JOURNAL OF PETROLOGY
VOLUME 43
NUMBER 8
PAGES 1529–1549
2002
Petrological, Geochemical and Isotopic Constraints on the Origin of the Harzburg Intrusion, Germany ¨ NSLI1∗, ROLF L. ROMER3 AND SAKAE SANO1,2, ROLAND OBERHA ROLAND VINX4 ¨ T POTSDAM, PF 601553, D-14415 POTSDAM, GERMANY ¨ R GEOWISSENSCHAFTEN, UNIVERSITA INSTITUT FU
1 2
EARTH SCIENCE LABORATORY, FACULTY OF EDUCATION, EHIME UNIVERSITY, 3 BUNKYO-CHO,
790-8577 MATSUYAMA, JAPAN 3
GEOFORSCHUNGSZENTRUM POTSDAM, TELEGRAFENBERG, D-14473 POTSDAM, GERMANY ¨ T HAMBURG, GRINDELALLEE 48, D-2000 HAMBURG, MINERALOGISCH–PETROGRAPHISCHES INSTITUT, UNIVERSITA
4
GERMANY
RECEIVED DECEMBER 8, 2000; REVISED TYPESCRIPT ACCEPTED FEBRUARY 11, 2002
We present mineralogical, petrological and geochemical data to constrain the origin of the Harzburg mafic–ultramafic intrusion. The intrusion is composed mainly of mafic rocks ranging from gabbronorite to quartz diorite. Ultramafic rocks are very rare in surface outcrops. Dunite is observed only in deeper sections of the Flora I drill core. Microgranitic (fine-grained quartz-feldspathic) veins found in the mafic and ultramafic rocks result from contamination of the ultramafic magmas by crustal melts. In ultramafic and mafic compositions cumulate textures are widespread and filter pressing phenomena are obvious. The order of crystallization is olivine → pargasite, phlogopite, spinel → plagioclase, orthopyroxene → plagioclase, clinopyroxene. Hydrous minerals such as phlogopite and pargasite are essential constituents of the ultramafic cumulates. The most primitive olivine composition is Fo89·5 with >0·4 wt % NiO, which indicates that the olivine may have been in equilibrium with primitive mantle melts. Coexisting melt compositions estimated from this olivine have mg-number = 71. The chemical variety of the rocks constituting the intrusion and the mg-number of the most primitive melt allow an estimation of the approximate composition of the mantle-derived primary magma. The geochemical characteristics of the estimated magma are similar to those of an islandarc tholeiite, characterized by low TiO2 and alkalis and high Al2O3. Geochemical and Pb, Sr and Nd isotope data demonstrate that even the most primitive rocks have assimilated crustal material. The decoupling of Sr from Nd in some samples demonstrates the influence of a fluid that transported radiogenic Sr. Lead of crustal origin from
The Harz Mountains of central Germany represent a portion of uplifted, mainly Palaeozoic, crust of the Rhenohercynian belt of the European Variscides (Fig. 1). The Ordovician to Permian rock sequence is surrounded by Permian to Mesozoic sediments and was uplifted during the Cretaceous. The Harz Mountains contain a Proterozoic polymetamorphic terrane (Ecker gneiss) and several post-orogenic granite intrusions
∗Corresponding author. Fax: +49 331 977 5060. E-mail:
[email protected]
Oxford University Press 2002
two isotopically distinct reservoirs dominates the Pb of all samples. The ultramafic rocks and the cumulates best reflect the initial isotopic and geochemical signature of the parent magma. Magma that crystallized in the upper part of the chamber was more strongly affected by assimilated material. Petrographic, geochemical and isotope evidence demonstrates that during a late stage of crystallization, hybrid rocks formed through the mechanical mixing of early cumulates and melts with strong crustal contamination from the upper levels of the magma chamber.
Harzburg mafic–ultramafic intrusion; Sr–Nd–Pb isotopes; magma evolution; crustal contamination KEY WORDS:
INTRODUCTION
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(Ocker, Brocken and Ramberg granites) as well as a gabbronorite complex (Harzburg gabbro; Lossen, 1889; Erdmannsdo¨rfer & Schro¨der, 1927). The emplacement of the Harzburg gabbronorite and the Brocken and Ocker granites occurred contemporaneously at 293–297 Ma (Baumann et al., 1991). The crustal evolution and geodynamic setting of this Variscan basement has been the focus of numerous studies (Sohn, 1956; Anderson, 1975; Vinx, 1982; Hentschke, 1985; Wachendorf et al., 1995; Ganssloser et al., 1996; Franz et al., 1997; Gabriel et al., 1997). The Harzburg gabbronorite complex provides one of the clues to the evolution and origin of the late Variscan magmas of the Harz Mountains. So far, geochemical investigations (Vinx, 1982; Hentschke, 1985) have mainly concentrated on the mafic to intermediate portions of the intrusion, as fresh ultramafic rocks are not available at the surface. Vinx (1982) also studied the ultramafic rocks; however, these rocks were strongly serpentinized. A limited number of new samples from commercial exploration drilling (Flora I, II, III) have been made available to us. The cores from the drill holes revealed unweathered mafic and ultramafic material with a relatively low degree of serpentinization. In this paper, we reconstruct the possible primary magma composition of the Harzburg mafic–ultramafic intrusion and discuss the processes that led to the evolution of the magma and its contamination. The study focuses on the petrology and isotope geochemistry of the drill core samples. The Harzburg intrusion includes the type locality of harzburgite. It should be noted that harzburgites from the type locality exhibit a poikilitic texture, which is composed of euhedral olivine crystals with surrounding large oikocrysts of clinopyroxene, plagioclase and/or orthopyroxene, hornblende and phlogopite.
