Petrologie du complexe alcalin sous-sature de Kokoumi (Cameroun)

2001 ◽  
Vol 172 (6) ◽  
pp. 675-686 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ismaila Ngounouno ◽  
Christian Moreau ◽  
Bernard Deruelle ◽  
Daniel Demaiffe ◽  
Raymond Montigny

Abstract The Cameroon Line was created by the rejuvenation, at the beginning of the opening of the Atlantic Ocean, of a Pan-African N070 degrees E fracture zone [Moreau et al., 1987], which acted as a huge lithospheric crack taping a hot asthenospheric zone [Deruelle et al., 1998; Marzoli et al., 2000]. The Kokoumi anorogenic pluton belongs to the E-W Garoua rift structure, which represents the easternmost extension of the Benue trough. The Garoua rift opened during the Neocomian-Lower Aptian ages [Benkhelil, 1988] through the rejuvenation of Pan-African normal faults. The rift subsided, was partially filled by conglomerates and sandstones, and the ensemble was folded in the Cretaceous period [Guiraud, 1993]. Post-Cretaceous faulting affected these sediments. Intrusion of the Kokoumi anorogenic complex through the Cretaceous sandstones was favoured by N-S, N070 degrees E, E-W and N135 degrees E faults and N030 degrees E extension [Moreau et al., 1987]. The Kokoumi complex was first described by Koch [1959]. It is composed of a plutonic gabbro-nepheline monzosyenite-nepheline syenite series and of lamprophyric dykes (monchiquites and camptonites). One trachyte dyke is also observed. The gabbros are olivine (Fo 70 )-, nepheline-, or kaersutite-bearing gabbros. They also contain Ti-Al-rich diopside, Ti-rich biotite, titanite, ilmenite, Ti-magnetite and apatite. The nepheline monzosyenites contain diopside, Fe-diopside, kaersutite, Fe-kaersutite, titanite and apatite. The nepheline syenites contain aegirine-augite, F-rich arfvedsonite and aenigmatite. Kaersutite and clinopyroxene predominate in the lamprophyres. Monchiquites and gabbros, camptonites and monzosyenites, display respective similar mineralogy. Monchiquites contain carbonate ocelli. The trachyte does not contain ferromagnesian minerals. For gabbros and monchiquites, equilibrium Fe-Ti oxide temperatures are between 650 and 750 degrees C (+ or -40 degrees C) and oxygen fugacities between 10 (super -15) and 10 (super -14) (+ or -0.5 X 10 (super -15) ) atmospheres, according to Spencer and Lindsley [1981]. Nepheline crystallized below 700 degrees C, according to Hamilton [1961]. All the rocks (except the trachyte) are nepheline normative (Ne 6 to Ne 40 ). Major and trace element distributions in MgO-element diagrams for the two series merge together into a single trend, from monchiquites to nepheline syenites. Nevertheless, the monchiquites trends have different slopes. We deduce the evolution from gabbros to nepheline syenites on the one hand and from monchiquites to camptonites on the other from primitive mantle normalized multi-element diagrams. Multi-element diagrams for the trachyte and the nepheline syenite are strictly similar. Patterns for Kokoumi gabbros are similar to those for basalts of the Kapsiki plateau [Ngounouno et al., 2000] and the Garoua rift [Ngounouno et al., 1997] with typical negative K and positive Zr and Ti anomalies. Patterns for nepheline monzosyenites display negative anomalies in Sr, P, Eu and Ti and those for nepheline syenites and trachyte display greater anomalies in these elements and Ba. Compared to gabbros, nepheline monzosyenites are enriched in all REE with a concave upward pattern and no Eu-anomaly. Nepheline syenites have a range of broadly similar REE patterns to nepheline monzosyenites with steep slope from La to Sm, strong Eu negative anomaly (Eu/Eu (super *) nearly equal 0.15) and heavy-REE spoon-shape. REE patterns for monchiquites, camptonites, and trachyte are respectively similar to those for gabbros, monzosyenites, and nepheline syenite. Initial Sr-isotope ratios of 0.7033 (recalculated from the measured ratios for an age of 39 Ma for plutonic rocks and 20 Ma for the lamprophyres and the trachyte) are similar to those obtained for basalts from the continental segment of the Cameroon Line [Halliday et al., 1988; Ngounouno et al., 2000; Demaiffe et al., unpubl.], whereas nepheline syenites and trachyte are distinctly more radiogenic with values between 0.7128 and 0.7251. Amphibole and whole-rock K-Ar analyses (table III) yield 39.0+ or -0.9 Ma and 36.6+ or -0.9 Ma respectively. Since amphibole is a reliable chronometer in K-Ar dating, we propose the first age as the probable time of emplacement of the gabbros. Whole-rock analysis of nepheline syenite 99 displays an age of 33.1+ or -0.5 Ma. Field and geochemical observations suggest that gabbros and nepheline syenite are cogenetic and hence contemporaneous.

