Petrographic, geochemical and SHRIMP U-Pb titanite age characterization of the Thabazimbi mafic sills: Extended time frame and a unifying petrogenetic model for the Bushveld Large Igneous Province
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Author list: Rajesh HM, Chisonga BC, Shindo K, Beukes NJ, Armstrong RA
Publisher: Elsevier
Place: AMSTERDAM
Publication year: 2013
Journal: Precambrian Research (0301-9268)
Journal acronym: PRECAMBRIAN RES
Volume number: 230
Start page: 79
End page: 102
Number of pages: 24
ISSN: 0301-9268
eISSN: 1872-7433
Languages: English-Great Britain (EN-GB)
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Abstract
Mafic sills occur within and in the vicinity of the Thabazimbi iron ore deposit, near the northern edge of the western limb of the Bushveld Complex. The sills are hosted in the 2.46 Ga Penge Iron Formation of the Transvaal Supergroup. The gabbroic sills have a primary mineral assemblage of clinopyroxene, plagioclase, accessory Fe-Ti oxides and titanite, with augites in places having been replaced by amphibole and/or biotite. K-feldspar veins crisscross through some of the more altered sill samples. Both primary and secondary titanite occurs in the sills, with the primary titanite rich in Fe (Fe/Al similar to 0.65-0.88) and secondary titanite rich in Al (Fe/Al similar to 0.17-0.47). SHRIMP U-Pb characterization of titanites separated from one of the sills (titanite Fe/Al in this sill similar to 1) indicate an emplacement age of 2046.6 +/- 3.4 Ma.In terms of whole-rock Mg#, the Thabazimbi sills fall into groups - a low Mg# (similar to 44-55) group and a high Mg# (similar to 63-76) group. The high Mg# sills are basaltic-andesitic and calc-alkaline, while the low Mg# sills are basaltic and tholeiitic. The highest Mg# samples with the lowest Fe2O3tot/MgO ratio have the highest Cr and Ni contents, representing the closest to parental magma composition. The continuous trends between the high and low Mg# groups and relatively higher abundances of highly incompatible elements in the high Mg# group likely indicate differences in the degree of partial melting. The petrogenetic characteristics of Thabazimbi sills involving contribution from the sub-continental lithospheric mantle (SCLM) and later crustal contamination have clear similarities with those of basaltic rocks from large igneous provinces (LIPs) like the Karoo and Parana.Using a compilation of available geochronological and geochemical data, we extent the approach using geochemical characteristics to the different rock units of the Bushveld Complex proper and syn-Bushveld rock types occurring within the Kaapvaal Craton and forming part of the Bushveld LIP. The recognition of low-Ti and high-Ti grouping among different units from different age brackets suggest that the Bushveld LIP likely consisted of three main pulses - similar to 2.061-2.060 Ga, similar to 2.059-2.054 Ga and similar to 2.046-2.042 Ga - with the second pulse which produced the Bushveld Complex proper lasting the longest. A possible unifying model involving melting of the metasomatized SCLM beneath the Kaapvaal Craton by an asthenosphere-derived magma and later contamination by crustal material, with rocks of the high-Ti group derived deeper, as smaller degree partial melts than rocks of the low-Ti group is presented. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords
Bushveld large igneous province, Crustal contamination, High-Ti and low-Ti groups, Paleoproterozoic gabbroic sills, petrogenetic model, Sub-continental lithospheric mantle
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