Pyrochlore-Group Minerals in the Granite-Hosted Katugin Rare-Metal Deposit, Transbaikalia, Russia
Autor: | S. V. Kanakin, Valentina B. Savel’eva, A. E. Starikova, Ekaterina P. Bazarova, Elena A. Khromova, Eugene V. Sklyarov |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
lcsh:QE351-399.2
Arfvedsonite 010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences Pyrochlore geology Geochemistry engineering.material 010502 geochemistry & geophysics 01 natural sciences Hydrothermal circulation chemistry.chemical_compound fluornatropyrochlore geochemistry_petrology pyrochlore-group minerals 0105 earth and related environmental sciences lcsh:Mineralogy East Transbaikalia geology.rock_type Geology Aegirine Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology Cryolite chemistry engineering Nepheline syenite alkaline granites Katugin rare-metal deposit Columbite Biotite |
Zdroj: | Minerals, Vol 9, Iss 8, p 490 (2019) Minerals Volume 9 Issue 8 |
ISSN: | 2075-163X |
DOI: | 10.3390/min9080490 |
Popis: | Pyrochlore group minerals are the main raw phases in granitic rocks of the Katugin complex-ore deposit that stores Nb, Ta, Y, REE, U, Th, Zr, and cryolite. There are three main types: Primary magmatic, early postmagmatic (secondary-I), and late hydrothermal (secondary-II) pyrochlores. The primary magmatic phase is fluornatropyrochlore, which has high concentrations of Na2O (to 10.5 wt.%), F (to 5.4 wt.%), and REE2O3 (to 17.3 wt.%) but also low CaO (0.6&ndash 4.3 wt.%), UO2 (to 2.6 wt.%), ThO2 (to 1.8 wt.%), and PbO (to 1.4 wt.%). Pyrochlore of this type is very rare in nature and is limited to a few occurrences: Rare-metal deposits of Nechalacho in syenite and nepheline syenite (Canada) and Mariupol in nepheline syenite (Ukraine). It may have crystallized synchronously with or slightly later than melanocratic minerals (aegirine, biotite, and arfvedsonite) at the late magmatic stage when Fe from the melt became bound, which hindered the crystallization of columbite. Secondary-I pyrochlore follows cracks or replaces primary pyrochlore in grain rims and is compositionally similar to the early phase, except for lower Na2O concentrations (2.8 wt.%), relatively low F (4 wt.%), and less complete A- and Y-sites occupancy. Secondary-II pyrochlore is a product of late hydrothermal alteration, which postdated the formation of the Katugin deposit. It differs in large ranges of elements and contains minor K, Ba, Pb, Fe, and significant Si concentrations but also low Na and F. Its composition mostly falls within the field of hydro- and keno-pyrochlore. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: | |
Nepřihlášeným uživatelům se plný text nezobrazuje | K zobrazení výsledku je třeba se přihlásit. |