Minerals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 326
Author(s):  
Tae-Hyeon Kim ◽  
Seung-Gu Lee ◽  
Jae-Young Yu

Carbonate formations of the Cambro-Ordovician Period occur in the Taebaek and Jeongseon areas, located in the central–eastern part of the Korean Peninsula. This study analyzed the rare earth element (REE) contents and Sr–Nd isotope ratios in these carbonates to elucidate their depositional environment and diagenetic history. The CI chondrite-normalized REE patterns of the carbonates showed negative Eu anomalies (EuN/(SmN × GdN)1/2 = 0.50 to 0.81), but no Ce anomaly (Ce/Ce* = CeN/(LaN2 × NdN)1/3 = 1.01 ± 0.06). The plot of log (Ce/Ce*) against sea water depth indicates that the carbonates were deposited in a shallow-marine environment such as a platform margin. The 87Sr/86Sr ratios in both Taebaek and Jeongseon carbonates were higher than those in the seawater at the corresponding geological time. The 87Sr/86Sr ratios and the values of (La/Yb)N and (La/Sm)N suggest that the carbonates in the areas experienced diagenetic processes several times. Their 143Nd/144Nd ratios varied from 0.511841 to 0.511980. The low εNd values and high 87Sr/86Sr ratios in the carbonates may have resulted from the interaction with the hydrothermal fluid derived from the intrusive granite during the Cretaceous Period.


1993 ◽  
Vol 30 (6) ◽  
pp. 1110-1122 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. E. Camiré ◽  
J. N. Ludden ◽  
M. R. La Flèche ◽  
J. -P. Burg

In the northwestern Pontiac Subprovince, metavolcanic rocks are exposed within a metagraywacke sequence that is intruded by metamorphosed mafic dykes. The metavolcanics are Al-undepleted komatiites ([La/Sm]N = 0.3, [Tb/Yb]N = 0.9) and tholeiitic Fe-basalts ([La/Sm]N = 0.8 and [Tb/Yb]N = 0.8). The nearly flat chondrite-normalized distributions of high field strength elements (HFSE), Ti and P, the constant Zr/Y, Nb/Th, Ti/Zr, and Ti/P ratios, and the lack of depletion of HFSE relative to rare-earth elements (REE) in both ultramafic and mafic metavolcanics, imply that crustal assimilation and magma mixing with crustal melts were not significant during differentiation and argue against the presence of subduction-related magmatic components. Contemporaneous volcanism and sedimentation in the northwestern Pontiac Subprovince are unlikely. The metavolcanics do not show any evidence of crustal contamination and likely represent a structurally emplaced, disrupted assemblage, chemically similar to early volcanics of the adjacent southern Abitibi Subprovince.Metamorphosed mafic dykes intruding the metagraywackes are not genetically related to the metavolcanics. The dykes have high CaO, P2O5, K2O, Ba, Rb, and Sr, intermediate Cr and Ni contents, and strongly fractionated REE patterns ([La/Yb]N = 10.8). Normalized to the primitive mantle, they display pronounced negative Nb, Ta, Ti, Zr, and Hf anomalies. These amphibolites are metamorphosed equivalents of Mg-rich calc-alkaline lamprophyre dykes, most likely derived from a hybridized mantle source. Mantle metasomatism was probably related to a subduction event prior to the peak of compressional Kenoran deformation in the Pontiac Subprovince.