REGIONAL GEOLOGY The Harzburg intrusion (Fig. 2) consists of two oval bodies defining a SSW–NNE trend at the surface level (Sohn, 1956). The two separate bodies are detached outcrops of the same intrusion with a thin bridge of hornfels roof rocks within a graben structure. The intrusion is composed of gabbronorite with locally occurring dunite, harzburgite, norite, diorite and quartz diorite. The body has been previously considered to represent a layered intrusion (Vinx, 1982). Along the eastern side, the gabbronorite massif is in contact with the Ecker gneiss. Its western part intruded Upper Devonian to Upper Carboniferous pelites and siliceous slates and produced hornfelses. The internal distribution of ultramafic and mafic rocks reveals gross concentric structures. These show advanced fractionation in the centre of the northern body (Fig. 2) and more ‘primitive’ cumulates
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at the southern rim of the northern body. The most evolved rock types are quartz diorites and they occur in the NW and exhibit signs of contamination, e.g. xenoliths of sedimentary rocks. The close relations to the contemporaneous granitic intrusions surrounding the gabbronorite massif were pointed out earlier (Mu¨ller, 1978; Stu¨tze, 1980). The Harz Mountains host several mafic complexes (Fig. 1) including pillow lavas and tuffs. These rocks, however, are of Devonian age and not related to the Carboniferous Harzburg intrusion.
PETROGRAPHY OF THE MAFIC AND ULTRAMAFIC MEMBERS The Harzburg mafic–ultramafic intrusion is composed of dunite, harzburgite, norite, gabbronorite, diorite and quartz diorite. Gabbronorite is the most common rock type in the body. Dunite is not found in surface outcrops, but observed in the core from the Flora I drill site (Fig. 2). Ultramafic rocks such as dunite and harzburgite show cumulate textures (Fig. 3). They never show porphyroclastic textures, which are characteristic mantle tectonite features. Dunite displays adcumulate textures with minor intercumulus pargasitic hornblende, phlogopite, plagioclase or clinopyroxene (Fig. 3a). Chromian spinel occurs only in the intercumulus phases as small, rectangular crystals. Harzburgites show typical orthocumulate textures with cumulus olivine and intercumulus clinopyroxene, hornblende, phlogopite, plagioclase and orthopyroxene (Fig. 3b). Norite also shows cumulate textures (Fig. 3c). In the ultramafic rocks, olivine appears as the first cumulus phase. Spinel occurs as euhedral crystals included in intercumulus minerals, but is never found included in olivine (Fig. 3a). Pargasite and phlogopite occur also as inclusions in spinel (Fig. 3d) underlining their magmatic origin. Although orthopyroxene occurs as an intercumulus phase in ultramafic rocks, it appears as a cumulus phase in norite together with plagioclase. On the basis of microscopic observations, the order of crystallization is olivine → pargasite, phlogopite, spinel → orthopyroxene, plagioclase → clinopyroxene, plagioclase (Fig. 4). Gabbronorite forms the dominant member of the intrusion. It does not show cumulate textures, but is characterized by holocrystalline textures (Fig. 3e). Sometimes, fine-grained biotite–feldspar rock fragments of meta-sedimentary origin are observed in the gabbronorite (Fig. 3f ). Contamination by sedimentary material is confirmed by the occurrence of blue corundum in xenoliths (Harries, 1999). The fragments are usually assimilated within the host gabbronorite. Olivine and spinel are rare, but ilmenite, biotite and quartz are widespread in the gabbronorite. Apatite and zircon occur commonly as accessory phases (Fig. 4). Diorite and quartz diorite are exposed mainly
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Fig. 1. Geological map of the Harz Mountains, central Germany [simplified and modified from Mohr (1978)]. Β, occurrences of high-pressure/ low-temperature metamorphic rocks (Ahrendt et al., 1996) and minerals (Ganssloser et al., 1996).
along the northwestern rim of the intrusion (Fig. 2). They show heterogeneous hypidiomorphic granular textures (Fig. 3g). The constituent minerals are relatively large crystals of plagioclase and orthopyroxene, and interstitial smaller hornblende, biotite and quartz. Fine-grained quartz–feldspar rocks are found as small pods or veinlets in ultramafic rocks from the drill core.
Drill core samples (Flora I and II–III)
Most ultramafic rocks are strongly serpentinized, except at the deepest position. Ultramafic rocks from levels below 300 m have preserved their original mineral assemblages and textures relatively well. Plagioclase, pargasite and phlogopite are heterogeneously distributed as intercumulus phases between cumulus olivine and spinel in the dunite. In the shallower levels, most of the cumulus olivine is altered, although cumulus spinel and intercumulus phlogopite and/or pargasite survived serpentinization.
The locations of drill holes Flora I and II–III are shown in Fig. 2. The maximum depth sampled is 390 m at site Flora I. Most of the drill core is composed of ultramafic rocks such as dunite and harzburgite (below 100 m), although gabbronorite is widely distributed in the surface outcrops. Although dunite is absent in surface outcrops, it occurs in the lowermost section of the Flora I drill core (below 350 m). Leucocratic rocks such as gabbronorite, diorite and quartz diorite are found only in the first 100 m of the drill hole. At deeper levels, fine-grained quartz–feldspar rocks appear as small pods or veinlets in the ultramafic host rock. Feldspar is strongly saussuritized.
