4.5 Article

Paragenesis of Li minerals in the Nanyangshan rare-metal pegmatite, Northern China: Toward a generalized sequence of Li crystallization in Li-Cs-Ta-type granitic pegmatites

Journal

AMERICAN MINERALOGIST
Volume 107, Issue 12, Pages 2155-2166

Publisher

MINERALOGICAL SOC AMER
DOI: 10.2138/am-2022-8285

Keywords

Spodumene; montebrasite-amblygonite; triphylite-lithiophilite; elbaite; lepidolite; pegmatite zonation; Lithium; beryllium and boron: Quintessentially crustal

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [91855209]
  2. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [14380099, IGGCAS-201902]
  3. Key deployment project of the Institute of Geology and Geophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences [2022300192]
  4. Research Funds for the Frontiers Science Center for Critical Earth Material Cycling, Nanjing University

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The Nanyangshan Li-Cs-Ta pegmatite in North China is the largest in the region and exhibits a zonal distribution of lithium mineralization, with spodumene being the dominant mineral in the intermediate zone. The sequence of lithium mineralization can be summarized as Li-aluminosilicates -> Li-phosphates -> elbaite -> lepidolite, which is consistent with the global occurrences of LCT pegmatites.
The Nanyangshan Li-Cs-Ta (LCT) pegmatite is the largest of hundreds of pegmatite dikes in the eastern Qinling orogenic district, North China. The Nanyangshan pegmatite is strongly zoned into a contact zone, border zone, wall zone, intermediate zone, and core, with Li mineralization occurring predominantly in the intermediate zone. Inward through the intermediate zone, Li mineralization is divided into subzones of Spd (spodumene), Mbs (montebrasite), Elb (elbaite), and Lpd (lepidolite). Lithium minerals include spodumene, montebrasite, lithiophilite, elbaite, lepidolite, and possible former petalite. Paragenetic assemblages of Li minerals are variable, with spodumene +/- Li-phosphates (montebrasite and lithiophilite), Fe-rich elbaite, lepidolite, and possible former petalite in the Spd subzone; Li-phosphates (main montebrasite and rare lithiophilite) + spodumene + Fe-bearing elbaite + lepidolite in the Mbs subzone; Fe-poor elbaite + lepidolite +/- montebrasite in the Elb subzone; and lepidolite +/- Fe-poor elbaite in the Lpd subzone. Whole-rock contents of Li2O, P2O5, B2O3, and F are consistent with the high contents of various Li minerals. Spodumene was formed first and dominantly from a Li-saturated melt in the Spd subzone (1.66 wt% Li2O). This subzone graduates into the P-rich Mbs subzone (3.75 wt% P2O5) with montebrasite gradually succeeding Li-aluminosilicates, followed by the appearance of abundant Fe-poor elbaite in the Elb subzone (1.04 wt% B2O3), reflecting the consumption of P in the melt. Lepidolite formed after early-formed Li phases in the F-rich Lpd subzone (2.03 wt% F), as indicated by replacement textures. Among the numerous LCT pegmatites worldwide, the Li mineralization sequence can be suggested as Li-aluminosilicates (commonly spodumene and less commonly petalite) -> Li-phosphates (montebrasite-amblygonite and triphylite-lithiophilite) -> elbaite -> lepidolite, and can be regarded as a general sequence for Li mineralization.

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