2008 ◽  
Vol 145 (4) ◽  
pp. 570-585 ◽  
Author(s):  
CÜNEYT AKAL

AbstractMiddle Miocene volcanic activity in the Afyon volcanic province (eastern part of Western Anatolia) is characterized by multistage potassic and ultrapotassic alkaline volcanic successions. The volcanism is generally related to the northward subduction of the African plate beneath the Eurasian Plate. In Afyon, the Middle Miocene volcanic products consist of melilite leucitite, tephriphonolite, trachyte, basaltic–trachyandesite, phonolite, phonotephrite, tephriphonolite and lamproite rocks. Near-surface emplacement and relatively quiescent subaerial eruptions of lamproitic magma produced different emplacement forms such as dome/plug-shaped bodies and lava flows, showing variation in volume and texture. The mineralogical constituents of the lamproites are sanidine, olivine (77 < Mg no. < 81), phlogopite (74 < Mg no. < 78), K-richterite, clinopyroxene (74 < Mg no. < 78), with accessory apatite, calcite and opaque minerals. Afyon lamproites resemble Mediterranean-type Si-rich lamproites. Their compositional range is 50–52 wt% SiO2, 4–8 wt% MgO, and they display a typical lamproitic affinity. Chondrite-normalized REE patterns exhibit enrichment in LREE relative to HREE ((La/Yb)CN=15.3–17.0). They show extreme enrichment in LILE relative to primitive mantle values and troughs of Nb and Ti. The lamproites give a range of high initial87Sr/86Sr ratios and low143Nd/144Nd ratios. The geochemical and isotopic characteristics suggest that lamproitic magma is derived from highly metasomatized mantle. The enrichment history may include metasomatic events related to subduction, as in other active orogenic areas of the Mediterranean.


2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 57 ◽  
Author(s):  
Augustin P. Moussango Ibohn ◽  
François Mvondo Owono ◽  
Bernard Njom ◽  
Simon P. Mbog Bassong ◽  
Jean-Paul Sep Nlomngan ◽  
...  

Morphometric parameters extracted fromDEM (90 m) combined with field and literature data of Edéa region, a portion of Cameroonian passive margin located between 3°43’ - 4°00 ’N and 10°00’ - 10°15’E, were used to constraint the present day landscape and forces that have acted and is currently acting on its evolving topography. The obtained results show that the Sanaga Fault is one of the main driver forces responsible for this evolution. Set up during the Pan-African orogeny, this fault which affects a good part of the Proterozoic basement and Tertiary sedimentary cover has developed two systems of secondary active faults different by their nature and characteristics, quite visible in the Edéa region: the Ekitté System, shearing normal faults with a N-S to NNE-SSW strike and the Sanaga-Batignol System shearing directional faults with a NW-SE strike. Most of these faults constitute the river beds and play iteratively, deeply affecting both the drainage system and the landscape. Morphometric indices used reveal that the landscape has been rejuvenated and experiences uplifts and tiltings to present-day due to these reactivations. Structural and petrographical analyses confirm the current role played by the Sanaga Fault and its systems in the segmentation of the region into block tectonics and the occurrence of pseudotachylites and tectonic breccia. Block tectonics, pseudotachylites, tectonic breccias are accompanied with the recent earth tremors with magnitudes comprised between 2.6 and 4.0 on the Richter scale highlighting the neotectonics in this region.


Solid Earth ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 915-938 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. V. Ashchepkov ◽  
N. V. Alymova ◽  
A. M. Logvinova ◽  
N. V. Vladykin ◽  
S. S. Kuligin ◽  
...  