Along the northwestern margin of the intrusion, a wide variety of features related to hybridization processes are observed. As reported by Vinx (1982), intrusive relationships among mafic to intermediate magmas indicate mixing phenomena. The lithology of the intermediate rocks is heterogeneous at the outcrop scale. Fine-grained biotite-rich patches are often found in the heterogeneous dioritic to quartz dioritic rock. Xenoliths
Mixing phenomena (hybridization)
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Fig. 2. Lithological map of the Harzburg mafic–ultramafic intrusion [modified from Sohn (1956)]. Β, position of Flora I and Flora II–III drill cores.
of quartzo-feldspathic gneiss and hornfels are also recognized in the intermediate rocks. Many gabbronorites and diorites show peculiar textures that originate from mixing. Such textures include fine-grained biotite– feldspar–quartz-rich patches (Fig. 3f ) with reaction rims of orthopyroxene + ilmenite + quartz. Irregular zoning in plagioclase is often found in gabbronorite (Fig. 3h). The plagioclase zoning shows albite-rich cores with anorthiterich rims. Furthermore, as described below, two types of clinopyroxenes showing an obvious compositional gap exist in small domains.
MINERAL CHEMISTRY Mineral compositions (Tables 1 and 2) were determined by JEOL 8600 electron microprobe at Ehime University.
Beam conditions for microprobe analyses were 15 keV accelerating voltage and 15 nA beam current. The complete dataset is available for downloading from the Journal of Petrology Web site at http://www.petrology. oupjournals.org.
Olivine Olivine (Fig. 5) in dunite and harzburgite has the highest Fo [= 100Mg/(Mg + Fe)] content of >89·5 with 0·3–0·4 wt % NiO, similar to olivine from mantle peridotites (Fig. 6b). The Fo content of olivine in norites is slightly lower than that in dunite and harzburgite. The gabbronorite with a high mg-number (>60) includes olivine that ranges in composition from Fo78·4 to Fo89·2.
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Fig. 3. (a)–(d)
With decreasing Fo contents, NiO contents also decrease to 0·1 to 0·2 wt %. The gabbronorite with a significantly lower whole-rock mg-number (>44) contains fayaliterich olivine of Fo22 (Fig. 5). Thus a compositional gap between Fo76 and Fo24 is observed in these rocks. The most differentiated gabbronorite with low mg-number (1 wt % (Fig. 6a). Small spinel crystals are
Plagioclase shows wide compositional ranges (Fig. 5). Norite and gabbronorite (mg-number >60) include the most An [= 100Ca/(K + Na + Ca)] rich plagioclase (An>85). Intercumulus plagioclase in dunite and harzburgite is low in An content (An66–83) compared with that in norite and harzburgite (An>85). Some of the plagioclase in the dunite shows very low An content (An66–72) for plagioclase in ultramafic rocks. In gabbronorite, the An content shows a bimodal distribution as a function of the whole-rock mg-number. Gabbronorites (40 < mg-number Ζ 60) show two peaks in the An content at 55 and 73%. Furthermore, gabbronorites (mg-number Ζ 40) show two distinct compositional ranges of An52–64 and An68–84. In one sample (H-73), the core of a crystal is formed by plagioclase with
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Fig. 3. Photomicrographs of rocks from the Harzburg intrusion. Scale bars represent 1 mm. (a) Sample 378.7. Cumulate texture. Dunite with intercumulus phlogopite. It should be noted that the rectangular spinel crystals occur only in the intercumulus phases. (b) Sample H-16. Harzburgite with intercumulus orthopyroxene and pargasite. (c) Sample H-97. Norite. (d) Sample 380.8. Pargasite and phlogopite inclusions in spinel. (e) Sample H-214. Gabbronorite showing typical texture. (f ) Sample 101004. Fine-grained biotite–quartz–plagioclase inclusion in gabbronorite. (g) Sample HA974. Diorite showing hybrid texture. (h) Sample H-73. Irregular zoning of plagioclase.
An49–56 surrounded by plagioclase with An81–84, with an abrupt compositional gap (Fig. 3h).
Orthopyroxene and clinopyroxene The mg-number of orthopyroxene shows a wide range from 0·90 to 0·32 with a compositional gap between 0·50 and 0·72. The Al2O3 content continuously decreases from 3·5 to 0·5 wt % with decreasing mg-number (Fig. 6c). Orthopyroxene in iron-rich gabbronorite includes small clinopyroxene exsolution lamellae. This is common for orthopyroxenes throughout the Harzburg rock sequence. Clinopyroxene in cumulus rocks is characterized by higher Al2O3, TiO2 and Na2O contents than in gabbronorites, as shown in Fig. 6d. With decreasing mg-number from 0·95 to 0·80, concentrations of these elements decrease drastically. The maximum Al2O3 content in the most Mg-rich clinopyroxene is 5 wt %. The TiO2 and Na2O contents at the highest mg-number are 1·0 and 0·8 wt %, respectively.
Amphibole For the classification and calculation of site occupation of amphiboles the program PROBE-AMPH (Tindle & Webb, 1994) was used. Amphibole shows wide compositional variations (Fig. 7a). The compositions of intercumulus amphibole in ultramafic rocks and magnesian gabbronorites range from pargasite to pargasitic hornblende. Additionally, actinolites to actinolitic hornblende occur in iron-rich gabbronorites, where they were apparently formed by later processes. As shown in Fig. 7, TiO2, Na2O and K2O contents are high in intercumulus amphiboles in dunite and harzburgite. The dunite and harzburgite contain TiO2rich amphiboles, titanian-pargasite, whereas magnesian gabbronorite hosts edenitic–pargasitic hornblende. Norite includes magnesio-hornblende. These dark yellowish brown amphiboles occur as interstitial phases among the cumulus crystals. However, amphiboles in more iron-rich gabbronorites are colourless actinolite or actinolitic hornblende, which may have formed during a secondary alteration stage.
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Fig. 4. Mineral assemblage as a function of whole-rock mg-number. It should be noted that amphibole and mica occur as intercumulus phases in the most high-mg-number cumulate. Clinopyroxene does not form a cumulus phase. Ilmenite is the dominant opaque mineral in gabbronorite. The essential crystallization order is olivine → spinel → plagioclase, orthopyroxene → clinopyroxene. Shaded zone indicates range of compositional variation of cumulates.
