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Chemistry of chromites from Arroio Grande Ophiolite (Dom Feliciano Belt, Brazil) and their possible connection with the Nama Group (Namibia).
- Source :
-
Journal of South American Earth Sciences . Dec2017, Vol. 80, p192-206. 15p. - Publication Year :
- 2017
-
Abstract
- The present paper shows a mineral chemistry study in chromites found in serpentine-talc schists of the Arroio Grande Ophiolite, located in the southeastern Dom Feliciano Belt, near the Brazil/Uruguay border. Using electron microscope scanning and electron microprobe techniques, this study found a supra-subduction zone signature in the chromites, together with evidence of metasomatism. It corroborates previous hypothesis that suggested a supra-subduction zone origin for the protoliths of the Arroio Grande meta-igneous rocks and a metasomatic origin for the chromite-bearing magnesian schists. The studied chromites present high Cr# (0.65–0.77) and Fe 2+ # (0.88–0.95), low MgO (0.85–2.47 wt%) and TiO 2 (0.01–0.19 wt%) and anomalous high concentration of ZnO (up to 1.97 wt%). The results were compared with chemical data from detrital chromites from the Schwarzrand and Fish River Subgroups of the Nama Group (Namibia), demonstrating that they are compositionally similar with those found in the latter. These chromites, in turn, are believed to have been derived from the oceanic Marmora Terrane (Gariep Belt) in the west (present-day coordinates). Taking into consideration that oceanic metamafites from both the latter and the Arroio Grande Ophiolite share common bulk-rock geochemical features (in this paper interpreted as fragments of the same paleo-ocean floor – the Marmora back-arc basin), it is possible to raise the hypothesis that detrital material derived from the studied ophiolite might also be found in Nama Group. It is reinforced by the fact that sediments (related to the Pelotas-Aiguá Batholith granitoids) derived from the easternmost Dom Feliciano Belt, i.e. the region where Arroio Grande Ophiolite is located, is found in both Schwarzrand and Fish River Subgroups. Thus, we suggest that Arroio Grande Ophiolite detrital sediments might also have contributed to the Nama Basin infilling during Late Ediacaran-Lower Cambrian. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Subjects :
- *CHROMITE
*GEOCHEMISTRY
*OPHIOLITES
*MAGNETES
*METASOMATISM
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 08959811
- Volume :
- 80
- Database :
- Academic Search Index
- Journal :
- Journal of South American Earth Sciences
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 126364899
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsames.2017.09.032