Introduction
Nepheline is a feldspathoid mineral with an ideal formula of K2Na6Al8Si8O32 (Z = 1) (Donnay et al., Reference Donnay, Schairer and Donnay1959; Hamada et al., Reference Hamada, Akasaka and Ohfuji2019) and is a typical rock-forming mineral in terrestrial silica-undersaturated alkaline rocks (Deer et al., Reference Deer, Howie and Zussman1963). It has also been reported in extra-terrestrial materials such as carbonaceous chondrites (Allen et al., Reference Allen, Zweifel, Haskin and Marvin1970; Kimura and Ikeda, Reference Kimura and Ikeda1995) and ordinary chondrites (Ikeda, Reference Ikeda1980).
Nepheline is classified as a tectosilicate and has a framework structure of four crystallographically independent tetrahedral sites. The general structural formula is A 2B 6T14T24T34T44O32 (Z = 1), where the T1 and T2 sites are one set of tetrahedral sites residing on special equivalent positions along the [001] triads forming distorted oval ring channels (labelled as B channel). The T3 and T4 sites of the second set of tetrahedral sites lie on general equivalent positions along the [001] triads and form hexagonal ring channels (designated as A channel) (Hahn and Buerger, Reference Hahn and Buerger1955). The T1 and T4 sites are mainly occupied by Al3+, whereas the T2 and T3 sites are mainly occupied by Si4+, and for this ‘ideal’ composition K+ and Na+ are distributed in the A and B channels, respectively (Hahn and Buerger, Reference Hahn and Buerger1955; Foreman and Peacor, Reference Foreman and Peacor1970; Dollase, Reference Dollase1970; Simmons and Peacor, Reference Simmons and Peacor1972; Vulić et al., Reference Vulić, Balić-Žunić, Belmonte and Kahlenberg2011; Balassone et al., Reference Balassone, Kahlenberg, Altomare, Mormone, Rizzi, Saviano and Mondillo2014; Hamada et al., Reference Hamada, Akasaka and Ohfuji2019). Thus, the Na to K ratio of ideal nepheline is 3:1, though almost all natural nephelines depart from this ratio due to substitutions, such as: (1) K+ + Al3+ → □ + Si4+, where □ is a vacancy in site A; (2) replacement of K+ with Na+ at the A site (Dollase and Thomas, Reference Dollase and Thomas1978); and (3) replacement of Na+ with K+ at the B site (Hamada et al., Reference Hamada, Akasaka and Ohfuji2019). In addition, other cations, discussed below, are known to cause nepheline compositional variations. Henderson (Reference Henderson2020) concluded that Mg2+, Mn2+ and Ti4+ replace Si4+ in the tetrahedral site, and large cations such as Ca2+, Ba2+ and Sr2+ replace Na+ and K+ in the cavity sites and suggested a method to calculate the molecular nepheline formula. Henderson and Oliveira (Reference Henderson and de Oliveira2022) modified that calculation method in order to deal with the presence of Fe2+, Mg2+ and Mn2+ in tetrahedral sites, and Oliveira and Henderson (Reference Oliveira and Henderson2022) proposed a method to estimate Fe2+ occurrence in nepheline. However, the content and site occupancies of minor and trace elements such as Ca2+, Mg2+, Mn2+, Fe2+ and Ti4+ in nepheline have not been studied systematically due to rather limited occurrences of nepheline and the difficulty of preparation of nepheline crystals suitable for detailed structural investigations. Therefore, further studies on the occurrence, composition, intra-crystalline distributions of cations, and structural properties of minor element-bearing nephelines are required.
Ca-bearing nephelines have been reported from silica-undersaturated igneous rocks such as basanite from the Korath range, Ethiopia (Brown and Carmichael, Reference Brown and Carmichael1969); pulaskite (nepheline–plagioclase syenite) from the Marangudzi complex, Zimbabwe (Henderson and Gibb, Reference Henderson and Gibb1972); and basanites from Nanzaki (Fig. 1) (Goto and Arai, Reference Goto and Arai1986; Oshika et al., Reference Oshika, Arakawa, Endo, Shinmura and Mori2014) and Kajishiyama (Hirai and Arai, Reference Hirai and Arai1986) in Japan. However, their detailed compositional characteristics and formation processes were not examined thoroughly in those studies. In addition, nepheline from the Hamada nephelinite, southwest Japan, is Ca-poor, although it shares a similar age and tectonic setting of eruption with the Kajishiyama basanite (Fig. 1) (Kimura et al., Reference Kimura, Stern and Yoshida2005a; Nguyen et al., Reference Nguyen, Kitagawa, Pineda-Velasco and Nakamura2020). In this investigation we describe the Ca-bearing nepheline and associated minerals in the Kajishiyama basanite in more detail and discuss the genesis of Ca-bearing nepheline in comparison with Ca-poor varieties from other nephelinites.
