Abstract

The distribution and compositions of chevkinite-group minerals (CGMs) in the pantelleritic Gold Flat Tuff, Nevada, USA, are used to examine three aspects of the evolution of the tuff, which we feel are of general significance in peralkaline magmatism. First, both chevkinite-(Ce) and perrierite-(Ce) occur in certain facies, although normally these phases almost invariably occur in different igneous lithologies. Their co-occurrence in the tuff is due to the mixing of pantelleritic and intermediate magmas. Second, the tuff is the first recorded occurrence of a CGM in a pantellerite eruptive, with possible implications for the crystallization conditions. In particular, low values of aSiO 2 may have stabilized ilmenite + chevkinite rather than aenigmatite, although the unusually high LREE contents (∑La–Sm ≤ 1517 ppm) in the pantellerite may have played a role. Third, an unusual lamellar texture in the CGM is revealed by Atomic Force Microscopy to be formed by a rutile-like phase. The lamellae may have formed by exsolution from a rutile-like layer in the crystal structure. An electron back-scattered diffraction study of a single crystal showed a structural dislocation not apparent optically or by electron back-scattered imaging. This may have wider implications in mineralogical studies.

Highlights

  • The chevkinite group of REE, Ti-silicates are increasingly being recognized as widespread accessory minerals in a wide range of igneous and metamorphic rocks

  • We report on the unusual case of the occurrence of the two phases in a strongly peralkaline rhyolite, which, in addition, is the only record of a chevkinitegroup mineral (CGM) crystallizing in a pantelleritic magma

  • The study has revealed unusual features of the occurrence and textures of CGM which may be of more general significance in studies of accessory minerals

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Summary

Introduction

The chevkinite group of REE, Ti-silicates are increasingly being recognized as widespread accessory minerals in a wide range of igneous and metamorphic rocks. The two most common members of the group, chevkinite and perrierite, have the general formula A4BC2D2(Si2O7), where the dominant cations in each site are: A, REE, Ca, Sr; B, Fe2+; C, Fe2+, Fe3+, Mn, Mg, Ti; D, Ti. In igneous systems, chevkinite and perrierite occupy different paragenesis; chevkinite occurs mainly in evolved, salic rocks, such as syenites and alkali granites (and their extrusive equivalents), and perrierite is known only from rocks of intermediate composition, such as syenodiorites, diorites, latites and trachyandesites [Macdonald and Belkin, 2002, Macdonald et al, 2019a]. The CGM under study displays an unusual textural feature, which has not been reported from the group before. It occurs as lamellae which may be related to some form of exsolution. The host pantellerite is the Gold Flat Tuff, an ash-flow tuff from the Black Mountain Volcanic Centre in Nevada, USA

Gold Flat Tuff
Samples and analytical methods
Petrography
Occurrence of CGM
Compositions of CGM
Nature and formation of lamellae
Paragenesis of the CGM
Conclusions
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