Abstract

Minerals of the apatite group commonly occur in granite pegmatites, and their ability to incorporate a wide range of trace elements makes them a good indicator of magma composition and magmatic–hydrothermal processes. Gem-quality purple apatite crystals from the Dara-e-Pech pegmatite field in Afghanistan have rarely been reported. Here, we investigated apatite crystals originated from this locality, using gemological testing, chemical analysis, and in situ U–Pb dating, with the purpose of identifying their origin, the constraints on the magma source in which the apatite crystals were formed, and the timing of the magmatic–hydrothermal activity. Our findings demonstrate that the purple apatite crystals were impure fluorapatite, characterized by heavy rare-earth element (HREE) enrichment, intermediate Eu anomalies, and non-CHARAC Y/Ho ratios. The results showed that these apatite crystals yielded a lower intercept age of 135.8 ± 6.9 Ma. We proposed that the pegmatitic apatite samples formed in a transitional magmatic–hydrothermal pegmatitic system with moderate fO2 in the Early Cretaceous (~135 Ma). Our study helps to constrain the magmatic–hydrothermal activities of the little-known Dara-e-Pech pegmatite field.

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