Biotite–phlogopite Biotite–phlogopite is a ubiquitous phase throughout the rocks of the Harzburg intrusion. Phlogopite is found as an intercumulus phase among the cumulus crystals in ultramafic rocks. Norite, however, does not usually include phlogopite. With falling mg-number, TiO2 and K2O contents increase, but Na2O and Cr2O3 contents decrease (Fig. 7b). Biotite in gabbronorites is associated with ilmenite.
Compositional heterogeneity of minerals From the above description of mineral composition and comparison with bulk-rock mg-number, it is evident that the noritic and gabbronoritic rocks from surface outcrops show enormous compositional heterogeneities that are not always reflected by hybrid textures. In such rocks the bulk mg-number and the mineral mgnumber strongly correlate. The few pristine samples made available from the drill cores allow us to identify the most primitive rock types and their primary phases. In these rocks, cumulus minerals that crystallized from a primitive melt show only restricted compositional
variations (Table 3), demonstrating that at least local equilibria were achieved at an early stage of magma evolution.
GEOCHEMISTRY Analytical procedure Six mafic and ultramafic cumulates, two fine-grained quartz–feldspar rocks in the ultramafic sequence (felsic pod) from the drill core, and two hybrid rocks from surface outcrops were analysed for major and trace element abundances and Sr, Nd and Pb isotope compositions. Major and trace element data and Sr, Nd and Pb isotope data were analysed at GeoForschungsZentrum (GFZ) in Potsdam. Major and trace elements were analysed by X-ray fluorescence (XRF). Additional concentration data of some trace elements, including rare earth elements (REE), were analysed by inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry (ICP-AES) and inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICPMS) (Table 4). Sr, Nd and Pb isotopic compositions were obtained on a Finnigan MAT262 multicollector mass spectrometer. Sr, Nd and Pb were separated and purified
1535
Opx-cumulate
Ol-norite
Pl-‘harzburgite’
‘Harzburgite’
Ol-gabbronorite 0·807
Gabbronorite
Gabbronorite
Gabbronorite
H-8
H-11
H-13
H-16
H-17
H-55
H-66
H-69
Troctolite
Norite
Ol-norite
‘Harzburgite’
Ferrogabbro
Norite
Ol-gabbronorite 0·854
Diorite
Diorite
Dunite
Dunite
Dunite
Dunite
H-91
H-97
H-112
H-114
1536
H-116
H-151
H-214
H-315
H-316
Flora-380.0
Flora-380.8
Flora-381.3
Flora-382.0
89·5 (0·3)
89·5 (0·2)
89·5 (0·2)
89·6 (0·4)
0·29 (0·05)
0·31 (0·04)
0·30 (0·04)
0·29 (0·04)
0·02 (0·03)
0·17 (0·06)
72·3 (5·4)
69·4 (2·1)
80·5 (0·5)
52·1 (3·1)
61·9 (4·5)
83·1 (1·2)
77·9 (9·4)
76·2 (2·9)
18·4 (5·3)
85·1 (4·5)
85·7 (3·6)
71·1 (14·4)
64·9 (8·5)
58·5 (7·5)
72·2 (2·8)
73·6 (6·1)
79·6 (2·0)
85·1 (0·7)
84·4 (2·4)
76·1 (6·2)
62·4 (8·0)
0·381 (0·007)
0·428 (0·007)
0·855 (0·011)
0·748 (0·019)
0·366 (0·004)
0·867 (0·004)
0·874 (0·004)
0·883 (0·006)
0·879 (0·005)
0·819 (0·015)
0·462 (0·008)
0·479 (0·007)
0·475 (0·005)
0·816 (0·009)
0·871 (0·005)
0·888 (0·004)
0·865 (0·006)
0·860 (0·007)
0·332 (0·006)
Al2O3 (SD)
0·41 (0·04)
0·45 (0·08)
1·95 (0·21)
0·92 (0·28)
0·39 (0·04)
2·46 (0·34)
2·55 (0·26)
2·39 (0·23)
1·65 (0·12)
1·42 (0·41)
0·44 (0·11)
0·63 (0·13)
0·36 (0·06)
1·63 (0·29)
2·10 (0·56)
3·00 (0·29)
2·38 (0·64)
2·02 (0·23)
0·51 (0·03)
Opx
mg-no. (SD)
0·915 (0·018)
0·918 (0·011)
0·911 (0·013)
0·495 (0·019)
0·554 (0·010)
0·885 (0·015)
0·819 (0·012)
0·479
0·917 (0·004)
0·926 (0·002)
0·848 (0·065)
0·611 (0·007)
0·621 (0·009)
0·604 (0·010)
0·874 (0·009)
0·903 (0·010)
0·924 (0·010)
