Abstract
The Kiviniemi mafic intrusion, near the eastern margin of the Paleoproterozoic Central Finland Granitoid Complex, is both spatially and temporally associated with post-kinematic Fe-Ti-P-enriched Svecofennian orogenic mafic magmatism. The main rock types in this small (~ 15 ha) intrusion are garnet-bearing fayalite ferrodiorite, leucoferrodiorite, ferromonzodiorite, and pyroxene diorite. The garnet-bearing fayalite ferrodiorite and leucoferrodiorite contain 50–281 ppm Sc, 275–5600 ppm Zr, and 58–189 ppm Y (n = 42), delineating a mineralized deposit some 2.5 ha in extent. Overall, these rocks show an evolved (iron-enriched) tholeiitic character; low values of Ni (< 20–40 ppm), Cr (< 20 ppm), and Cu (< 20–80 ppm); and high contents of Zn (213–700 ppm). The rock-forming minerals in the ferrodioritic rocks are (ferro)hedenbergite, plagioclase (~ An40), ferropargasite and ferroedenite, almandine garnet, and fayalite (Fo1–4). Accessory minerals include zircon, ilmenite, fluorapatite, biotite, pyrite, pyrrhotite, potassium feldspar, grunerite, and clinoferrosilite. Some relict cumulate textures have been preserved, but primary magmatic features have largely been overprinted by strong recrystallization and corona formation. The main carriers of Sc are amphibole, clinopyroxene, and apatite. The remarkably strong enrichment of Sc in ferromagnesian silicates and apatite, rather than in specific Sc-minerals, implies magmatic enrichment. Post-kinematic mafic intrusions in central Finland constitute a bimodal association with co-existing granitoid counterparts. The Kiviniemi mafic intrusion is associated with a coarse megacrystic granite and the two rock type display mingled contacts, indicative of contemporaneity of the two magmas. This conclusion is in accord with the coincident U-Pb zircon ages for the ferrodiorite, at 1857 ± 2 Ma (multigrain ID-TIMS) and the megacrystic granite, at 1860 ± 7 Ma (single-crystal LA-MC-ICP-MS). The initial εNd value of the ferrodiorite and the granite are + 0.1 and − 2.5, respectively. These Nd isotope compositions probably reflect a chondritic mantle source for the ferrodiorite and suggest incorporation of some Archaean crustal material into the granite in the course of magmatic evolution. The resource estimation calculated for Kiviniemi intrusion by using 40 g/t Sc cut off value is 13.4 Mt of rock with an average grade of 162.7 g/t scandium, 1726 g/t zirconium, and 81 g/t yttrium.
Highlights
Since the times of Bowen (1928) and Fenner (1929), strong iron enrichment in basaltic magmas has been acknowledged as a fundamental process of magmatic differentiation
Mass spectrometry based on thermal ionization (ID-TIMS using a VG Sector 54 mass spectrometer) was used for the ferrodiorite, and the laser ablation multicollector method (LA-MC-inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS)) for the surrounding megacrystic granite
Leucocratic ferrodiorites and a few two-meter-thick fayalite pyroxenite cumulate layers are found in close contact with the main deposit rocks
Summary
Since the times of Bowen (1928) and Fenner (1929), strong iron enrichment in basaltic magmas has been acknowledged as a fundamental process of magmatic differentiation. The mechanisms of iron enrichment via the tholeiitic differentiation path may involve gravitational floating/accumulation, compositional convection, and segregation of an interstitial liquid (e.g., McBirney 1995; Mitchell et al 1996; White 2007; Morse 2008), and liquid immiscibility (Philpotts 1979; Roedder 1978; Naslund 1983; Veksler 2009; Charlier and Grove 2012). The differentiation paths of anorthosite-related Fe-enriched magmas and some layered cumulate intrusions (e.g., Graveyard Point and Pleasant Bay, USA; Panzhihua, SW China; Grader, Canada) are explained by fractionation and formation of crystal “mush,” from which iron-rich interstitial liquid is expelled. Primary melt inclusion studies of apatite, olivine, plagioclase, and interstitial trapped melts as well as trace element geochemistry of cumulus apatite have corroborated the concept of unmixing of late-stage liquids in mafic-layered intrusions (Jakobsen et al 2005 and 2011; Charlier et al 2011; VanTongeren and Mathez 2012)
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