Geological background
In the Japan arc terrains, alkaline basalts, and especially basanites and nephelinites, have been reported primarily in the Japan Sea side of the Chugoku district (Fig. 1) (Takamura, Reference Takamura1973; Nakamura et al., Reference Nakamura, McDougall and Campbell1986; Iwamori, Reference Iwamori1991; Tatsumi et al., Reference Tatsumi, Arai and Ishizaka1999; Hamada, Reference Hamada2011; Hamada et al., Reference Hamada, Akasaka and Ohfuji2019).
Kajishiyama (35°02’55.7”N, 133°50’05.0”E) is located in the Tsuyama Basin, where there occurs monogenetic volcanoes of alkaline basalts with Ca-bearing nepheline (Hirai and Arai, Reference Hirai and Arai1983, Reference Hirai and Arai1986). The Kajishiyama basanite, located ~15 km west of Tsuyama in the Okayama Prefecture, Japan, originally formed a small volcanic dome on the basement of the Sangun metamorphic rocks (Takamura, Reference Takamura1973; Fig. 1). The dome has been highly dissected, and we collected representative samples from loose blocks near the summit of the residual hill (Hirai and Arai, Reference Hirai and Arai1983). Uto et al. (Reference Uto, Hirai and Arai1986) reported a K–Ar radiometric age of 6.5±0.3 Ma for the Kajishiyama basanite. Takamura (Reference Takamura1973) determined the whole-rock composition of the basanite, showing that it is highly silica-undersaturated, containing 40.94 wt.% SiO2 and 20.39 wt.% normative nepheline. Modal nepheline was first recognised in this basanite by Hirai and Arai (Reference Hirai and Arai1983), who discussed the temperature and stages of crystallisation of nepheline and feldspar on the basis of their compositions. In addition, Hirai and Arai (Reference Hirai and Arai1986) showed that there is a relationship between the modal amounts of nepheline, feldspars and zeolites in the Noyamadake basanite, and suggested the reaction “Nepheline + Feldspars + H2O → Zeolites” occurred during the deuteric alteration of the solidified basanite.
Petrography
The Kajishiyama basanites are massive, dark grey, and vary in grain size from fine to relatively coarse grained. Samples collected for detailed analysis are referred to as follows: fine grained (KJ-01, 02), medium grained (KJ-03, 04, 05, 06, 07) and coarse grained (KJ-08, 09). The grain size was determined by eye and thin-section observation. The mean grain size of the groundmass minerals in Kajishiyama fine-grained basanites is: 5 μm for spinel and 20–25 μm for plagioclase. In medium-grained basanites the mean is 7–8 μm for spinel and 40–60 μm for plagioclase and in the coarse-grained basanites the mean grain size of the groundmass is 10 μm for spinel and 60 μm for plagioclase (Fig. 2). The constituent minerals of these samples are essentially identical, irrespective of grain size.
The Kajishiyama basanite contains xenoliths and druses. The druses are classified into Type I and Type II. Type I is up to 20 mm in size and contains mainly euhedral zeolites such as phillipsite-K and ‘hydroamesite’, which have grown on the druse wall (Fig. 3a). Type II druse is <2 mm in size and normally filled with anhedral zeolites such as mesolite-K. Subhedral calcite or anhedral quartz occasionally coexist with mesolite-K in Type II druse. The maximum size of xenoliths is 20 mm for peridotites and 15 mm for the basement Sangun schists.