Abstract. Major and trace element variations in picroilmenites from Late Devonian kimberlite pipes in Siberia reveal similarities within the region in general, but show individual features for ilmenites from different fields and pipes. Empirical ilmenite thermobarometry (Ashchepkov et al., 2010), as well as common methods of mantle thermobarometry and trace element geochemical modeling, shows long compositional trends for the ilmenites. These are a result of complex processes of polybaric fractionation of protokimberlite melts, accompanied by the interaction with mantle wall rocks and dissolution of previous wall rock and metasomatic associations. Evolution of the parental magmas for the picroilmenites was determined for the three distinct phases of kimberlite activity from Yubileynaya and nearby Aprelskaya pipes, showing heating and an increase of Fe# (Fe# = Fe / (Fe + Mg) a.u.) of mantle peridotite minerals from stage to stage and splitting of the magmatic system in the final stages. High-pressure (5.5–7.0 GPa) Cr-bearing Mg-rich ilmenites (group 1) reflect the conditions of high-temperature metasomatic rocks at the base of the mantle lithosphere. Trace element patterns are enriched to 0.1–10/relative to primitive mantle (PM) and have flattened, spoon-like or S- or W-shaped rare earth element (REE) patterns with Pb > 1. These result from melting and crystallization in melt-feeding channels in the base of the lithosphere, where high-temperature dunites, harzburgites and pyroxenites were formed. Cr-poor ilmenite megacrysts (group 2) trace the high-temperature path of protokimberlites developed as result of fractional crystallization and wall rock assimilation during the creation of the feeder systems prior to the main kimberlite eruption. Inflections in ilmenite compositional trends probably reflect the mantle layering and pulsing melt intrusion during melt migration within the channels. Group 2 ilmenites have inclined REE enriched patterns (10–100)/PM with La / Ybn ~ 10–25, similar to those derived from kimberlites, with high-field-strength elements (HFSE) peaks (typical megacrysts). A series of similar patterns results from polybaric Assimilation + fractional crystallization (AFC) crystallization of protokimberlite melts which also precipitated sulfides (Pb < 1) and mixed with partial melts from garnet peridotites. Relatively low-Ti ilmenites with high-Cr content (group 3) probably crystallized in the metasomatic front under the rising protokimberlite source and represent the product of crystallization of segregated partial melts from metasomatic rocks. Cr-rich ilmenites are typical of veins and veinlets in peridotites crystallized from highly contaminated magma intruded into wall rocks in different levels within the mantle columns. Ilmenites which have the highest trace element contents (1000/PM) have REE patterns similar to those of perovskites. Low Cr contents suggest relatively closed system fractionation which occurred from the base of the lithosphere up to the garnet–spinel transition, according to monomineral thermobarometry for Mir and Dachnaya pipes. Restricted trends were detected for ilmenites from Udachnaya and most other pipes from the Daldyn–Alakit fields and other regions (Nakyn, Upper Muna and Prianabarie), where ilmenite trends extend from the base of the lithosphere mainly up to 4.0 GPa. Interaction of the megacryst forming melts with the mantle lithosphere caused heating and HFSE metasomatism prior to kimberlite eruption.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pan Qu ◽  
Wubin Yang

Figure S1: Harker diagrams illustrating major elemental variations of the porphyry and wall rock. QGP—Qiancuoluo granodioritic porphyry; QBG—Qiancuoluo biotite granodiorite; Figure S2: (a) Chondrite-normalized REE patterns and (b) primitive mantle (PM)-normalized spider diagrams of the porphyry and wall rock. Normalizing values are taken from S. Sun and McDonough (1989); Table S1: Whole-rock major and trace element compositions of the Qiancuoluo granodioritic porphyry (QGP) and Qiancuoluo biotite granodiorite (QBG) granites; Table S2: Whole-rock Sr-Nd compositions of the Qiancuoluo granodioritic porphyry (QGP) and Qiancuoluo biotite granodiorite (QBG); Table S3: Apatite major and trace elements (ppm) of the Qiancuoluo granodioritic porphyry (QGP) and Qiancuoluo biotite granodiorite (QBG); Table S4: Apatite Sr and Nd isotope data of the Qiancuoluo granodioritic porphyry (QGP) and Qiancuoluo biotite granodiorite (QBG); Table S5: Apatite U-Pb isotope data of the Qiancuoluo granodioritic porphyry (QGP) and Qiancuoluo biotite granodiorite (QBG).


2013 ◽  
Vol 150 (5) ◽  
pp. 835-861 ◽  
Author(s):  
AMARA MASROUHI ◽  
OLIVIER BELLIER ◽  
HEMIN KOYI ◽  
JEAN-MARIE VILA ◽  
MOHAMED GHANMI

AbstractDetailed geological mapping, dating, and gravimetric and seismic data are used to interpret the Lansarine–Baouala salt structure (North Tunisia) as a salt canopy emplaced during the Cretaceous Period. The extensional tectonic regime related to the Cretaceous continental margin offered at least two factors that encouraged buried Triassic salt to extrude onto the sea floor and flow downslope: (i) extension induced normal faults that provided routes to the surface, and led to the formation of sub-marine slopes along which salt could flow; (ii) this structural setting led to differential sedimentation and consequently differential loading as a mechanism for salt movement. The present 40-km-long Lansarine–Baouala salt structure with its unique mass of allochthonous Triassic salt at surface was fed from at least four stems. The salt structure is recognized as one of the few examples worldwide of a subaerial salt canopy due to the coalescence of submarine sheets of Triassic salt extruded in Cretaceous times.


