Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10224341 | Chemical Geology | 2018 | 34 Pages |
Abstract
The generation of high-silica magma is generally considered to occur as a result of liquid-crystal segregation from a crystal mush. Yet whether high-silica melts could undergo significant fractionation process after the segregation remains unclear. This study contributes to this topic through the lens of zircon geochemistry of the ~130â¯Ma high-silica granite in the Tengchong block, SW China. The high-silica granite, with SiO2 ~76%, displays low Zr/Hf and EuN/Eu*N, and high Rb/Sr ratios. The zircons crystallized from the granite can be divided into two groups. The group 1 zircons are characterized by lower Hf (<12,200â¯ppm), and show relatively lower U (710-1103â¯ppm, averaging 891â¯ppm) and Yb (688-1106â¯ppm, averaging 903â¯ppm), and higher EuN/Eu*N (0.11-0.18). By contrast, the group 2 zircons have higher Hf (>12,200â¯ppm), and display elevated U values (936-2429â¯ppm, averaging 1557â¯ppm) and Yb values (755-1556â¯ppm, averaging 1134â¯ppm), as well as lower EuN/Eu*N (0.01-0.1). The increasing Hf content from group 1 to group 2 zircons, presence of fluorite inclusions in high-Hf zircon, and similarity in Hf isotope between the two groups of zircon consistently support the high-silica granite has witnessed a highly fractionated crystallization process. The presence of these two groups of zircons is considered to reflect two-stage in-situ fractionation processes, which display distinct REE (rare earth elements) compositions in the magma system in response to differing precipitated mineral assemblages. In light of the change of zircon REE within each group, the percentage of minerals co-precipitating with zircons in each stage was estimated. The results showed that 35.24% quartz, 18.60% feldspar, 0.25% apatite, 0.14% zircon, 0.12% allanite, and 0.05% titanite fractionated in the early stage, and 67.50% quartz, 23.41% feldspar, 0.15% zircon, 0.10% allanite, 0.07% apatite, and 0.06% titanite fractionated in the second stage. The discovery of different zircons and corresponding estimation in this study provide a new line of evidence for the fractionation of high-silica melt.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geochemistry and Petrology
Authors
Qiwei Zhang, Qingfei Wang, Gongjian Li, Xiaolin Cui,