions (CH4 > H2O, H2O > CH4, CO2 > H2O) show that oxygen fugacity h
as a stronger effect on mica chemistry than does variation in pressure
or temperature. Micas in experiments with H2O > CH4 have higher Al- a
nd Ba-contents and lower Si, and K-contents than those in experiments
with CH4 > H2O. Fluorine contents are lower due to the high water acti
vity, and Ti contents higher. At higher fO2, at which CO2 forms an imp
ortant species in the fluid, Ba- and Ti-contents are appreciably highe
r. The experimental results show that the rapid decrease in Al and the
high Ti contents of phlogopites in natural lamproites is best explain
ed by fractionation in H2O-rich conditions. The extremely high K/Al of
lamproites can be directly attributed to melting of mica in the sourc
e rock if melting conditions correspond to the most reducing of the ex
periments (fO2 = IW. The typically high Ba contents of lamproites must
then be attributed to melting of accessory phases in the source. The
origin of lamproitic magmas under reducing conditions also explains ot
her chemical and mineralogical characteristics, namely: (i) high Fe2O3
in later generations of spinel and leucite, (ii) the stability of arm
alcolite, (iii) low C-contents, and (iv) the SiO2-rich composition of
leucite lamproites. A critical assessment of liquidus experiments on u
ltrapotassic igneous rocks and partial melting experiments on lherzoli
tes shows that the ultrapotassic rocks could not have formed from lher
zolitic source rocks. Clinopyroxene and mica are much more common in t
he liquidus experiments than melting of Iherzolite would allow. Trace
elements and isotope measurements provide further arguments against a
homogeneous source rock. The alkali-rich veins in the source regions a
re the results of earlier magmas which solidified at depth. The veins
commonly contain abundant mica and clinopyroxene and may contain acces
sories which are not stable in the peridotitic wall-rock. Examples are
priderite, K-Richterite and LIMA. Olivine is uncommon or absent in th
e veins, since it is consumed by the crystallization of mica. The firs
t, strongly alkaline melt of veined peridotite is restricted to the ve
in assemblage due to the concentration of incompatible elements and vo
latiles. With increasing temperature this melt becomes hybridized by a
component from the wall-rock by means of two mechanisms: (1) Dissolut
ion of wall-rock minerals: The first melt is sucked into the wall-rock
due to surface energy minimization, where it dissolves wall-rock mine
rals (especially olivine and orthopyroxene) at temperatures below the
wall-rock solidus. (2) Solid-solution melting. Vein assemblages contai
n several minerals which consist of extensive solid-solution series (e
.g. mica, amphibole, spinel and apatite). These minerals melt progress
ively over large temperature ranges and thus effectively bridge the te
mperature gap between the melting points of vein and wall-rock. A melt
component from the wall-rock is therefore mixed in with the vein-deri
ved melt whilst the most refractory vein minerals are still stable. Vo
lcanics with contradictory trace element and isotopic indicators of te
ctonic setting can be explained by storage of these characteristics in
vein assemblages within the, mantle. Veins of differing age will be r
eactivated together during a later melting event. Ultrapotassic rocks
represent melts originating dominantly from the vein assemblage. Conti
nued melting may result in dilution of the vein-derived melt by compon
ents from both lithospheric and asthenospheric peridotite. This proces
s explains parallels in trace element patterns between ultrapotassic r
ocks and commoner basaltic rocks, with the extreme example of alkali-p
icrites.