Olivine occurs as microphenocrysts (100–400 μm) and phenocrysts (up to 2.5 mm) in the Kajishiyama basanite; these are euhedral or subhedral and partly altered to iddingsite along cracks and the rim. The modal amount of olivine microphenocrysts and pheno crysts is ~10 vol.%. Augite occurs as microphenocrysts, ~100–500 μm in size, showing short prismatic euhedral or subhedral habits in thin section, and also occurs as phenocrysts, up to 2.4 mm in size. Augite microphenocrysts and phenocrysts account for ~6 vol.%. Some augite microphenocrysts show zoning and partings. Additionally, subhedral or anhedral inclusions of spinel–hercynite solid solution (100–250 μm in size) and chromian spinels (30–65 μm in size) occur in the olivine and augite (Fig. 3b). We determined these spinel-group phenocrysts and microphenocrysts to be xenocrysts because their rims display evidence of resorption (Fig. 3b).
The groundmass is composed of Ca-bearing nepheline, olivine, augite, ulvöspinel, feldspars, zeolites and apatite (Fig. 3c). The Ca-bearing nepheline, anhedral and ~20 μm in size, fills interstices between phenocrysts and microphenocrysts and typically coexists with anhedral zeolites (Fig. 3c,d). Olivine and augite are subhedral-to-anhedral and 10–100 μm in size in the groundmass. Anhedral ulvöspinel in the groundmass is <10 μm in size and is sometimes included by microphenocrysts of olivine and augite, and groundmass minerals such as olivine, augite and feldspars. Both plagioclase and alkali feldspar occur as long prismatic crystals, 50 to 100 μm in length, in the groundmass, however plagioclase is more abundant than alkali feldspar. Zeolites are anhedral and interstitial to phenocrysts in the same manner as nepheline (Fig. 3c,d). Apatite appears as euhedral acicular crystals <10 μm in length.
According to the occurrence of constituent minerals, it is considered that the magmatic crystallisation sequence of the Kajishiyama basanite is: olivine + clinopyroxene + ulvöspinel → feldspars + apatite ± (olivine + augite + ulvöspinel) → nepheline.
Experimental methods
Whole-rock chemical analysis
Hand specimens with different grain sizes (KJ-01 to 09) were prepared for determining whole-rock compositions of the Kajishiyama basanite. Druses and xenoliths were removed to minimise contamination, then the specimens were crushed and ground to powders using an iron mortar and an automatic agate mortar and pestle. The powdered samples were heated for 4 h at 900°C in an oven to determine the loss on ignition (LOI). Fused glass beads for major-element analysis were prepared with an alkali flux of Li2B4O7. The flux-to-sample ratio was 10:1. The major-element contents were determined using a Rigaku ZSX Primus II X-ray fluorescence analyser at Kanazawa University, Japan. A Rh X-ray tube was used; tube voltage, specimen current and beam diameter were 50 kV, 50 mA and 30 mm, respectively.
The samples were analysed for trace and rare earth elements (REE) using an Agilent 7500s laser-ablation, inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer (LA–ICP–MS) at Kanazawa University. The laser was UP-213 and was set to 5 Hz repetition, 100 μm spot size and 7–8 J/cm2 energy density at target.
Composition analysis of minerals
Compositions of minerals in the Kajishiyama basanite were determined using the JEOL JXA-8800R electron probe microanalyser at Kanazawa University. Nepheline and zeolite were analysed using an accelerating voltage, specimen current and beam diameter of 15 kV, 2 nA and 5 μm, respectively, to reduce damage by the electron beam. Other minerals were analysed using an accelerating voltage, specimen current and beam diameter of 20 kV, 20 nA and 2 μm, respectively. The standards (and elements) used were quartz (Si), KTiPO5 (K, Ti and P), eskolaite (Cr), corundum (Al), fayalite (Fe), manganosite (Mn), wollastonite (Ca), periclase (Mg), jadeite (Na), NiO (Ni), baryte (Ba) and celestite (Sr). The ZAF method was used for data correction.
