Layered amphibolite sequenze in NE Sardinia, Italy: remnant of a pre-Variscan mafic silicic layered intrusion?
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2005
abstract:
A banded amphibolite sequence of alternating
ultramafic, mafic (amphibolite) and silicic layers, tectonically enclosed within Variscan migmatites, outcrops
at Monte Plebi (NE Sardinia) and shows similarities with
leptyno-amphibolite complexes. The ultramafic layers
consist of amphibole (75-98%), garnet (0-20%), opaque
minerals (1-5%) and biotite (0-3%). The mafic rocks are
made up of amphibole (65-80%), plagioclase (15-30%),
quartz (0-15%), opaque minerals (2-3%) and biotite (0-
2%). The silicic layers consist of plagioclase (60-75%),
amphibole (15-30%) and quartz (10-15%). Alteration,
metasomatic, metamorphic and hydrothermal processes
did not significantly modify the original protolith
chemistry, as proved by a lack of K2O-enrichment, Rb enrichment, CaO-depletion, MgO-depletion and by no
shift in the rare earth element (REE) patterns. Field,
geochemical and isotopic data suggest that ultramafic,
mafic and silicic layers represent repeated sequences of
cumulates, basic and acidic rocks similar to macrorhythmic units of mafic silicic layered intrusions. The
ultramafic layers recall the evolved cumulates of
Skaergaard and Pleasant Bay mafic silicic layered intrusions. Mafic layers resemble Thingmuli tholeiites and
chilled Pleasant Bay mafic rocks. Silicic layers with
Na2O: 4-6 wt%, SiO2: 67-71 wt% were likely oligoclaserich adcumulates common in many mafic silicic layered
intrusions. Some amphibolite showing a strong Ti-, P- depletion and REE-depletion are interpreted as early
cumulates nearly devoid of ilmenite and phosphates. All
Monte Plebi rocks have extremely low Nb, Ta, Zr, Hf
content and high LILE/HFSE ratios, a feature inherited
from the original mantle sources. The mafic and ultramafic layers show slight and strong LREE enrichment
respectively. Most mafic layer samples plot in the field of
continental tholeiites in the TiO2-K2O-P2O5 diagram
and are completely different from N-MORB, E-MORB
and T-MORB as regards REE patterns and Nd, Sr isotope ratios but show analogies with Siberian, Deccan and
proto-Atlantic rift tholeiites. Comparisons with Thingmuli, Skaergaard and Kiglapait rocks and with experimental data suggest that the Monte Plebi intrusion was
an open-to-oxygen system with fO2 >_FMQ. Mafic and
ultramafic samples yielded epsilonNd(460)=+0.79 /+3.06 and
87Sr/86Sr=0.702934-0.703426, and four silicic samples
epsilonNd(460)=-0.53/-1.13; 87Sr/86Sr=0.703239-0.703653.
Significant differences in Nd isotope ratios between mafic
and silicic rocks prove that both groups evolved separately in deeper magma chambers, from different mantle
sources, with negligible interaction with crustal material,
and were later repeatedly injected within a shallower
magma chamber. The spectrum of Sr and Nd isotope
data is consistent with a slightly enriched mantle metasomatized during an event earlier than 460 Ma. The
metasomatising component was represented by alkali Th-rich fluids of crustal origin rather than by sedimentary materials, able to modify alkali and Sr-Nd isotope
systematics. Monte Plebi layered amphibolites might
represent the first example of a strongly metamorphosed
fragment of an early Paleozoic mafic silicic layered
intrusion emplaced in a thinning continental crust and
then tectonically dismembered by Variscan orogeny
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Variscan migmatites;
List of contributors:
Dini, Andrea; Puxeddu, Mariano
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