Abstract

Abundances of precious metals and cobalt in the lithospheric mantle are typically obtained by bulk geochemical analyses of mantle xenoliths. These elements are strongly chalcophile and the mineralogy, texture and trace element composition of sulphide phases in such samples must be considered. In this study we assess the mineralogy, textures and trace element compositions of sulphides in spinel lherzolites from four Scottish lithospheric terranes, which provide an ideal testing ground to examine the variability of sulphides and their precious metal endowments according to terrane age and geodynamic environment. Specifically we test differences in sulphide composition from Archaean-Palaeoproterozoic cratonic sub-continental lithospheric mantle (SCLM) in northern terranes vs. Palaeozoic lithospheric mantle in southern terranes, as divided by the Great Glen Fault (GGF).Cobalt is consistently elevated in sulphides from Palaeozoic terranes (south of the GGF) with Co concentrations>2.9wt.% and Co/Ni ratios>0.048 (chondrite). In contrast, sulphides from Archaean cratonic terranes (north of the GGF) have low abundances of Co (<3600ppm) and low Co/Ni ratios (<0.030). The causes for Co enrichment remain unclear, but we highlight that globally significant Co mineralisation is associated with ophiolites (e.g., Bou Azzer, Morocco and Outokumpu, Finland) or in oceanic peridotite-floored settings at slow-spreading ridges. Thus we suggest an oceanic affinity for the Co enrichment in the southern terranes of Scotland, likely directly related to the subduction of Co-enriched oceanic crust during the Caledonian Orogeny. Further, we identify a distinction between Pt/Pd ratio across the GGF, such that sulphides in the cratonic SCLM have Pt/Pd≥chondrite whilst Palaeozoic sulphides have Pt/Pd<chondrite. We observe that Pt-rich sulphides with discrete Pt-minerals (e.g., PtS) are associated with carbonate and phosphates in two xenolith suites north of the GGF. This three-way immiscibility (carbonate-sulphide-phosphate) indicates carbonatitic metasomatism is responsible for Pt-enrichment in this (marginal) cratonic setting. These Co and Pt-enrichments may fundamentally reflect the geodynamic setting of cratonic vs. non-cratonic lithospheric terranes and offer potential tools to facilitate geochemical mapping of the lithospheric mantle.

Highlights

  • The lithospheric mantle has variably undergone complex magmatic and metasomatic events, dependent upon the age, structure and transient geodynamic environment(s) recorded in any one region

  • The sub-continental lithospheric mantle (SCLM) as a source of metals has been studied for decades

  • Given the significant lateral movement along the Great Glen Fault (GGF) prior to Permo-Carboniferous entrainment of xenolith suites, and the cratonic lithospheric keel beneath northern Scotland; we find that sulphide compositions, petrography and textures can distinguish between lithospheric mantle regions (Fig.15)

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Summary

Introduction

The lithospheric mantle has variably undergone complex magmatic and metasomatic events, dependent upon the age, structure and transient geodynamic environment(s) recorded in any one region. For the metallogenesis of a mantle region, and magmas derived from that region, the petrographic siting of sulphides and their composition are key controls, and this may be reflected in mineralisation at the surface (e.g., Hughes et al, 2015a) It can be demonstrated in lavas of the North Atlantic Igneous Province that changes in Pt/Pd bulk rock ratio are a result of contamination by shallow marginal cratonic SCLM-derived sulphides which have elevated Pt abundances. The earliest lavas of this region that intruded up through cratonic SCLM have the highest Pt/Pd ratios, whilst younger lavas see a gradual decrease in Pt/Pd ratio (Hughes et al, 2015a) In this investigation we envisage that a similar compositional control for mantle-derived magmas may be noted for Co (i.e., reflecting Co-rich or Co-poor SCLM sulphides per lithospheric terrane). We consider the geochemistry of mantle sulphide minerals ( for Co) in this geodynamic context

Scottish terranes
Mantle xenoliths
Sampling and analytical techniques
Whole-rock sample preparation and analysis
Petrography and mineral chemistry analysis
Xenolith preservation and alteration
Whole-rock element abundances
Sulphide petrography and mineralogy
Sulphide compositions
Platinum-group element geochemistry
Sulphide mineral abundance and ‘populations’
Metasomatism north of the GGF
Cobalt and the Great Glen Fault — a major lithospheric lineament distinction
Conclusions
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