4.5 Article

A terrestrial magmatic hibonite-grossite-vanadium assemblage: Desilication and extreme reduction in a volcanic plumbing system, Mount Carmel, Israel

Journal

AMERICAN MINERALOGIST
Volume 104, Issue 2, Pages 207-219

Publisher

MINERALOGICAL SOC AMER
DOI: 10.2138/am-2019-6733

Keywords

Hibonite; native vanadium; grossite; krotite; super-reduced conditions; mantle methane; Mt Carmel; Volatile Elements in Differentiated Planetary Interiors

Funding

  1. ARC LIEF Systemic Infrastructure Grant
  2. ARC DEST Systemic Infrastructure Grant
  3. Macquarie University

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Hibonite (CaAl12O19) is a constituent of some refractory calcium-aluminum inclusions (CAIs) in carbonaceous meteorites, commonly accompanied by grossite (CaAl4O7) and spinel. These phases are usually interpreted as having condensed, or crystallized from silicate melts, early in the evolution of the solar nebula. Both Ca-Al oxides are commonly found on Earth, but as products of high-temperature metamorphism of pelitic carbonate rocks. We report here a unique occurrence of magmatic hibonite-grossite-spinel assemblages, crystallized from Ca-Al-rich silicate melts under conditions [high-temperature, very low oxygen fugacity (f(O2))] comparable to those of their meteoritic counterparts. Ejecta from Cretaceous pyroclastic deposits on Mt Carmel, N. Israel, include aggregates of hopper/skeletal Ti-rich corundum, which have trapped melts that crystallized at f(O2) extending from 7 log units below the iron-wustite buffer (Delta IW = -7; SiC, Ti2O3, Fe-Ti silicide melts) to Delta IW <= -9 (native V, TiC, and TiN). The assemblage hibonite + grossite + spinel + TiN first crystallized late in the evolution of the melt pockets; this hibonite contains percentage levels of Zr, Ti, and REE that reflect the concentration of incompatible elements in the residual melts as corundum continued to crystallize. A still later stage appears to be represented by coarse-grained (centimeter-size crystals) ejecta that show the crystallization sequence: corundum + Liq -> (low-REE) hibonite -> grossite + spinel +/- krotite -> Ca4Al6F2O12 + fluorite. V-0 appears as spheroidal droplets, with balls up to millimeter size and spectacular dendritic intergrowths, included in hibonite, grossite, and spinel. Texturally late V-0 averages 12 wt% Al and 2 wt% Mn. Spinels contain 10-16 wt% V in V-0-free samples, and <0.5 wt% V in samples with abundant V-0. Ongoing paragenetic studies suggest that the f(O2) evolution of the Mt Carmel magmatic system reflects the interaction between OIB-type mafic magmas and mantle-derived CH4+H-2 fluids near the crust-mantle boundary. Temperatures estimated by comparison with 1 atm phase-equilibrium studies range from ca. 1500 degrees C down to 1200-1150 degrees C. When f(O2) reached ca. Delta IW = -7, the immiscible segregation of Fe, Ti-silicide melts and the crystallization of SiC and TiC effectively desilicated the magma, leading to supersaturation in Al2O3 and the rapid crystallization of corundum, preceding the development of the hibonite-bearing assemblages. Reports of Ti-rich corundum and SiC from other areas of explosive volcanism suggest that these phenomena may be more widespread than presently realized, and the hibonite-grossite assemblage may serve as another indicator to track such activity. This is the first reported terrestrial occurrence of krotite (CaAl2O4), and of at least two unknown Zr-Ti oxides.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available