Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-fscjk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-27T22:34:24.620Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Three compositional varieties of perovskite from kimberlites of the Lac de Gras field (Northwest Territories, Canada)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2018

A. R. Chakhmouradian*
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, Lakehead University, 955 Oliver Road, Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada P7B 5E1
R. H. Mitchell
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, Lakehead University, 955 Oliver Road, Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada P7B 5E1
*

Abstract

In hypabyssal and crater-facies kimberlites of the Lac de Gras kimberlite field, perovskite occurs as reaction-induced rims on earlier-crystallized Ti-bearing minerals (magnesian ilmenite and priderite), inclusions in atoll spinels and discrete crystals in a serpentine-calcite mesostasis. The mineral is associated with spinels, apatite, monticellite, phlogopite, baryte, Fe-Ni sulphides, ilmenite, diopside and zircon. Uncommon accessory phases found in an assemblage with perovskite include titanite, monazite- (Ce), witherite, strontium-apatite, khibinskite, djerfisherite, wollastonite, pectolite, suolunite, hydroxyapophyllite and bultfonteinite. Three types of perovskite can be distinguished on the basis of composition: (I) REE-Nb-Al-poor perovskite with relatively high Sr and K contents (up to 2.2 and 0.6 wt.% oxides, respectively) occurring as mantles on priderite and inclusions in atoll spinels; (II) perovskite with elevated Al, Fe, Nb and LREE (up to 1.4, 8.3, 9.1 and 17.0 wt.% oxides, respectively) found as discrete crystals and rims on macrocrystic ilmenite; (III) perovskite significantly enriched in Na, Sr, Nb and LREE (up to 3.3, 3.4, 13.0 and 22.6 wt.% oxides, respectively) found as rims on perovskite I and II. The overwhelming majority of perovskite is represented by discrete crystals of type II. In some occurrences, this type of perovskite also has high Th contents (up to 5.5 wt.% ThO2) and Zr contents (up to 3.7 wt.% ZrO2). Textural evidence indicates that perovskite shows an overall evolutionary trend from the most primitive type I towards type III showing the highest Na, Nb and LREE contents. Perovskite of type I probably crystallized under relatively high pressures prior to the precipitation of MUM spinels. Perovskite II crystallized after magnesiochromite, pleonaste and MUM (magnesian ulvöspinel-magnetite) spinels, under increasing fO2. The most compositionally evolved type III formed during near-solidus re-equilibration of the earlier-crystallized perovskite. The compositional variation of the Lac de Gras perovskite can be adequately characterized in terms of five major end-members: CaTiO3 (perovskite), CeFeO3, NaNbO3 (lueshite), Na0.5LREE0.5TiO3 (loparite), and CaFe0.5Nb0.5O3 (latrappite).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 2001

