Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4717424 Lithos 2008 15 Pages PDF
Abstract
The high-Ti basalts contain relatively high and variable PGE and their Cu/Pd ratios are relatively constant (compared to the tephrites) and vary from 8,500 to 86,000. We attribute such relative constancy of the Cu/Pd ratios to the presence of residual sulphide in the source of the high-Ti rocks and subsequent crystallization from S-undersaturated melts. The basaltic andesites have relatively high and constant Cu/Pd ratios (130,000-370,492) and the lowest PGE contents (average 0.12 ppb for Pd, 0.20 ppb for Pt), suggesting an earlier removal of sulfide due to crustal contamination before emplacement. The tephrites have PGE abundances (0.057 to 1.89 ppb for Pt and 0.11 to 2.10 ppb for Pd) higher than those for basaltic andesites, however, the Cu/Pd ratios (33,300 to 429,000) of the rocks are more variable than those for the basaltic andesites, suggesting that the tephrites may have undergone both S-saturated fractionation during emplacement of the magmas and weak removal of sulfides from the source magmas. Early fractionation of chromite together with removal of laurite and/or Os-Ir-Ru alloys from the parental magmas may be responsible for the negative Ru anomalies of the tephrites, high-Ti basalts and basaltic andesites.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geochemistry and Petrology
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