6533b871fe1ef96bd12d1bf6

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Ca-rich carbonates associated with ultrabasic-ultramafic melts. Carbonatite or limestone xenoliths? A case study from the late Miocene Morron de Villamayor volcano (Calatrava Volcanic Field, central Spain)

LustrinoM.PrelevićD.AgostiniS.GaetaM.Di RoccoT.CapizziL. S.

subject

alkali basalts010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesGeochemistrySkarnMediterraneanengineering.material010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencespetrologygeochemistry; petrology; carbonate; carbonatite; olivine; mantle; alkaline; Spain; Cenozoic; MagmatismPetrographychemistry.chemical_compoundcarbonateGeochemistry and PetrologyUltramafic rockolivineNeogene volcanism0105 earth and related environmental sciencesgeochemistryPeridotiteOlivineCenozoicAragoniteMagmatismcarbonatitechemistry13. Climate actionSpainCarbonatiteengineeringCarbonatealkalineGeologymantle

description

The volcanic products of the late Miocene Morron de Villamayor volcano (Calatrava Volcanic Field, central Spain) are known for being one of the few outcrops of leucitites in the entire circum-Mediterranean area. These rocks are important because aragonite of mantle origin has been reported as inclusion in olivine macrocrysts. We use petrographic observations, mineral compositions, as well as oxygen and carbon isotope ratios coupled with experimental petrology to understand the origin of carbonate phase in these olivine-phyric rocks. Groundmass and macrocryst olivines range from δ18OVSMOW of +4.8‰, typical of mantle olivine values, to +7.4‰, indicating contamination by sedimentary carbonate. Carbonates are characterized by heavy oxygen isotope compositions (δ18OVSMOW >+24‰), and relatively light carbon isotopes (δ13CPDB <−11‰), resembling skarn values, and distinct from typical mantle carbonatite compositions. Petrography, mineral compositions such as low Mg# of clinopyroxene and biotite, low Ca# and low incompatible element abundance of the carbonate, and isotopic ratios of O and C, do not support a mantle origin for the carbonate. Rather, the carbonate inclusions found in the olivine macrocrysts are interpreted as basement limestone fragments entrapped by the rising crystallizing magma. Comparison with experimental carbonatitic and silicate-carbonatitic melts indicates that low-degree partial melts of a carbonated peridotite must have a dolomitic rather than the aragonitic/calcitic composition as those found trapped in the Morron de Villamayor olivine macrocrysts.

10.1016/j.gca.2016.02.026http://hdl.handle.net/11573/925358