4.6 Article

Discrimination and origin of the sanukitoid series: Geochemical constraints from the Neoarchean western Karelian Province (Finland)

Journal

LITHOS
Volume 115, Issue 1-4, Pages 27-39

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.lithos.2009.11.001

Keywords

Archean; Sanukitoids; Karelian Province; Geochemistry; High Ba-Sr; Enriched mantle

Funding

  1. University of Helsinki and Finnish Graduate School in Geology

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Neoarchean late to post-tectonic sanukitoid intrusions are found in the western part of the Karelian Province in Finland. Variable-sized, even-grained to K-feldspar porphyritic intrusions form a series of diorites, tonalites, and granodiorites, that are calc-alkaline to alkali-calcic, magnesian, and mostly peraluminous. The major and trace element geochemistry of the intrusions show typical sanukitoid affinities: a mantle signature (high content of Mg, Ni, Cr and high Mg#) and enrichment in LILE (especially K, Ba, and Sr). The intrusions form a distinctive series that can be distinguished from the TTG series of the Karelian Province by their high Ba-Sr signature, low Na2O/K2O ratio, and uniform HREE pattern. The sanukitoid series can be compositionally constrained as follows: SiO2=55-70 wt.%, Na2O/K2O = 0.5-3, MgO = 1.5-9 wt.%, Mg# = 45-65, K2O=1.5-5.0 wt.%, Ba + Sr>1400 ppm, and (Gd/Er)(N) = 2-6. The probable source was enriched subcontinental lithosphere mantle with high LILE concentrations in phlogopite and/or sanidine. The accumulation of K, Ba, and Sr in the mantle source may have occurred as a consequence of two separate metasomatic events: 1) by subduction-related fluids/melts and 2) by metasomatism related to asthenospheric mantle upwelling caused by slab breakoff. The slab breakoff at the end-stage of subduction is also a viable trigger for the sanukitoid magmatism. (C) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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