0·897 (0·009)
0·900 (0·009)
0·832 (0·005)
Cpx
TiO2 (SD)
0·51 (0·19)
0·61 (0·19)
0·66 (0·18)
0·17 (0·09)
0·19 (0·11)
0·31 (0·12)
0·40 (0·19)
0·11
0·41 (0·05)
0·46 (0·03)
0·42 (0·22)
0·15 (0·11)
0·10 (0·07)
0·17 (0·09)
0·72 (0·15)
0·40 (0·16)
0·44 (0·11)
0·64 (0·15)
0·50 (0·10)
0·15 (0·10)
Cpx
Al2O3 (SD)
3·41 (1·12)
3·97 (0·67)
4·03 (0·35)
0·72 (0·24)
0·72 (0·23)
2·65 (0·55)
1·21 (0·41)
0·90
3·15 (0·81)
4·21 (0·02)
1·84 (0·81)
0·76 (0·19)
0·58 (0·16)
0·74 (0·12)
2·44 (0·33)
3·41 (0·22)
4·33 (0·61)
2·93 (0·31)
2·73 (0·12)
0·59 (0·17)
Cpx
Na2O (SD)
0·61 (0·11)
0·65 (0·11)
0·63 (0·11)
0·18 (0·03)
0·15 (0·02)
0·31 (0·08)
0·19 (0·03)
0·16
0·53 (0·13)
0·64 (0·05)
0·31 (0·16)
0·16 (0·03)
0·15 (0·03)
0·15 (0·02)
0·40 (0·08)
0·59 (0·08)
0·56 (0·12)
0·36 (0·07)
0·35 (0·03)
0·16 (0·03)
Cpx
Cr2O3 (SD)
1·14 (0·35)
1·25 (0·32)
1·38 (0·35)
0·02 (0·01)
0·04 (0·03)
0·75 (0·12)
0·20 (0·07)
0·00
0·94 (0·18)
1·01 (0·01)
0·04 (0·04)
0·07 (0·06)
0·05 (0·04)
0·05 (0·04)
0·26 (0·06)
1·05 (0·11)
1·00 (0·07)
0·80 (0·18)
0·59 (0·08)
0·09 (0·06)
Cpx
mg-no. (SD)
0·540 (0·033)
0·508 (0·040)
0·539 (0·027)
0·562 (0·014)
0·463 (0·058)
0·424 (0·015)
0·492 (0·031)
0·518 (0·025)
0·583 (0·033)
0·442 (0·015)
Spinel
cr-no. (SD)
0·470 (0·014)
0·505 (0·030)
0·464 (0·029)
0·450 (0·015)
0·487 (0·052)
0·525 (0·004)
0·479 (0·022)
0·420 (0·025)
0·435 (0·034)
0·418 (0·009)
Spinel
TiO2 (SD)
0·74 (0·19)
1·36 (0·66)
1·11 (0·24)
0·64 (0·23)
1·19 (0·73)
0·43 (0·03)
0·58 (0·35)
0·49 (0·19)
0·42 (0·10)
1·59 (0·71)
Spinel
The complete dataset is available at the Journal of Petrology Web site. mg-number = Mg/(Mg + Fe2+) using cation fractions. XFo calculated as 100Mg/( Mg + Fe2+) and XAn as 100Ca/(Ca + Na) using cation fractions. cr-number = Cr/(Cr + Al + Fe3+) using cation fractions. WR, whole rock; Opx, orthopyroxene; Cpx, clinopyroxene. Concentrations are in wt %, with standard deviation given in parentheses.
0·889
0·889
0·889
20·5 (1·3)
85·6 (0·1)
0·28 (0·04)
0·20 (0·04)
0·25 (0·05)
0·27 (0·07)
0·10 (0·04)
0·17 (0·03)
0·23 (0·04)
0·21 (0·04)
0·22 (0·04)
mg-no. (SD)
NUMBER 8
0·887
0·439
0·410
0·749
85·9 (0·4)
86·7 (0·4)
88·1 (0·3)
87·0 (0·3)
78·0 (0·6)
78·9 (0·3)
86·0 (0·5)
88·2 (0·4)
85·9 (0·3)
XAn (SD) Plagioclase Opx
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0·286
0·853
0·869
0·863
Gabbronorite
H-73
0·811
0·481
0·457
0·473
0·855
0·865
0·853
Diorite
0·852
Gabbro
H-4
NiO (SD) Olivine
WR
Olivine
mg-no. XFo (SD)
H-1
Sample no. Rock type
Table 1: Summary of compositional data for anhydrous minerals, Harzburg intrusion, Germany JOURNAL OF PETROLOGY AUGUST 2002
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Dunite
Dunite
Flora-381.3
Flora-382.0
88·9
88·9
88·9
88·7
43·9
41·0
85·4
74·9
28·6
85·3
86·9
86·3
81·1
48·1
45·7
47·3
80·7
85·5
0·920 (0·012)
0·920 (0·004)
0·921 (0·001)
0·391 (0·024)
0·460 (0·010)
0·820 (0·001)
0·772 (0·016)
0·343
0·893 (0·005)
0·919 (0·012)
0·835 (0·030)
0·499 (0·012)
0·485 (0·024)
0·485 (0·009)
0·862 (0·009)
0·897 (0·003)
0·893
0·908 (0·004)
0·890 (0·016)
0·307 (0·041)
5·50 (0·70)
3·58 (0·75)
3·46 (0·30)
2·22 (0·05)
5·20 (0·44)
4·35 (0·24)
3·99 (0·42)
4·46 (1·49)
4·25
4·07 (0·97)
0·44 (0·38)
2·81 (1·06)
5·27 (0·30)
5·46 (0·27)
4·66 (0·53)
2·77 (0·92)
4·35 (0·16)
1·57
2·15 (0·21)
2·72 (1·13)
4·82 (0·42)
1·16 (0·44)
1·19 (0·05)
1·07 (0·02)
0·29 (0·04)
0·12 (0·03)
0·25 (0·00)
0·16 (0·03)
0·29
1·10 (0·17)
1·44 (0·47)
1·03 (0·35)
0·14 (0·02)
0·16 (0·03)
0·16 (0·03)
1·05 (0·23)
1·16 (0·08)
0·60
1·48 (0·68)
1·31 (0·07)
0·13 (0·03)
0·20 (0·03)
Mica
Na2O (SD) Mica
Cr2O3 (SD)
1·12
0·07
8·09 (0·83) 1·88 (0·21)