Whole-rock compositions
The whole-rock compositions of the Kajishiyama basanite samples are given in Table 1. The SiO2 content is 43.75–46.16 wt.%. The Kajishiyama basanite is confirmed to be silica-undersaturated and is characterised by high total alkalis, Sr and Ba contents. The chondrite-normalised REE distribution patterns (Fig. 4a) are similar to those of the Nanzaki basanite (Oshika et al., Reference Oshika, Arakawa, Endo, Shinmura and Mori2014) and the Hamada nephelinite (Tatsumi et al., Reference Tatsumi, Arai and Ishizaka1999) (Fig. 1), showing high concentrations of incompatible elements. The Kajishiyama basanites were possibly formed by a low degree of partial melting of a source asthenospheric mantle peridotite, considering the high contents of incompatible elements and the low FeO*/MgO ratio (*total iron as FeO) of the whole-rock composition and the high Fo contents of olivine (up to 90 mol.%; see ‘Mineral compositions’ below). There is no Eu anomaly, which suggests formation by removal solely of olivine and clinopyroxene, without plagioclase, at an early stage of fractional crystallisation of the basanite (see Discussion section). N-MORB-normalised trace-element patterns (Fig. 4b) also show a similarity between Kajishiyama basanite, Nanzaki basanite and Hamada nephelinite, with a depletion in alkalis such as Rb and K. This depletion is usually ascribed to the selective loss during deuteric hydrothermal alteration processes (Tatsumi et al., Reference Tatsumi, Arai and Ishizaka1999).
*Total iron as Fe2O3
The Kajishiyama basanites of different grain size have similar whole-rock compositions though differing water content. The coarser grained sample has a higher LOI, e.g. 0.67 (KJ-01; fine), 1.68–3.58 (medium) and 2.55–3.92 wt.% (coarse) (Table 1). Note that KJ-02 has a high LOI (3.47 wt.%) even though it is fine-grained. This could be because druses were not removed completely prior to crushing. In these basanites, LOI is ascribed to the presence of altered olivine, zeolite in groundmass and druse and calcite in druse. However the degree of alteration between the basanite samples shows no difference, the amount of calcite in druse is negligible and the druses were removed during preparation. Therefore, we interpret the LOI to be mainly due to the presence of groundmass zeolites, consistent with the observations of Hirai and Arai (Reference Hirai and Arai1986), which is that zeolites were formed by the reaction between the initial nepheline and deuteric fluid related to the deuteric alteration of the solidified basanite. The alkali depletion is at the same stage as the deuteric alteration of nepheline (Hirai and Arai, Reference Hirai and Arai1986).
Mineral compositions
Nepheline
Compositions of nepheline are listed in Table 2. The nepheline contains up to 2.31 wt.% CaO (0.467 atoms per formula unit: apfu). Overall, the Kajishiyama Ca-bearing nepheline contains 14.01–16.75 wt.% Na2O (5.136–6.112 apfu) and 2.96–4.68 wt.% K2O (0.711–1.139 apfu). Although the ideal Na to K ratio of nepheline is 3:1, it is ~5.5:1 in these nephelines. Moreover, the Ca-bearing nepheline contains up to 0.88 wt.% Fe2O3 (as total Fe; 0.126 apfu). In addition, the excess silica component was detected in the Ca-bearing nepheline, as noted previously by Hirai and Arai (Reference Hirai and Arai1983). The Ca and K contents of nepheline are slightly different between the medium-grained basanite (KJ-03) and coarse-grained basanite (KJ-08), i.e. nepheline from the former has lower Ca and higher K contents than the latter.
#This Range is all data - coarse and medium. *Total iron as Fe2O3; **Calculation of Ne–Ks–CaNe–Qz component and ΔAlcc/ΔTch follows Henderson and Oliveria (Reference Henderson and de Oliveira2022).
n.d. – not detected
The end-member proportions of Ne (nepheline; Na8Al8Si8O32), Ks (kalsilite; K8Al8Si8O32) and CaNe (Ca nepheline; □Ca4Ca4Al8Si8O32) components of the Ca-bearing nephelines from Kajishiyama together with nephelines from some other localities (Table 3) are plotted by rock type in Fig. 5. Figures 5a and 5b show nephelines are considerably enriched in Ca from basanites, including the Kajishiyama sample, compared to those from nephelinites, except for those from basanitic nephelinites (Wittle and Holm, Reference Wittke and Holm1996). Additionally, nephelines in theralite (Henderson and Gibb, Reference Henderson and Gibb1983; Blancher et al., Reference Blancher, D'arco, Fonteilles and Pascal2010) might be rich in Ca, but nephelines in urtite (Vulić et al., Reference Vulić, Balić-Žunić, Belmonte and Kahlenberg2011; Wittle and Holm, Reference Wittke and Holm1996), syenite (Blancher et al., Reference Blancher, D'arco, Fonteilles and Pascal2010; Wittle and Holm, Reference Wittke and Holm1996) and ijolite (Vulić et al., Reference Vulić, Balić-Žunić, Belmonte and Kahlenberg2011; Wittle and Holm, Reference Wittke and Holm1996) have both Ca-rich and Ca-poor nephelines (Fig. 5c). More data are needed to confirm the trend of Ca in nepheline from these rocks.
