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Melt inclusion record of immiscibility between silicate, hydrosaline, and carbonate melts: applications to skarn genesis at Mount Vesuvius
- Source :
- Geology. Nov, 2001, Vol. 29 Issue 11, p1043, 4 p.
- Publication Year :
- 2001
-
Abstract
- Foid-bearing syenites and endoskarn xenoliths of the A.D. 472 Vesuvius eruption represent the magma chamber-carbonate wall-rock interface. Melt inclusions hosted in crystals from these rocks offer a rare opportunity to depict the formation and the composition of metasomatic skarn-forming fluids at the peripheral part of a growing K-alkaline magma chamber disrupted by an explosive eruption. Four principal types of melt inclusions represent highly differentiated phonolite (type 1), hydrosaline melt (type 3), unmixed silicatesalt melts (type 2), and a complex chloride-carbonate melt with minor sulfates (type 4). The high-temperature (700-800 [degrees] C) magmatic-derived hydrosaline melt is considered to be the main metasomatic agent for the skarn-forming reactions. The interaction between this melt (fluid) and carbonate wall rocks produces a Na-K-Ca carbonate-chloride melt that shows immiscibility between carbonate and chloride constituents at ~700 [degrees] C in 1 atm experiments. This unmixing can be viewed as a possible mechanism for the origin of carbonatites associated with intrusion-related skarn systems. Keywords: Vesuvius, skarn, melt inclusions, immiscibility.
Details
- ISSN :
- 00917613
- Volume :
- 29
- Issue :
- 11
- Database :
- Gale General OneFile
- Journal :
- Geology
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- edsgcl.80852472