ABSTRACT
The island of Jan Mayen is the northernmost active volcano on the
Mid-Atlantic Ridge. The rocks of Jan Mayen belong to the potassic
series of the alkaline rocks and appear to belong to the straddle
type association. The ankaramites and alkali olivine basalts are
characterized by the presence of large xenocrysts of rimmed
chromium diopside, titaniferous salite, olivine (Fo83 to Fo88),
magnetite and sometimes plagioclase (bytownite rimmed by
labradorite). Phenocrysts of olivine (Fo74) and plagioclase
(andesine) are present in several rocks. These and phenocrysts lie
in a matrix composed of` titaniferous salite, olivine (Fo58),
plagioclase (andesine), magnetite, biotite and sometimes ilmenite.
Latite andesites contain large crystals of plagioclase of an
andesine-oligoclase composition rimmed by oligoclase or alkali
feldspar, magnetite, biotite, hornblende and sometimes highly
altered clinopyroxene.
The trachytes are characterized by phenocrysts of aegirine-augite,
anorthoclase, magnetite, biotite and sometimes andesine rimmed by
an alkali feldspar. The phenccrysts of the latite andesites and
trachyte lie in a groundmass consisting of andesine, alkali
feldspar, magnetite, hematite and biotite.
Trace element whole rock geochemistry indicates that the rocks of
Jan Mayen were probably derived from the mantle from slightly
different source regions based on different Rb/Sr ratios for the
mafic rocks of Nord Jan and Sor Jan. The rocks formed by the
partial accumulation of titaniferous salite, plagioclase, olivine
and magnetite from an alkali basalt magma followed by the
intrusion and capture of xenoliths and xenocrysts of ultramafic or
mafic rocks, which may have been in the process of accumulation.
This accumulation process is supported by the results of least
squares magma mixing models and Rayleigh fractionation curves.
White, C.A., 1979. Petrology and mineral chemistry of some
Jan Mayen volcanics. Unpublished MSc. thesis, State
University of New York at Albany.
197pp., +x.
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