Petrochemistry of late Palaeozoic alkali lamprophyre dykes from N Scotland
- 1 January 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh
- Vol. 77 (4) , 267-277
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0263593300023166
Abstract
The lower Carboniferous–late Permian dyke swarms of the Scottish Highlands and Islands comprise a mild-strongly alkaline basic series of dolerites, camptonites and monchiquites. Differentiation within the suite was largely controlled by olivine + clinopyroxene fractionation. Major and trace element data indicate that dolerites and camptonites chemically overlap, their mineralogical contrasts resulting from differential loss of an H2O, CO2-rich fluid phase during ascent. By contrast most monchiquites have high Mg-values and are relatively primitive compositions, some being near-primary magmas which have risen rapidly from mantle levels with little chemical modification.HREE-buffered incompatible element profiles imply a garnet–lherzolite source, which must underlie the lithospheric mantle region represented by spinel lherzolite xenoliths found in some monchiquites.C. 0·5–2·0% partial melting can account for the gross incompatible element variation in the suite, but relative fluctuations in K, Ba, Rb, Sr, P and Zr imply chemical heterogeneity controlled either by refractory mantle accessory phases or by modification of magmas during ascent through variably metasomatised lithospheric mantle.Keywords
This publication has 42 references indexed in Scilit:
- The relationship between calc-alkaline volcanism and within-plate continental rift volcanism: evidence from Scottish Palaeozoic lavasEarth and Planetary Science Letters, 1986
- Camptonite-Monchiquite dyke swarms of Northern Scotland; Age relationships and their implicationsScottish Journal of Geology, 1984
- The ending of the Caledonian orogeny in ScotlandJournal of the Geological Society, 1984
- Mantle reservoirs and ocean island basaltsNature, 1983
- Chemical geodynamicsTectonophysics, 1982
- Implications for Caledonian plate tectonic models of chemical data from volcanic rocks of the British Old Red SandstoneJournal of the Geological Society, 1981
- Trace element evidence for mantle heterogeneity beneath the Scottish Midland Valley in the Carboniferous and PermianPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 1980
- The Permo-Carboniferous dyke-swarm of northern Argyll and its bearing on dextral displacement on the Great Glen FaultJournal of the Geological Society, 1979
- Ultramafic and mafic nodule suites in shield-forming lavas from MauritiusJournal of the Geological Society, 1978
- Geochemistry and petrogenesis of primitive alkali basalt from Mauritius, Indian OceanGSA Bulletin, 1976