Extreme peralkalinity in delhayelite- and andremeyerite-bearing nephelinite from Nyiragongo volcano, East African Rift

Tom Andersen, Marlina A. Elburg, Muriel Erambert

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

18 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Highly peralkaline leucite nephelinite from the active volcano Nyiragongo in the Virunga province of the East African Rift contains globules of iron- and volatile-rich, highly peralkaline silicate glass with (Na+K)/Al up to 18 which has formed as a late differentiate of less peralkaline precursors, probably by fractional crystallization at a shallow level in the volcanic system. A number of uncommon minerals coexist with this glass (kalsilite, kirschsteinite, chlorbartonite, götzenite, delhayelite, umbrianite, zirconian cuspidine, andremeyerite (BaFe2Si2O7), other Ba-Fe-Ti silicate minerals, and unnamed alkali-barium phosphate and Zr-Nb-Ti silicate minerals). These minerals are members of late magmatic assemblages that have survived sub-solidus recrystallization. Combeite occurs as a near-solidus mineral. Low-variance mineral assemblages in Nyiragongo nephelinite define a cooling trend from eruptive temperatures ≥. 980. °C to the solidus of extremely peralkaline residual liquids at ca. 600. °C, followed by sub-solidus recrystallization and metasomatism down to ca. 500. °C. Oxygen fugacity well below the QFM buffer (QFM-2 to -3) persisted throughout the magmatic crystallization stage, but increased to above QFM during the final stage of postmagmatic recrystallization.Highly alkaline, volatile-rich minerals such as delhayelite, götzenite and cuspidine were stabilized by a combination of high peralkalinity and elevated activity of chlorine and fluorine; these conditions persisted to sub-solidus temperatures.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)164-178
Number of pages15
JournalLithos
Volume206-207
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2014

Keywords

  • Combeite
  • Extreme magmatic differentiation
  • Götzenite
  • Halogen activity
  • Peralkaline nephelinite
  • Residual glass

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Geology
  • Geochemistry and Petrology

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