* The threshold for ‘Ca-rich’ was set at 0.5 wt.% CaO.
Other minerals
Compositions of associated minerals are given in Table 4. Olivine phenocrysts show normal zoning with forsterite components of the core (Fo82–90) higher than for the rim (Fo65–77). Furthermore, the rim is enriched in MnO and CaO compared with the core, but NiO is lower. Additionally, Ti-rich augite phenocrysts, with or without zonal textures, were found in the Kajishiyama basanite. The rim of the zoned Ti-rich augite is enriched in TiO2, Al2O3 and Fe compared with the core. Ulvöspinel, which occurs in the groundmass, contains 18.59 wt.% TiO2. Plagioclase contains 31–71 mol.% anorthite component, and alkaline feldspars contain 27–54 mol.% orthoclase component (Fig. 6). SrO and BaO contents are up to 0.64 wt.% and 0.96 wt.% in the plagioclase and up to 0.34 wt.% and 1.23 wt.% in the alkali feldspar, respectively. Fine acicular apatite is too small to be analysed by microprobe. Analcime, phillipsite-K and stilbite-Na in the groundmass are characterised by high alkali contents.
*Fe2O3 and FeO of augite and spinel-group minerals were with adjustment of total cations to 4 for O = 6 and 24 for O = 32, respectively.
**Spinel–hercynite solid-solution samples and chromian spinels are xenocrysts.
n.d. – not detected
Discussion
Chemical formula of the Kajishiyama Ca-bearing nepheline
The chemical formula of nepheline, especially the distribution of M 3+ and M 2+ cations in the nepheline structure, has been discussed in many publications. Hahn and Buerger (Reference Hahn and Buerger1955) and Dollase (Reference Dollase1970) investigated the crystal structure of natural nephelines, albeit without any reference to the Ca distribution. Donnay et al. (Reference Donnay, Schairer and Donnay1959) suggested that Fe3+ substitutes for Si and Al in tetrahedral coordination to form an iron-nepheline component. They also suggested that the small amounts of Mg, Mn and Ti that might be present within the nepheline structure could substitute for Na, K and Ca. In addition, the occupancy of Mg, Fe2+, Mn or Ti in the framework of nepheline and synthesised leucite was reported by Buerger (Reference Buerger1954), Dollase and Thomas (Reference Dollase and Thomas1978) and Roedder (Reference Roedder1951, Reference Roedder1952, Reference Roedder1978). Strontium and Ba occupy cavity sites (A and B channel) in a similar manner to analogue kalsilite structures with a stuffed-tridymite framework (Henderson and Taylor, Reference Henderson and Taylor1982). Henderson (Reference Henderson2020) concluded that smaller divalent cations (e.g. Mg and Mn) and Ti probably replace Si in the tetrahedral site, whereas larger cations such as Ca, Sr, Ba and Rb replace K and Na in cavity sites, and provided the protocol for nepheline formula calculation. Recently, Henderson and Oliveira (Reference Henderson and de Oliveira2022) modified this protocol in order to deal correctly with Fe2+, Mg2+ and Mn2+ in tetrahedral sites; even small contents of these components in natural nephelines requires the corrected Henderson and Oliveira (Reference Henderson and de Oliveira2022) protocol to be applied.
