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Geochemistry of ultramafic xenoliths and their host alkali basalts from Tallante, southern Spain

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2018

C. Dupuy
Affiliation:
Centre Géologique et Géophysique, USTL, Place E. Bataillon, 34060 Montpellier Cedex, France Department of Geology, Saint Mary's University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, B3H 3C3, Canada Département de Géologie et Minéralogie, Université, 5 rue Kessler, 63038 Clermont-Ferrand Cedex, France

Abstract

Ultramafic xenoliths enclosed in Plio-Quaternary alkali basalts from Tallante near Cartagne (southern Spain) are composed mainly of spinel lherzolites which are probably upper mantle residues. In many xenoliths, the spinel lherzolite is cut by pyroxenite or gabbroic anorthosite veinlets generally 0.2–3 cm thick. The clinopyroxenite veinlets were formed by high-pressure crystal-liquid segregation from alkali basalt magmas formed earlier than the host basalts, whereas mantle metasomatism played a role in the genesis of gabbroic anorthosites. Close to the contact with the veinlets, the spinel lherzolites are enriched in Ca, Fe, and some incompatible elements including light REE due to the migration of a fluid from the veinlets into the surrounding lherzolites. The host alkali basalts were derived from a heterogeneous, incompatible element-enriched upper-mantle source probably similar in composition and nature to the composite xenoliths, but were formed in a garnet stability field.

Type
Geochemistry
Copyright
Copyright © The Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 1986

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