8·49 (0·14) 1·56 (0·22)
7·98 (0·07) 0·70 (0·07)
9·45 (0·41) 0·07 (0·04)
9·54 (0·21) 0·06 (0·05)
8·82 (0·02) 1·92 (0·08)
8·93 (0·72) 0·28 (0·06)
8·45
8·19 (0·24) 1·68 (0·16)
7·45 (0·46) 0·38 (0·44)
7·64 (2·64) 0·02 (0·02)
10·23 (0·38) 0·09 (0·04)
10·05 (0·23) 0·13 (0·03)
9·69 (1·13) 0·08 (0·02)
8·61 (0·70) 0·09 (0·04)
8·38 (0·29) 1·14 (0·09)
4·51
6·27 (1·64) 0·19 (0·04)
7·93 (0·28) 1·29 (0·39)
10·16 (0·15) 0·08 (0·08)
9·26 (0·54) 0·15 (0·11)
Mica
K2O (SD)
0·918 (0·030)
0·887 (0·011)
0·914 (0·017)
0·971 (0·027)
0·540 (0·099)
0·924 (0·025)
0·459 (0·091)
0·878 (0·007)
0·998 (0·003)
0·978
0·939 (0·008)
0·871 (0·036)
0·754
0·772 (0·055)
0·722 (0·027)
0·851 (0·024)
0·880 (0·026)
0·997 (0·005)
1·000 (0·000)
0·983 (0·021)
0·403 (0·079)
0·840 (0·084)
Amphibole
mg-no. (SD)
2·44 (0·87)
4·13 (0·15)
2·06 (0·73)
0·86 (0·41)
0·14 (0·06)
0·78 (0·24)
0·24 (0·24)
2·81 (0·27)
0·20 (0·16)
0·56
2·71 (0·18)
2·62 (0·52)
0·24
0·49 (0·13)
0·55 (0·09)
3·22 (0·71)
3·67 (0·66)
0·81 (0·64)
1·77 (0·20)
0·93 (0·35)
0·15 (0·17)
0·26 (0·16)
Amphibole
TiO2 (SD)
3·01 (0·43)
2·84 (0·10)
3·31 (0·51)
2·96 (0·15)
0·31 (0·19)
0·49 (0·10)
0·28 (0·25)
2·58 (0·43)
0·99 (0·17)
1·89
2·50 (0·07)
2·11 (0·16)
0·37
0·47 (0·09)
0·48 (0·07)
2·35 (0·09)
2·56 (0·09)
2·27 (0·25)
2·80 (0·04)
1·45 (0·37)
0·22 (0·21)
0·21 (0·14)
Amphibole
Na2O (SD)
0·67 (0·42)
1·00 (0·03)
0·55 (0·44)
0·28 (0·15)
0·19 (0·13)
0·34 (0·08)
0·08 (0·14)
0·86 (0·45)
0·22 (0·07)
0·60
0·45 (0·01)
0·69 (0·24)
0·19
0·20 (0·05)
0·23 (0·04)
0·95 (0·18)
0·90 (0·12)
0·39 (0·05)
0·22 (0·02)
0·37 (0·09)
0·11 (0·18)
0·08 (0·07)
Amphibole
K2O (SD)
1·625 (0·292)
1·831 (0·030)
1·747 (0·057)
1·633 (0·102)
0·434 (0·274)
0·576 (0·082)
0·325 (0·327)
1·741 (0·046)
0·695 (0·173)
1·405
1·721 (0·045)
1·589 (0·098)
0·450
0·577 (0·058)
0·607 (0·072)
1·720 (0·082)
1·829 (0·035)
1·535 (0·134)
1·706 (0·082)
1·105 (0·258)
0·286 (0·327)
0·287 (0·156)
Amphibole
Al(IV) (SD)
0·791 (0·131)
0·811 (0·029)
0·863 (0·096)
0·710 (0·090)
0·047 (0·011)
0·061 (0·014)
0·033 (0·021)
0·757 (0·031)
0·149 (0·071)
0·477
0·617 (0·024)
0·532 (0·079)
0·035
0·036 (0·010)
0·041 (0·007)
0·695 (0·046)
0·757 (0·041)
0·554 (0·062)
0·581 (0·013)
0·313 (0·095)
0·036 (0·022)
0·017 (0·012)
Amphibole
A-site (SD)
pargasitic hornblende
pargasite
pargasite–pargasitic hornblende
pargasitic hornblende
actinolitic hornblende
tremolitic hornblende
hornblende
cummingtonite/actinolitic
pargasite–pargasitic hornblende
hornblende
tremolitic hornblende/magnesio-
magnesio-hornblende
pargasitic hornblende
hornblende
pargasitic hornblende/magnesio-
actinolite
actinolitic hornblende
actinolitic hornblende
pargasite–pargasitic hornblende
pargasite
hornblende
edenitic hornblende/pargasitic
magnesio-hastingsitic hornblende
magnesio-hornblende
hornblende
cummingtonite/ferro-actinolitic
actinolite
Nomenclature
The complete dataset is available at the Journal of Petrology Web site. mg-number = Mg/(Mg + Fe2+) using cation fractions. Concentrations are in wt %, with standard deviation given in parentheses. Nomenclature of amphiboles was determined by PROBE-AMPH (Tindle & Webb, 1994).
Dunite
Dunite
Flora-380.0
Diorite
H-316
Flora-380.8
Ol-gabbronorite
Diorite
H-214
Norite
H-151
H-315
‘Harzburgite’
Ferrogabbro
H-114
Ol-norite
H-112
H-116
Troctolite
Norite
H-91
Gabbronorite
H-73
H-97
Gabbronorite
Gabbronorite
H-66
H-69
Ol-gabbronorite
Gabbronorite
H-17
H-55
‘Harzburgite’
H-16
86·5
85·3
Ol-norite
Pl-‘harzburgite’
H-11
Opx-cumulate
H-8
H-13
85·2
Gabbro
Diorite
H-1
0·665 (0·011)
Mica
Whole Mica
rock
TiO2 (SD)
mg-no. mg-no. (SD)
H-4
Rock type
Sample no.