Henderson (Reference Henderson2020) and Henderson and Oliveira (Reference Henderson and de Oliveira2022) defined end-members of nepheline as Ne, Ks, CaNe and Qxs (excess quartz; □Si8Si16O32), and established a calculation protocol of end-member proportions and of vacancy proportions in the nepheline structure. There are two types of occupation of vacant sites (A and B channels), i.e. □Si (caused by excess Si which takes into account the replacement of Al3+ by Fe2+, Mg2+ and Mn2+ in tetrahedral sites) and □Ca (caused by replacement of Na+ and K+ by Ca2+, Sr2+ and Ba2+). In this study, the highest-Ca nepheline has 8.912 apfu and 0.480 apfu of Si and Ca+Sr+Ba, respectively, and excess Si is 1.811 apfu (excess Si = (Si4+ + Ti4+) − (Al3+ + Fe3+ + Cr3+) − 3*(Fe2+ + Mg2+ + Mn2+): equation 2 of Henderson and Oliveira, Reference Henderson and de Oliveira2022). Therefore, □Si and □Ca are 0.906 apfu and 0.480 apfu, respectively, giving a total cavity cation-site vacancy of 1.386. Finally, following the calculation method of Henderson and Oliveira (Reference Henderson and de Oliveira2022), the chemical formula of the highest-Ca nepheline in the Kajishiyama basanite could be written as (Ca0.467Ba0.013Na5.286K0.919□Total1.386)Σ8.071(Si0.912Al6.980Cr3+0.003Fe3+0.067Mg0.017)Σ7.979Si8.000O32, i.e. Ne65.50Ks11.39Qxs11.22CaNe11.89, where □Total is the sum of □Si and □Ca. Henderson and Oliveira (Reference Henderson and de Oliveira2022) and Oliveira and Henderson (Reference Oliveira and Henderson2022) reported that K-rich nepheline and kalsilite have a trend including relatively high Mg and Fe2+ and showed a way to estimate the Fe2+ proportion in total Fe using the variation of the ΔAlcc (change in T charge minus cavity cation charge: T 3+ + 2T 2+ − M + − 2M 2+) and ΔTch (total analysed T charge minus charge for 16T: 4T 4+ + 3T 3+ + 2T 2+ − 16*mean T charge) stoichiometry parameters. In this study, however, we treated all iron as Fe3+ because the nepheline of Kajishiyama is low in Mg and Fe, and has a high Na/K ratio.
Formation process of the Ca-bearing nepheline in the basanite
We examined the process of fractionation of Kajishiyama basanites in order to consider the crystallisation conditions of nepheline. Miyashiro (Reference Miyashiro1978) indicated that three different trends of differentiation appear to exist in large-scale alkalic volcanic association: ‘Kennedy trend’; ‘Coombs trend’; and the ‘straddle type’. The ‘Kennedy trend’ is the trend away from the low-pressure thermal divide, which is defined by the Di–Ol–Pl plane in the model basalt Di–Ol–Ne–Qz tetrahedron (Yoder and Tilley, 1952), towards an increasing degree of undersaturation; thus, normative nepheline increases with fractionation. The ‘Coombs trend’ is the alkali trend that leads to peralkaline felsic rock; therefore, normative hypersthene increases with fractionation. The ‘straddle type’ shows composition ranges straddling the low-pressure thermal divide; therefore, normative nepheline decreases, followed by an increase in normative hypersthene with fractionation, ultimately towards Qz-normative compositions.
Figure 5a clearly indicates that nepheline is Ca-rich in basanite. The variations of normative plagioclase (anorthite + albite), normative nepheline and An/Ab ratio of normative plagioclase with fractionation are shown in Fig. 7 for the basanite sample set considered including the coeval Kajishiyama samples. Although there is a substantial amount of scatter, there appears to be a trend for total normative plagioclase to increase (Fig. 7a) and normative nepheline to decrease exponentially (Fig. 7b) in basanite with progress in magmatic fractionation in terms of increasing FeO (total iron)/MgO. Such a trend might be equivalent to the ‘straddle type’ of Miyashiro (Reference Miyashiro1978), suggesting that the melt becomes enriched in Ca and silica due to crystallisation of low silica minerals, such as olivine, amphibole and magnetite (Miyashiro, Reference Miyashiro1978). The crystallisation sequence of the Kajishiyama basanite based on our petrographic observation is: (1) early phenocrysts and microphenocrysts of olivine and subordinate clinopyroxene, and their ulvöspinel inclusions; (2) later-formed plagioclase, alkali feldspar and apatite as groundmass; and (3) nepheline in mesostasis. This sequence is consistent with the character of crystallisation of ‘straddle type’ magma reported by Miyashiro (Reference Miyashiro1978).
