Abstract

The petrogenesis and relationship of diamondite to well-studied monocrystalline and fibrous diamonds are poorly understood yet would potentially reveal new aspects of how diamond-forming fluids are transported through the lithosphere and equilibrate with surrounding silicates. Of 22 silicate- and oxide-bearing diamondites investigated, most yielded garnet intergrowths (n = 15) with major element geochemistry (i.e. Ca–Cr) classifying these samples as low-Ca websteritic or eclogitic. The garnet REE patterns fit an equilibrium model suggesting the diamond-forming fluid shares an affinity with high-density fluids (HDF) observed in fibrous diamonds, specifically on the join between the saline–carbonate end-members. The δ13C values for the diamonds range from − 5.27 to − 22.48‰ (V-PDB) with δ18O values for websteritic garnets ranging from + 7.6 to + 5.9‰ (V-SMOW). The combined C–O stable isotope data support a model for a hydrothermally altered and organic carbon-bearing subducted crustal source(s) for the diamond- and garnet-forming media. The nitrogen aggregation states of the diamonds require that diamondite-formation event(s) pre-dates fibrous diamond-formation and post-dates most of the gem monocrystalline diamond-formation events at Orapa. The modelled fluid compositions responsible for the precipitation of diamondites match the fluid-poor and fluid-rich (fibrous) monocrystalline diamonds, where all grow from HDFs within the saline-silicic-carbonatitic ternary system. However, while the nature of the parental fluid(s) share a common lithophile element geochemical affinity, the origin(s) of the saline, silicic, and/or carbonatitic components of these HDFs do not always share a common origin. Therefore, it is wholly conceivable that the diamondites are evidence of a distinct and temporally unconstrained tectono-thermal diamond-forming event beneath the Kaapvaal craton.

Highlights

  • The deep carbon cycle can be investigated on billion year timescales by studying the petrological and geochemical nature of mantle diamonds and their mineral/fluid inclusions and intergrowths

  • The samples show complex textural relationships with mutual intergrowths of diamond and garnet. This is consistent with previous observations of southern African diamondites (Kurat and Dobosi 2000; Dobosi and Kurat 2002, 2010; Rubanova et al 2012), and that the garnet and diamond are syngenetic (Fig. 1b)

  • Monocrystalline gem diamonds from Orapa are evidence for a long and protracted record of carbonaceous metasomatism in the SCLM (Gurney et al 2010)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The deep carbon cycle can be investigated on billion year timescales by studying the petrological and geochemical nature of mantle diamonds and their mineral/fluid inclusions and intergrowths. These samples show some striking petrological and geochemical features which distinguish diamondites from their monocrystalline counterparts. For example: (1) a dominance of low-Ca eclogitic to websteritic garnets relative to garnets from monocrystalline diamonds (Dobosi and Kurat 2002, 2010; Gurney and Boyd 1982; Jacob et al 2000, 2011, 2014; Kirkley et al 1991; Stachel and Harris 2008), (2) diamond-garnet textures which imply silicate melt was present during diamond formation (Dobosi and Kurat 2002, 2010), (3) a total lack of olivine for all diamondites investigated (Jacob et al 2014), and (4) low δ13C values and high δ15N values in samples with peridotitic garnets (Mikhail et al 2013)

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call