Table 2: Summary of compositional data for hydrous minerals, Harzburg intrusion, Germany
SANO et al. HARZBURG MAFIC–ULTRAMAFIC INTRUSION
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Fig. 5. Frequency of Fo (%) in olivine, An (%) in plagioclase and mg-number in clinopyroxene. It should be noted that obvious bimodal compositional ranges in An (%) are recognized in gabbronorite (40 < mg-number < 60), gabbronorite (mg-number 70) always occurs as small fragments located in the core of large plagioclase crystals (see Fig. 3h). The surrounding plagioclase has much lower An content (>48–58) in the core and higher An content (>80–84) in the rim.
by ion-exchange chromatography using standard procedures. Analytical details are given in the footnote to Table 5.
metasedimentary rocks plot in the same area as the gabbronorites.
Whole-rock trace element composition Whole-rock major element composition Results are shown in Table 4. Whole-rock chemical variation against the mg-number is shown in Fig. 8. Most of the data plotted are from R. Vinx (unpublished data, 1988). Many oxides display good correlations with mgnumber. Cumulates range from mg-number = 75 to 90. SiO2, Al2O3 and CaO show scattered convex patterns. The variation within the cumulates is probably controlled by the olivine–plagioclase distribution. Data for the Harzburg intrusion mainly follow a tholeiitic fractionation trend, although chemical diversity, probably as a result of melt–wall-rock interaction, is recognized. Here, the term hybrid is used for rocks showing mixing phenomena such as xenoliths in various stages of assimilation, or inverse plagioclase zoning. Compositions of many
Primitive mantle-normalized trace element abundances are illustrated in Fig. 9. The normalization values are from Sun & McDonough (1989). Figure 9a shows trace element patterns for dunite, harzburgite and magnesian gabbro. These rocks have positive Cs and Pb anomalies and weak positive Rb, Th and U, or negative Ba anomalies. The pod-forming quartz–feldspar rocks within ultramafic samples show enriched patterns for highly incompatible elements. These rocks have positive Cs and Pb, and negative Ba, Sr, P, Eu and Ti anomalies (Fig. 9a). The normalized patterns of the hybrid rocks show positive Cs and Pb, and negative Ba, P and Ti anomalies (Fig. 9a). Their compositional variation is intermediate between ultramafic and quartz– feldspar rocks. Chondrite-normalized REE abundance
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HARZBURG MAFIC–ULTRAMAFIC INTRUSION
Fig. 6. Anhydrous mineral compositions. (a1) mg-number vs cr-number in spinels. Field for spinel composition from oceanic peridotites is from Dick & Bullen (1984) and Dick (1989). Field for spinel compositions for layered intrusions is from McLaren & De Villiers (1982), Wilson (1982), Engelbrecht (1985), Nicholson & Mathez (1991), Scoon & Teigler (1994) and Roach et al. (1998). Spinel field from Alaskan arc cumulates is from Himmelberg et al. (1986). (a2) cr-number vs TiO2 in spinel. (b) mg-number vs NiO in olivine. Field of olivine composition in mantle peridotites is from Sato (1977). (c) mg-number vs Al2O3 in orthopyroxene. (d) mg-number vs TiO2, Al2O3, Na2O and Cr2O3 in clinopyroxene.
of mafic and ultramafic cumulates, hybrid rocks and felsic pods in ultramafic rock are also shown (Fig. 9b). Normalization values are from Anders & Grevesse (1989). Dunites display the lowest REE abundance (× 1 chondrite at La to Lu) with flat patterns, whereas harzburgites show almost parallel patterns with a much higher REE abundance (× 5 to × 7 chondrite at
La) as compared with those of dunites. REE patterns of the felsic pods from the ultramafic sequence are characterized by light REE (LREE) enrichment (× 150 chondrite at La) and a negative Eu anomaly. Hybrid rocks show intermediate patterns between the ultramafic cumulates and the felsic pods in the ultramafic sequence (Fig. 9).
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Fig. 7. Hydrous mineral compositions. (a) Amphibole compositions. Nomenclature from Leake (1978). Intercumulus amphiboles in dunite and harzburgite are Ti-rich pargasite–Ti-rich pargasitic hornblende compositions. (b) Biotite–phlogopite compositions. K2O and TiO2 concentrations increase with decreasing mg-number.
DISCUSSION Estimation of primary melt composition In general, cumulus minerals can be thought as of having equilibrated with the surrounding melt in a magma system. The most primitive mineral is olivine with Fo89·5 and high NiO contents of >0·4 wt %. (Fig. 6b). Such olivine compositions can be in equilibrium with the mantle or a primitive basaltic melt. On the basis of the primary cumulus olivine compositions, we estimated the coexisting melt compositions. The estimated melt composition has mg-number = 71, if the partition coefficient between olivine and melt for Fe–Mg exchange is 0·3
(Roeder & Emslie, 1970). As there is no evidence for cumulus texture in the many gabbronorite samples, and chemical compositions of the rocks constituting the Harzburg intrusion exhibit a good and single compositional trend, especially for higher mg-number (>50), we infer a primary melt composition from the chemical trend. If there is a melt composition coexisting with the primary olivine on the chemical trend represented by the wholerock variation shown in Fig. 8, the composition can be represented by the intersection between the whole-rock chemical trend and mg-number = 71. On the basis of this approach, the best estimate of the primary melt composition is shown in Table 6. Whole-rock
1540
41·486
1541
101·635
1·011
0·002
0·007
0·905
99·622
1·002
0·207
0·004
1·779
0·001
0·006
0·896
Total
Si
Fe2+
Mn
Mg
Ca
Ni
XMg
0·064
1·791
0·005
0·220
0·372
0·036
0·294
CaO
49·431
0·257
10·661
NiO
0·171
48·430
MnO
MgO
40·652
10·039
SiO2
FeO
Average
Comment:
Max.
