Abstract

The Duluth Complex and associated subvolcanic intrusions comprise a large (5,000 km 2 ) intrusive complex in northeastern Minnesota that was emplaced into comagmatic volcanics during the development of the 1.1 Ga Midcontinent rift in North America. In addition to anorthositic and felsic intrusions, the Duluth Complex is composed of many individual mafic layered intrusions of tholeiitic affinity. The cumulate stratigraphies and cryptic variations of six of the better exposed and better studied intrusions are described here to demonstrate the variability in their cumulus mineral paragenesis. Although the general paragenetic sequence is: O1(±Pl) → Pl+Ol → Pl+Cpx+Ox(±Ol±Opx) → Pl+Cpx+Ox+Ap(±Ol) considerable differences exist among the six intrusions in the relative order and timing of cumulus arrivals, most notably with regard to augite (Cpx) and Fe-Ti oxide (Ox). The various cumulate stratigraphies and cryptic variations represented by the six intrusions described here largely reflect differences in the degree of open-system behaviour to recharge, eruption, and country-rock assimilation, but also may have been influenced by differences in parent magma composition, in the efficiency of fractional crystallization, and in the conditions of crystallization ( e.g. P total , f O 2 P H 2 O ). The Sonju Lake intrusion, wherein cumulus augite arrived before ilmenite, formed by essentially closed-system fractional crystallization. However, its compositional evolution may have been affected to an uncertain degree by assimilation of a granitic hanging-wall. The monotonous, thick troctolitic cumulate sequences of the lower parts of the South Kawishiwi and Partridge River Intrusions appear to represent the effects of frequent magma recharge coupled with in situ (or boundary layer) crystallization though other interpretations have been proposed. Extensive Cu-Ni sulphide mineralization at the base of these intrusions is attributed to country-rock contamination of the earliest intruded magmas. The cyclical progression of cumulates in the Layered Series at Duluth, wherein cumulus augite and oxide arrived nearly simultaneously, formed in a moderately open system characterized by periodic eruption and recharge. The Wilder Lake Intrusion is different from other intrusions in that cumulus ilmenite appears before augite and that olivine and augite composition define an inverted cryptic variation. The latter phenomenon may be related to a strong upward gradation toward lesser amounts of trapped liquid in the cumulates. Finally, the incomplete cumulate stratigraphy of the Bald Eagle Intrusion, which is composed of approximately equal thicknesses of troctolite (PO) and gabbro (PAO) adcumulates, is unique in that Fe-Ti oxide did not arrive as a cumulus phase despite prolonged crystallization of cumulus augite. These different cumulus parageneses probably produced a variety of derivative magmas, which may have contributed in part to the compositional diversity of the Midcontinent rift volcanics.

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