T. Imaoka, J. Kimura, Q. Chang, T. Ishikawa, M. Nagashima, N. Takeshita
{"title":"Chemical and lithium isotope characteristics of murakamiite and Li–rich pectolite from Iwagi Islet, Southwest Japan","authors":"T. Imaoka, J. Kimura, Q. Chang, T. Ishikawa, M. Nagashima, N. Takeshita","doi":"10.2465/JMPS.200721","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"We report in situ major and trace element and Li isotope analyses of murakamiite and Li – rich pectolite in an albitite and whole – rock analyses of the albitite and host granite from Iwagi Islet, SW Japan. The albitite forms small bodies that are several tens of centimeters to tens of meters in size, disseminated in a host granite of Late Cretaceous age. The studied murakamiite – bearing albitite contains albite, sugilite, aegirine – augite, quartz, murakamiite – Li – rich pectolite, microcline, katayamalite, and accessory minerals. It shows conspicuous strain – induced textures. The murakamiite and Li – rich pectolite form a solid solution with Li × 100/(Li + Na) atomic ratios ranging from 44.2 to 60.1, and the Na line pro fi les show a zoning structure in which Na decreases from core to rim. Major and trace element compositions of murakamiite – pectolite normalized to that of albitite in-dicate the enrichments of some elements, particularly in Mn, Ca, Li, Sr, and REEs, roughly on the same order of magnitude (~ 10 times). The albitite – normalized element concentrations vary systematically with ionic radius of the element; the normalized concentrations of cations with the same valence roughly form a simple convex parabolic curve when plot against the ionic radius. This indicates that the element partitioning of murakamiite and pectolite during metasomatism to form albitite took place under a strong control of crystal structure, quasi – equilibrated with metasomatic fl uids and coexisting minerals. The δ 7 Li values of murakamiite and Li – rich pectolite show a wide range from − 9.1 to +0.4 ‰ (average − 2.9 ‰ ), and no obvious correlation with Li contents was observed. These δ 7 Li values should have resulted from hydrothermal fl uid – rock interactions at the temperatures of 300 – 600 °C. The very low δ 7 Li values down to − 9.1 ‰ may have originated from intra – crystalline Li isotope di ff usion, or involvement of deep – seated, Li – Na – enriched subduction – zone fl uids with low δ 7 Li values. ,","PeriodicalId":51093,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Mineralogical and Petrological Sciences","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.9000,"publicationDate":"2021-02-10","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"6","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Mineralogical and Petrological Sciences","FirstCategoryId":"89","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2465/JMPS.200721","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"地球科学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"MINERALOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 6
Abstract
We report in situ major and trace element and Li isotope analyses of murakamiite and Li – rich pectolite in an albitite and whole – rock analyses of the albitite and host granite from Iwagi Islet, SW Japan. The albitite forms small bodies that are several tens of centimeters to tens of meters in size, disseminated in a host granite of Late Cretaceous age. The studied murakamiite – bearing albitite contains albite, sugilite, aegirine – augite, quartz, murakamiite – Li – rich pectolite, microcline, katayamalite, and accessory minerals. It shows conspicuous strain – induced textures. The murakamiite and Li – rich pectolite form a solid solution with Li × 100/(Li + Na) atomic ratios ranging from 44.2 to 60.1, and the Na line pro fi les show a zoning structure in which Na decreases from core to rim. Major and trace element compositions of murakamiite – pectolite normalized to that of albitite in-dicate the enrichments of some elements, particularly in Mn, Ca, Li, Sr, and REEs, roughly on the same order of magnitude (~ 10 times). The albitite – normalized element concentrations vary systematically with ionic radius of the element; the normalized concentrations of cations with the same valence roughly form a simple convex parabolic curve when plot against the ionic radius. This indicates that the element partitioning of murakamiite and pectolite during metasomatism to form albitite took place under a strong control of crystal structure, quasi – equilibrated with metasomatic fl uids and coexisting minerals. The δ 7 Li values of murakamiite and Li – rich pectolite show a wide range from − 9.1 to +0.4 ‰ (average − 2.9 ‰ ), and no obvious correlation with Li contents was observed. These δ 7 Li values should have resulted from hydrothermal fl uid – rock interactions at the temperatures of 300 – 600 °C. The very low δ 7 Li values down to − 9.1 ‰ may have originated from intra – crystalline Li isotope di ff usion, or involvement of deep – seated, Li – Na – enriched subduction – zone fl uids with low δ 7 Li values. ,
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Mineralogical and Petrological Sciences (JMPS) publishes original articles, reviews and letters in the fields of mineralogy, petrology, economic geology, geochemistry, planetary materials science, and related scientific fields. As an international journal, we aim to provide worldwide diffusion for the results of research in Japan, as well as to serve as a medium with high impact factor for the global scientific communication
Given the remarkable rate at which publications have been expanding to include several fields, including planetary and earth sciences, materials science, and instrumental analysis technology, the journal aims to encourage and develop a variety of such new interdisciplinary scientific fields, to encourage the wide scope of such new fields to bloom in the future, and to contribute to the rapidly growing international scientific community.
To cope with this emerging scientific environment, in April 2000 the journal''s two parent societies, MSJ* (The Mineralogical Society of Japan) and JAMPEG* (The Japanese Association of Mineralogists, Petrologists and Economic Geologists), combined their respective journals (the Mineralogical Journal and the Journal of Mineralogy, Petrology and Economic Geology). The result of this merger was the Journal of Mineralogical and Petrological Sciences, which has a greatly expanded and enriched scope compared to its predecessors.