Abstract
Chromitites from Orhaneli and Harmancık ophiolites (Bursa, NW Turkey) are mainly associated with dunites. They occur as banded and lenticular bodies showing massive and disseminated textures and are composed of magnesiochromite grains characterized by the following composition: Cr2O3=58.30–61.19wt.%, Al2O3=8.32–10.03wt.% and TiO2=0.14–0.21wt.%. The Cr# [Cr/(Cr+Al)] values of magnesiochromite from both ophiolites range between 0.80 and 0.83 and their Mg# [Mg/(Mg+Fe2+)] values vary from 0.52 to 0.69. However, one chromitite sample (BO13B) from the Orhaneli ophiolite contains magnesiochromite with relatively low Cr2O3 (48.38wt.%), high Al2O3 (15.16wt.%) and TiO2 (0.30wt.%) contents, and average Cr# and Mg# values of 0.68 and 0.56, respectively. Although the total content of platinum-group elements (PGE) in most chromitite samples varies between 83 and 169ppb, two samples from the Orhaneli ophiolite show enrichments in total PGE (up to 500ppb). Several platinum-group mineral (PGM) grains occur as minute inclusions in magnesiochromite grains (1–15μm across). Laurite is dominant PGM phase, followed by erlichmanite, unidentified Ru–Ni–Fe sulfide, irarsite, hollingworthite, native osmium and iridium. Millerite and pentlandite represent the most abundant primary base-metal mineral inclusions in magnesiochromite, whereas bornite, awaruite, heazlewoodite, violarite and orcelite are mostly observed in the secondary silicate groundmass. Olivine, clinopyroxene and amphibole are also identified as silicate inclusions in the magnesiochromite. The composition of the magnesiochromite and the parental melts in equilibrium indicate that these magnesiochromite grains were most likely crystallized from boninitic melts in an arc setting. However, BO13B chromitite sample from the Orhaneli chromitites may have crystallized from arc-related melt of probably an island arc tholeiite affinity.
Published Version
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