ABSTRACT
Whole-rock major and trace element compositions of one basalt, one
diabase, and 21 rocks from the magmatic-plutonic units of the
North Arm Mountain massif, Bay of Islands ophiolite, Newfoundland,
were determined. Mineral compositions of a subset of the plutonic
rocks were also determined.
The major and trace element compositions of the basalt and diabase
are similar to abyssal tholeiites, and this is consistent with the
REE data of Malpas (1978) and Suen, et. al. (1979) that suggest
the lavas and dikes formed from a depleted or slightly enriched
abyssal tholeiitic magma. The alkaline nature of the magma
proposed by several previous investigators based on major element
chemistry is attributed to alteration. The major primary minerals
of the plutonic rocks are approximately in chemical equilibrium
with each other, and mineral zoning, where present, is normal.
This indicates that the plutonic rocks formed mainly by in situ
nucleation and crystallization on or near the margins of the magma
chamber rather than by homogeneous nucleation and gravitational
sorting.
Methods of estimating the amount of trapped liquid in plutonic
rocks from incompatible trace element concentrations are
discussed. Textures and estimates of trapped liquid indicate many
of the plutonic rocks from the area of North Arm Mountain from
where the rocks in this study were collected are mesocumulates.
This and the thinning of the layered units and thickening of the
isotropic gabbros suggest the plutonic rocks in this area formed
under conditions of faster cooling than did those to the northeast
and southwest.
Whole-rock and cryptic mineral variations with
pseudo-stratigraphic height suggest the magma chamber was
vertically zoned, with. the degree of differentiation increasing
upward, but that the extent of fractionation was rather limited.
Olivine Fo, plagioclase Ca#, and clinopyroxene Mg# varied by 9,
17, and 13 units, respectively, through a vertical distance of 6
km. through the transition zone and gabbroic units.
Mineral compositions determined in this study and others and the
gross lithologic layering suggest the general crystallization
order of the North Arm parent magma was olivine (± chromite) -
clinopyroxene - plagioclase - orthopyroxene. This is inconsistent
with phase relations of abyssal tholeiites in which clinopyroxene
crystallizes after olivine and plagioclase. No explanation is
suggested.
Most chemical and mineralogic features of North Arm Mountain
plutonic rocks can be attributed to a combination of crystal
fractionation and repeated mixing of newly injected parent magma
in a large, steady-state chamber at an oceanic spreading center.
This is consistent with the geologic evidence (Casey, 1980).
However, other processes must be responsible for some of the minor
variant mineral assemblages in the plutonic rocks.
Sullivan, J.W., 1981. Some chemical and mineralogical aspects of
plutonic rocks from the North Arm Mountain Massif, Bay Of Islands
Ophiolite, Newfoundland. Unpublished MSc. thesis, State University
of New York at Albany. 149 pp., +xii
University at Albany Science Library call number: SCIENCE
Oversize (*) QE 40 Z899 1981 S85
thesis (scanned text) - 6MB pdf file
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