Calculation of the composition of fractionated solid as deduced from chemical profiles in tholeiitic lava

Authors
Citation
Wh. Maclean, Calculation of the composition of fractionated solid as deduced from chemical profiles in tholeiitic lava, CONTR MIN P, 139(1), 2000, pp. 85-100
Citations number
40
Categorie Soggetti
Earth Sciences
Journal title
CONTRIBUTIONS TO MINERALOGY AND PETROLOGY
ISSN journal
00107999 → ACNP
Volume
139
Issue
1
Year of publication
2000
Pages
85 - 100
Database
ISI
SICI code
0010-7999(200005)139:1<85:COTCOF>2.0.ZU;2-R
Abstract
The composition of solid precipitated from cooling magma is calculated from chemical differentiation profiles and an incompatible element monitor of f ractionation. In a period of cooling, magma evolves to a derivative liquid and a solid; liquid compositions are obtained from the chemical profiles, a nd the fractionation interval via the incompatible element and the Rayleigh distillation equation. The composition of the solid, the only unknown, can be calculated for both equilibrium and continuous fractionation models. A sequence of low-K tholeiitic laves (basalt to rhyolite) from an Archean gre enstone belt in northwestern Quebec are used to describe the procedure. Che mical trends in the lava exhibit strong iron enrichment followed by depleti on and evolution to rhyolite. Trends in the calculated solid are amplified relative to lava, and bulk distribution coefficients. normative minerals, m g-number, and other parameters also show significant divergence. Oxidation state and amount of "trapped liquid" have important effects on solid compos ition. Solids have notably more basic chemical compositions than coexisting liquids, and this produces a "lag" in differentiation indices between the two. The high values of bulk distribution coefficients calculated for Fe, T i and P (D similar to 3 to 4 +) in late stages of fractionation make it pos sible to produce the extremely Fe-Ti-P-rich solid fractions in layered igne ous complexes from quartz-normative liquids.