1993 ◽  
Vol 130 (3) ◽  
pp. 335-343 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simon C. Milner ◽  
Anton P. Le Roex ◽  
Ronald T. Watkins

AbstractThe Okenyenya igneous complex is one of a suite of intrusions which define a prominent northeast-trending linear feature in Damaraland, northwestern Namibia. Precise Rb–Sr internal isochron ages range from 128.6 ± 1 to 123.4 ± 1.4 Ma for the major phases of intrusion identified within the complex. The tholeiitic gabbros forming the outer rings of the complex, and the later alkali gabbros which form the central hills, cannot be distinguished in terms of Rb–Sr ages, although field relations clearly indicate the younger age of the latter. The intrusionsof nepheline-syenite and essexite comprising the mountain of Okenyenya Bergon the northern edge of the complex give ages of 123.4 ± 1.4 and 126.3 ± 1 Ma, respectively, and form the final major phase of intrusion. The ages obtained for early and late intrusive phases define a minimum magmatic ‘life-span’ of approximately 5 Ma for the complex. The determined age of the Okenyenya igneous complex (129–123 Ma), when taken together with the few reliable published ages for other Damaraland complexes (130–134 Ma), suggests that these sub-volcanic complexes were emplaced contemporaneously with the widespread Etendeka volcanics (˜ 130 Ma), and relate to magmatism associated with the breakup of southern Africa and South America with the opening of the South Atlantic Ocean. The linear distributionof intrusions in Damaraland is interpreted to be due to magmatism resultingfrom the upwelling Tristan plume being focused along a structural discontinuity between the Pan-African, Damaran terrain to the south, and Proterozoiccratonic basement to the north.


1871 ◽  
Vol 8 (90) ◽  
pp. 540-544 ◽  
Author(s):  
William Carruthers

It is a singular coincidence that in a former communication to this Magazine (Vol. VI., p. 1) I described, among other Coniferous fruits, two from the Gault at Folkestone, the one the cone of a pine, and the other of a Wellingtonia, and that in this communication I propose to describe two hitherto unknown fruits from the same deposit and found at the same locality, belonging also the one to a Wellingtonia and the other to a pine. Although the small pinecone already described (Pinites gracilis) differs in form and in the arrangement of the scales from any known cone, recent or fossil, it is more nearly related to that group of the section Pinea, the members of which are now associated with the Wellingtonias in the west of North America, than with any other member of the great genus Pinus. I, however, hesitated to refer to this interesting fact, because the occurrence of the two cones in the Gault might have been due to their being accidentally brought into the same silt by rivers having widely separated drainage areas. And it is easier to keep back generalizations based on imperfect data, than to suppress them after publication, when in the progress of investigation they are shown to be false. But I have now to describe a second pinecone more closely related to the Californian species of Pinea, and with it a new species of Wellingtonia. These surely point with tolerable certainty to the existence of a Coniferous vegetation on the high lands of the Upper Cretaceous period having a fades similar to that now existing in the mountains on the west of North America, between the thirtieth and fortieth parallels of latitude. No fossil referable to Sequoia has hitherto been found in strata older than the Gault, and here on the first appearance of the genus we find it associated with pines of the same group that now flourish by its side in the New World.


2008 ◽  
Vol 145 (6) ◽  
pp. 845-857 ◽  
Author(s):  
TAI-PING ZHAO ◽  
MEI-FU ZHOU ◽  
JUN-HONG ZHAO ◽  
KAI-JUN ZHANG ◽  
WEI CHEN

AbstractThe Rutog granitic pluton lies in the Gangdese magmatic arc in the westernmost part of the Lhasa Terrane, NW Tibet, and has SHRIMP zircon U–Pb ages of c. 80 Ma. The pluton consists of granodiorite and monzogranite with SiO2 ranging from 62 to 72 wt% and Al2 O3 from 15 to 17 wt%. The rocks contain 2.33–4.93 wt% K2O and 3.42–5.52 wt% Na2O and have Na2O/K2O ratios of 0.74–2.00. Their chondrite-normalized rare earth element (REE) patterns are enriched in LREE ((La/Yb)n = 15 to 26) and do not show significant Eu anomalies (δEu = 0.68–1.15). On a primitive mantle-normalized trace element diagram, the rocks are rich in large ion lithophile elements (LILE) and poor in high field strength elements (HFSE), HREE and Y. Their Sr/Y ratios range from 15 to 78 with an average of 30. The rocks have constant initial 87Sr/86Sr ratios (0.7045 to 0.7049) and slightly positive ɛNd(t) values (+0.1 to +2.3), similar to I-type granites generated in an arc setting. The geochemistry of the Rutog pluton is best explained by partial melting of a thickened continental crust, triggered by underplating of basaltic magmas in a mantle wedge. The formation of the Rutog pluton suggests flat subduction of the Neo-Tethyan oceanic lithosphere from the south. Crustal thickening may have occurred in the Late Cretaceous prior to the India–Asia collision.


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