Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-t5tsf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-20T05:06:57.782Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A Note on the Origin of Ophitic Texture in the Chilled Olivine Gabbro of the Skaergaard Intrusion

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

L. R. Wager*
Affiliation:
Department of Geology and Mineralogy, Oxford.

Abstract

The textures of the chilled marginal gabbro of the Skaergaard intrusion and of the coarser marginal gabbros 25 yards further in are described and related to counts of the number of separate crystals of the chief mineral species per cubic centimetre of the rock. An explanation of the textures and number of crystal individuals is attempted in terms of various degrees of supersaturation in the magma. In the chilled rock abundant nucleation of plagioclase and olivine, presumably at the middle labile stage of supersaturation, is inferred. This is followed by ophitic or poikilitic crystallization of pyroxene and ilmenite about scarce nuclei, produced at lower temperatures, presumably during the early labile stage of supersaturation for these two minerals. The coarser gabbro, further in from the margin, has about half the number of plagioclase crystals per cm.3 compared with the chilled rock and only one twenty-fifth the number of olivine crystals, and these have a tendency to be ophitic in texture. Under these slower cooling conditions, supersaturation apparently still reached into the middle labile region for plagioclase, giving many nuclei, while olivine, like pyroxene, separated under early labile supersaturation conditions and only relatively few nuclei formed. The contrasting textures of the plateau magma-type basalts of Mull and the tholeiitic basalts of Northern Ireland are explained along similar lines.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1961

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Bailey, E. B. etal et al. , 1924. Tertiary and Post-Tertiary geology of Mull, Loch Aline and Oban. Mem. geol. Surv. U.K. Google Scholar
Bowen, N. L., 1928. The evolution of the igneous rocks. Princeton.Google Scholar
Brown, G. M., 1957. Pyroxenes from the early and middle stages of fractionation of the Skaergaard intrusion, East Greenland. Miner. Mag., 31, 511543.Google Scholar
Buckley, H. E., 1951. Crystal growth. New York.Google Scholar
Elliott, R. B., 1952. Trachy-ophitic texture in Carboniferous basalts. Miner. Mag., 29, 925–8.Google Scholar
Fenner, C. N., 1926. The Katmai magmatic province. J. Geol., 34, 673772.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krokström, T., 1932. On the ophitic texture and the order of crystallization in basaltic magmas. Bull. geol. Inst. Upsala, No. 24, 197217.Google Scholar
Miers, H. A., and Isaac, F., 1907. The spontaneous crystallization of binary mixtures—experiments on aslol and betol. Proc. Royal Soc. London A, 79, 322351.Google Scholar
Tomkeieff, S. I., 1940. The basalt lavas of the Giant's Causeway district of Northern Ireland. Bull. Volcan., Ser, 2, 6, 89143.Google Scholar
Vincent, E. A., 1960. Ulvöspinel in the Skaergaard intrusion, Greenland. N. Jahrb. Min. Abh., 94, 9931016.Google Scholar
Wadsworth, W. J. (in press). The ultrabasic rocks of southwest Rhum. Phil. Trans. Royal Soc. London, B.Google Scholar
Wager, L. R., and Deer, W. A., 1939. Geological investigations in East Greenland, Part III. The petrology of the Skaergaard intrusion, Kangerdlugssuaq. Medd. om Gronland, 104, No. 4, 1352.Google Scholar
Wager, L. R., 1959. Differing powers of crystal nucleation as a factor producing diversity in layered igneous intrusions. Geol. Mag., 96, 7580.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wager, L. R., Brown, G. M., and Wadsworth, W. J., 1960. Types of igneous cumulates. J. Petrol., 1, 7185.Google Scholar
Wager, L. R., 1960. The major element variation of the layered series of the Skaergaard intrusion and a re-estimation of the average composition of the hidden layered series and of the successive residual magmas. J. Petrol., 1, 364398.Google Scholar
Walker, F., 1957. Ophitic texture and basaltic crystallization. J. Geol., 65, 114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Winkler, H. G. F., 1949. Crystallization of basaltic magma as recorded by variation of crystal-size in dikes. Miner. Mag., 28, 557574.Google Scholar
Winkler, H. G. F., and Weitz, G., 1956. Kristallisation des Basalts von Hardeberga, Schonen. Geol. Fören, Stochk. Förh., 77, 619641.Google Scholar