4.5 Article

Crystallization of primitive basaltic magmas at crustal pressures and genesis of the calc-alkaline igneous suite: experimental evidence from St Vincent, Lesser Antilles arc

Journal

CONTRIBUTIONS TO MINERALOGY AND PETROLOGY
Volume 154, Issue 5, Pages 535-558

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00410-007-0208-6

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Near-liquidus crystallization experiments have been carried out on two basalts (12.5 and 7.8 wt% MgO) from Soufriere, St Vincent (Lesser Antilles arc) to document the early stages of differentiation in calc-alkaline magmas. The water-undersaturated experiments were performed mostly at 4 kbar, with 1.6 to 7.7 wt% H2O in the melt, and under oxidizing conditions (Delta NNO = -0.8 to +2.4). A few 10 kbar experiments were also performed. Early differentiation of primitive, hydrous, high-magnesia basalts (HMB) is controlled by ol + cpx + sp fractionation. Residual melts of typical high-alumina basalt (HAB) composition are obtained after 30-40% crystallization. The role of H2O in depressing plagioclase crystallization leads to a direct relation between the Al2O3 content of the residual melt and its H2O concentration, calibrated as a geohygrometer. The most primitive phenocryst assemblage in the Soufriere suite (Fo(89.6) olivine, Mg-, Al- and Ti-rich clinopyroxene, Cr-Al spinel) crystallized from near-primary (Mg# = 73.5), hydrous (similar to 5 wt% H2O) and very oxidized (Delta NNO = +1.5-2.0) HMB liquids at middle crustal pressures and temperatures from similar to 1,160 to similar to 1,060 degrees C. Hornblende played no role in the early petrogenetic evolution. Derivative HAB melts may contain up to 7-8 wt% dissolved H2O. Primitive basaltic liquids at Soufriere, St Vincent, have a wide range of H2O concentrations (2-5 wt%).

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