Nepheline is crystallised at the final stage of basanite solidification, and because Ca remains in the melt at that time, nepheline incorporates it and becomes enriched in Ca. The Ca content of nepheline is possibly controlled both by the Ca content of original magma and by the crystallising order of minerals, especially the timing of nepheline precipitation. Regarding the Kajishiyama basanite, if the magma is capable of nepheline crystallisation after precipitation of Na-rich plagioclase and alkali feldspar, the nepheline is possibly Ca-rich because of a relatively high Ca/Na ratio in the residual magma. The Kajishiyama basanites contain a small amount of calcite in druse (this study) as well as in the groundmass (Hirai and Arai, Reference Hirai and Arai1983), which means the deuteric fluid responsible for hydrothermal alteration after nepheline crystallisation was rich in Ca.
Factors controlling the Ca content of the nepheline in silica-undersaturated rocks
Even if the CaO content of the silica-undersaturated magma is the same as that of the basanite magma, the CaO content of the nepheline crystallising from it will make a difference. Most nephelinites contain Ca-poor nepheline in contrast to the Ca-rich nepheline of basanites (Fig. 5b). Some nephelinites, however, contain remarkably Ca-rich nepheline, such as basanitic nephelinites of the House Mountain volcano, Arizona, USA. (Wittke and Holm, Reference Wittke and Holm1996). What are the factors controlling the Ca content of the nepheline?
Melilite commonly occurs in the nephelinites, for example, the melilite–olivine nephelinite from Hamada, Japan (Tatsumi et al., Reference Tatsumi, Arai and Ishizaka1999, Hamada, Reference Hamada2011), olivine melilite nephelinite from Moiliili, Hawaii (Wilkinson and Stolz, Reference Wilkinson and Stolz1983) and wollastonite nephelinite from Oldoinyo Lengai, Tanzania (Sharygin et al., Reference Sharygin, Kamenetsky, Zaitsev and Kamenetsky2012) (Table 3). In fact, the CaO content of nephelines from these nephelinites is up to 0.34 wt.% (Hamada, Reference Hamada2011), 0.27 wt.% (Wilkinson and Stolz, Reference Wilkinson and Stolz1983) and up to 0.46 wt.% (Sharygin et al., Reference Sharygin, Kamenetsky, Zaitsev and Kamenetsky2012), respectively, and they are all Ca-poor.
It is considered that the removal of CaO from magma by the crystallisation of melilite, which is characterised by a high CaO content prior to, or simultaneously with, nepheline plays an important role in the crystallisation of Ca-poor nepheline. The nephelines from nephelinites without melilite, such as those from Nemby, eastern Paraguay (Comin-Chiaramonti et al., Reference Comin-Chiaramonti, Civetta, Petrini, Piccirillo, Bellieni, Censi, Bitschene, Demarchi, De Min, Gomes, Castillo and Velazquez1991) and from House Mountain volcano (Wittke and Holm, Reference Wittke and Holm1996), are actually rich in Ca. In these basanites, the magma is high in CaO but not silica-undersaturated enough to crystallise melilite, thus Ca-rich nepheline crystallises.
Summary and implications
The Kajishiyama basanite is composed of olivine and augite as phenocrysts and microphenocrysts, and Ca-bearing nepheline, olivine, augite, ulvöspinel, plagioclase, alkali feldspar, apatite and zeolite in the groundmass. Basanites are of the ‘straddle type’ of Miyashiro (Reference Miyashiro1978), indicating that normative plagioclase increases and normative nepheline decreases as fractionation progresses, where nepheline is precipitated at the last stage of solidification. Nepheline is possibly Ca-rich in the case of crystallisation from a high-normative plagioclase magma such as the Kajishiyama basanites. The occurrence of calcite in the druse indicates that the magma, which crystallised nepheline and the deuteric fluid were rich in Ca. Precipitation of melilite, which is highly Ca-rich, causes the low-Ca character of subsequently crystallising nepheline. For example, as shown in Fig. 5b, there are some reports of the presence of Ca-rich nepheline in nephelinites, which show no signature of melilite precipitation.
Acknowledgements
We thank Dr. Akihiro Tamura for his help during LA–ICP–MS measurements, Dr. Terumi Ejima of Shinshu University for her assistance in sample collection, Prof. Masayuki Okuno and Dr. Hiroki Okudera of Kanazawa University and Prof. Masahide Akasaka of Shimane University for their comments, advice and stimulating discussions, and three anonymous reviewers. Editors Roger Mitchell, Ian Coulson and Helen Kerbey are thanked for editorial assistance.
Competing interests
There are no conflicts of interest to declare.