Formation of composite dykes by contact remelting and magma mingling: The Shaluta pluton, Transbaikalia (Russia)

B. A. Litvinovsky, A. N. Zanvilevich, Y. Katzir

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

A unique opportunity to study the source areas, from which composite dykes were injected, occurs in the Shaluta pluton, Transbaikalia, Russia. The major quartz syenite pluton was intruded by several synplutonic gabbro bodies of various sizes. Investigations of the contact zones between gabbro and host syenite showed that liquid basalt magma intruded the incompletely crystallized coarse-grained quartz syenite with T=700-720°C and caused contact remelting of the silicic rock at about 900-950°C. Mechanical interaction between newly formed silicic melt and partially crystallized mafic magma resulted in extensive magma mingling. Chemical interaction was exhibited by migration of MgO, CaO, FeO *, Sr, H 2O and Cl from the basalt magma, whereas silica, alkalis, Rb and Ba migrated from the silicic refusion zone into the crystallized gabbro. Presence of melt inclusions with homogenization temperature ranging from 640 to 790°C in quartz and attaining 850-900°C in late clinopyroxene indicates that at least part of newly formed minerals crystallized from the hybrid melt. Mingled magmatic material was squeezed out inwards, into the host solid quartz syenite pluton and formed dyke-like apophyses that can be traced for a distance of 60-70m from the contact zone. Apophyses have the same dimensions, structure and composition as typical composite dykes that are common in the roof pendant over the gabbro bodies and nearby the gabbro exposures.

Original languageAmerican English
Pages (from-to)18-30
Number of pages13
JournalJournal of Asian Earth Sciences
Volume60
DOIs
StatePublished - 22 Oct 2012

Keywords

  • Composite dykes
  • Contact melting
  • Magma mingling
  • Melt inclusions
  • Russia
  • Transbaikalia

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Geology
  • Earth-Surface Processes

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