Flora-380.0 (n=27)
Sample:
0·890
0·004
0·000
1·757
0·001
0·187
0·994
98·255
0·212
0·013
47·537
0·071
9·064
40·201
Min.
0·004
0·001
0·000
0·007
0·001
0·008
0·004
0·580
0·040
0·013
0·341
0·048
0·370
0·257
SD
0·900
0·006
0·001
1·787
0·003
0·198
1·003
100·055
0·306
0·033
48·954
0·161
9·643
40·959
Average
0·930
0·007
0·002
1·846
0·005
0·213
1·009
101·003
0·354
0·059
51·571
0·236
10·382
41·665
Max.
Flora-380.8 (n=23)
0·893
0·004
0·000
1·762
0·001
0·138
0·998
98·206
0·226
0·010
47·919
0·059
6·712
40·554
Min.
0·012
0·001
0·000
0·025
0·001
0·025
0·003
0·648
0·038
0·014
0·965
0·039
1·176
0·280
SD
0·895
0·006
0·001
1·784
0·004
0·210
0·998
99·637
0·307
0·028
48·505
0·172
10·181
40·444
Average
0·898
0·007
0·002
1·794
0·005
0·218
1·003
100·523
0·379
0·061
49·031
0·230
10·579
40·776
Max.
Flora-381.3 (n=22)
0·891
0·005
0·000
1·776
0·002
0·202
0·991
98·453
0·240
0·010
48·000
0·105
9·810
39·893
Min.
0·002
0·001
0·000
0·005
0·001
0·004
0·003
0·465
0·045
0·012
0·263
0·038
0·184
0·225
SD
0·897
0·006
0·001
1·782
0·003
0·204
1·002
99·060
0·289
0·038
48·267
0·164
9·829
40·474
Average
0·928
0·007
0·002
1·843
0·005
0·219
1·012
99·898
0·381
0·066
50·626
0·243
10·597
41·077
Max.
Flora-382.0 (n=21)
0·890
0·003
0·000
1·765
0·002
0·142
0·996
97·422
0·170
0·000
47·198
0·081
6·974
39·939
Min.
Table 3: Olivine analyses from Flora drill cores (average, minimum, maximum and standard deviation), Harzburg intrusion, Germany
0·010
0·001
0·001
0·020
0·001
0·019
0·004
0·558
0·049
0·019
0·793
0·042
0·891
0·258
SD
SANO et al. HARZBURG MAFIC–ULTRAMAFIC INTRUSION
JOURNAL OF PETROLOGY
VOLUME 43
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AUGUST 2002
Table 4: Whole-rock major and trace element abundance of Harz Gabbro intrusion Samples from drill core
Sample:
Samples from surface
Flora I
H-16
Comment: harz.
Flora II
Flora III
50.8
H-73
HA974
253.3
364.6–7 369.8
378.7–8 380.9
382.1
382.2
382.4
40.6
hybrid
hybrid
felsic
dunite
dunite
dunite
dunite
dunite
gabbro felsic
dunite
dunite
87.9 harz.
SiO2
40·04
48·83
52·55
65·72
36·96
36·91
36·92
37·17
36·73
36·26
36·24
39·05
57·30
TiO2
0·15
0·26
0·26
1·04
0·06
0·08
0·13
0·08
0·07
0·05
0·05
0·11
0·54
38·45 0·22
Al2O3
6·10
14·50
14·27
14·49
2·52
2·15
1·64
2·34
2·11
2·35
2·29
10·28
16·11
3·14
Fe2O3
3·43
1·34
1·88
1·33
4·33
4·58
4·94
4·08
4·62
4·58
4·85
4·93
0·98
4·82
FeO
6·58
5·98
5·31
5·25
5·11
5·07
4·87
5·39
5·00
4·92
4·61
3·62
1·67
6·08
MnO
0·165
0·154
0·144
0·112
MgO
31·96
17·32
12·61
3·47
0·155 39·96
0·150 41·16
3·806
0·179
9·80
35·61
0·97
5·87
4·37
2·21
0·44
1·48
0·13
8·16
0·23
0·75
1·10
0·67
K2O
0·074
0·374
0·754
2·095
0·014
0·028
0·082
0·030
0·030
0·010
0·020
0·065
0·176
0·116
P2O5
0·026
0·040
0·018
0·079
0·016
0·020
0·033
0·021
0·021
0·015
0·017
0·013
0·176
0·042
H2O+
5·81
1·45
2·38
4·18
7·84
7·41
7·78
6·90
7·26
7·96
8·49
8·47
2·96
7·53
CO2
0·20
0·17
0·10
1·00
0·31
0·29
0·33
0·26
0·41
0·36
0·34
0·27
0·32
0·25
Total
99·04
99·95
99·54
99·67
98·72
98·55
98·71
98·5
98·54
98·26
98·38
99·11
99·68
98·76
mg-no.
85·49
81·13
76·24
49·00
88·78
88·80
88·74
88·92
88·87
88·89
88·91
85·14
87·25
85·91
Sc
16
24
27
15
8
8
8
8
7
7
7
13
10
15
V
79
104
153
131
40
48
70
50
51
43
47
70
34
74
Cr
3267
615
696
233
5119
6079
5852
3897
5300
5172
5089
3501
79
4671
Ni
1328
260
655
92
2182
2124
2113
2056
2127
2217
1983
1084
48
1805
Zn
65
57
56
66
57
59
56
54
55
53
57
47
29
67
17·3
35·4
87·2
Sr Y Zr Cs Ba
28·2 4·48 12·7 0·13 16·8
142 6·91 26·0 0·98 68·7
136 10·2 19·1 1·73 98
35·7 20·8 124 5·77 238
1·08 20·2