Abstract

Epidote-group minerals, together with albite, quartz, fluorite, Al-poor and Fe-rich phyllosilicates, zircon, and minor oxides and sulphides, are typical hydrothermal phases in peralkaline alkali-feldspar granites from the Corupá Pluton, Graciosa Province, South Brazil. The epidote-group minerals occur as single crystals and as aggregates filling in rock interstices and miarolitic cavities. They display complex recurrent zoning patterns with an internal zone of ferriallanite-(Ce), followed by allanite-(Ce), then epidote-ferriepidote, and an external zone with allanite-(Ce), with sharp limits, as shown in BSE and X-ray images. REE patterns show decreasing fractionation degrees of LREE over HREE from ferriallanite to epidote. The most external allanite is enriched in MREE. LA-ICP-MS data indicate that ferriallanite is enriched (>10-fold) in Ti, Sr and Ga, and depleted in Mg, Rb, Th and Zr relative to the host granite. Allanite has lower Ga and Mn and higher Zr, Nb and U contents as compared to ferriallanite, while epidote is enriched in Sr, U and depleted in Pb, Zr, Hf, Ti and Ga. The formation of these minerals is related to the variable concentrations of HFSE, Ca, Al, Fe and F in fluids remaining from magmatic crystallization, in an oxidizing environment, close to the HM buffer. L-MREE were in part released by the alteration of chevkinite, their main primary repository in the host rocks.

Highlights

  • Epidote-group minerals constitute complex solid solutions series crystallized in several geological environments, making part of a variety of paragenesis in magmatic and metamorphic rocks and pegmatites, as well as hydrothermal and metassomatic rocks (Deer et al 1986, Gieré and Sorensen 2004)

  • Several samples of the Corupá peralkaline granites were studied in polished thin sections and the features described in this paper are common to most of them

  • Hydrothermal epidote-group minerals occur as isolated idiomorphic crystals and as aggregates of smaller prismatic to acicular grains, sometimes arranged in a radiated form

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Summary

Introduction

Epidote-group minerals constitute complex solid solutions series crystallized in several geological environments, making part of a variety of paragenesis in magmatic and metamorphic rocks and pegmatites, as well as hydrothermal and metassomatic rocks (Deer et al 1986, Gieré and Sorensen 2004). The minerals in this group fit the. Al+3 and Mn+3 are essential cations in M(3), respectively. Mg, Fe2+, and Mn2+ are essential cations in M(1) and/ or M(3). In ferriallanite (Kartashov et al 2002) and ferriepidote, Fe3+ is the dominant cation in M(1). Substantial reviews on the mineralogy and petrology of this group can be found in Deer et al (1986), Gieré and Sorensen (2004) and Franz and Liebscher (2004)

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