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

Chakhmouradian, A.R. and Mitchell, R.H. (1997) Compositional variation of perovskite-group minerals from the carbonatite complexes of the Kola Alkaline Province, Russia. Canad. Mineral., 35, 1293–310.Google Scholar
Chakhmouradian, A.R. and Mitchell, R.H. (1998 a) A structural study of the perovskite series CaTi1-2x Fe x Nb x O3 . J. Solid State Chem., 138, 272–7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chakhmouradian, A.R. and Mitchell, R.H. (1998 b) Compositional variation of perovskite-group minerals from the Khibina Complex, Kola Peninsula, Russia. Canad. Mineral., 36, 953–70.Google Scholar
Chakhmouradian, A.R. and Mitchell, R.H. (2000) Occurrence, alteration patterns and compositional variation of perovskite in kimberlites. Canad. Mineral., 38, 975–94.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chernysheva, E.A. and Davydova, L.K. (1974) Niobium and zirconium in perovskite from carbonatites of Eastern Siberia. Ann. Report Inst. Geochem. Siberian Branch Acad. Sci. USSR, 1974, 184–8 (in Russian).Google Scholar
Davis, W.J. and Kjarsgaard, B.A. (1997) A Rb-Sr isochron age for a kimberlite from the recently discovered Lac de Gras Field, Slave Province, Northwest Canada. J. Geol., 105, 503–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dawson, J.B., Smith, J.V. and Steele, I.M. (1994) Trace-element distribution between coexisting perovskite, apatite and titanite from Oldoinyo Lengai, Tanzania. Chem. Geol., 117, 285–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eibschütz, M. (1965) Lattice constants of orthoferrites. Acta Crystallogr., 19, 337–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fipke, C.E., Dummett, C.E., Moore, R.O., Carlson, J.A., Ashley, R.M., Gurney, J.J. and Kirkley, M.B. (1995) History of the discovery of diamondiferous kimberlites in the Northwest Territories, Canada. Sixth Int. Kimb. Conf., Ext. Abstr. 158–60. Novosibirsk, Russia.Google Scholar
Geller, S. and Bala, V.B. (1956) Crystallographic studies of perovskite- like compounds. II. Rare earth aluminates. Acta Crystallogr., 9, 1019–25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kimura, S. and Muan, A. (1971) Phase relations in the system CaO – iron oxide – titanium oxide under strongly reducing conditions. Amer. Mineral., 56, 1347–58.Google Scholar
Kubo, A., Suzuki, T. and Akaogi, M. (1997) High pressure phase equilibria in the system CaTiO3-CaSiO3: stability of perovskite solid solutions. Phys. Chem. Miner., 24, 488–94.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
LeCheminant, A.N., Heaman, L.M., van Bremen, O., Ernst, R.E., Baragar, W.R.A. and Buchan, K.L. (1996) Mafic magmatism, mantle roots and kimberlites in the Slave craton. Pp. 161–9 in: Searching for Diamonds in Canada (LeCheminant, A.N., Richardson, D.G., DiLabio, R.N.W., Richardson, K.A., editors) Geological Survey of Canada Open File 3228.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leinenweber, K., Linton, J., Navrotsky, A., Fei, Y. and Parise, J.B. (1995) High-pressure perovskites on the join CaTiO3-FeTiO3 . Phys. Chem. Miner., 22, 251–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lloyd, F.E., Edgar, A.D. and Ragnarsdottir, K.V. (1996) LREE distribution in perovskite, apatite and titanite from south west Ugandan xenoliths and kamafugite lavas. Mineral. Petrol., 57, 205–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lupini, L., Williams, C.T. and Woolley, A.R. (1992) Zr-rich garnet and Zr and Th-rich perovskite from the Polino carbonatite, Italy. Mineral. Mag., 56, 581–6.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marezio, M., Remeika, J.P. and Dernier, P.D. (1970) The crystal chemistry of the rare earth orthoferrites. Acta Crystallogr., B26, 2008–22.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Masun, K. (1999) The petrography and mineralogy of the Lac de Gras kimberlite field, Slave Province, Northwest Territories: a comparative study. Unpubl. MSc Thesis, Lakehead University, Ontario, Canada.Google Scholar
Mitchell, R.H. (1986) Kimberlites: Mineralogy, Geochemistry and Petrology. Plenum Press, New York.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mitchell, R.H. (1995) Accessory rare earth, strontium, barium and zirconium minerals in the Benfontein and Wesselton calcite kimberlites, South Africa. Pp. 115–28 in: Kimberlites, Related Rocks and Mantle Xenoliths (Meyer, H.O.A. and Leonardos, O.H., editors). Companhia Pesquisa Recursos Minerals, Rio de Janeiro.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mitchell, R.H. (1996) Perovskites: a revised classification scheme for an important rare earth element host in alkaline rocks. Pp. 4176 in: Rare Earth Minerals: Chemistry, Origin and Ore Deposits (Jones, A.P., Wall, F. and Williams, C.T., editors). Mineralogical Society Series, 6. Chapman & Hall, London.Google Scholar
Mitchell, R.H. (1997) Preliminary studies of the solubility and stability of perovskite group compounds in the synthetic carbonatite system calciteportlandite. J. Afr. Earth Sci., 25, 147–58.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mitchell, R.H. and Chakhmouradian, A.R. (1999 a) Sr-bearing perovskite and loparite from lamproite and agpaitic nepheline syenite pegmatites. Canad. Mineral. 37, 99112.Google Scholar
Mitchell, R.H. and Chakhmouradian, A.R. (1999 b) Solid solubility in the system NaLREETi2O6 – ThTi2O6 (LREE, light rare-earth elements): Experimental and analytical data. Phys. Chem. Miner., 26, 396405.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mitchell, R.H., Choi, J.B., Hawthorne, F.C., McCammon, C.A. and Burns, P.C. (1998) Latrappite: A re-investigation. Canad. Mineral., 36, 107–16.Google Scholar
Mitchell, R.H., Yakovenchuk, V.N., Chakhmouradian, A.R., Burns, P.C. and Pakhomovsky, Ya.A. (2000) Henrymeyerite, a new hollandite-type Ba-Fe titanate from the Kovdor Complex, Russia. Canad. Mineral., 38, 617–26.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Muir, I.J., Metson, J.B. and Bancroft, G.M. (1984) 57Fe Mössbauer spectra of perovskite and titanite. Canad. Mineral., 22, 689–94.Google Scholar
Pell, J.A. (1997 a) Kimberlites in the Slave Craton, Northwest Territories, Canada. Geoscience Canada, 24, 7790.Google Scholar
Pell, J.A. (1997 b) Kimberlites in the Slave Craton, Northwest Territories, Canada: A preliminary review. Russ. Geol. Geophys. (Proc. Sixth Int. Kimb. Conf.), 38, 516.Google Scholar
Platt, R.G. (1994) Perovskite, loparite and Ba-Fe hollandite from the Schryburt Lake carbonatite complex, northwestern Ontario, Canada. Mineral. Mag., 58, 4957.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pozharitskaya, L.K. and Samoylov, V.S. (1972) Petrology, Mineralogy and Geochemistry of East- Siberian Carbonatites. Nauka Press, Moscow (in Russian).Google Scholar
Robbins, M., Wertheim, G.K., Menth, A. and Sherwood, R.C. (1969) Preparation and properties of polycrystalline cerium orthoferrite (CeFeO3). J. Phys. Chem. Solids, 30, 1823–5.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rønsbo, J.G. (1989) Coupled substitution involving REEs and Na and Si in apatites in alkaline rocks from the Ilímaussaq intrusion, South Greenland and the petrological implications. Amer. Mineral., 74, 896901.Google Scholar