Applied Biophysics
Aether
Dodecahedron
  Research Laboratory   

NEW WEB SITE FOR Applied Biophysics Aether Research Laboratory: Enter Here

Hello and Welcome to the Research 'Webside'  jorney in to the Secrets of the Creation ..........
Welcome (Applied Biophysics)

Research Archive Contents:

7.01.2008

Apatite–monazite relations in the Kiirunavaara magnetite–apatite ore, northern Sweden

Apatite–monazite relations in the Kiirunavaara magnetite–apatite ore, northern Sweden

Daniel E. Harlov, Ulf B. Andersson, Hans-Jürgen Förster, Jan Olov Nyström, Peter Dulski and Curt Broman

GeoForschungsZentrum Potsdam, Telegrafenberg, D-14473, Potsdam, Germany

Institute of Earth Sciences, University of Potsdam, D-14415, Potsdam, Germany

Naturhistoriska Riksmuseet, Box 50007, SE-10405, Stockholm, Sweden

Institute of Geology and Geochemistry, Stockholm University, SE-10691, Stockholm, Sweden



Available online 4 September 2002.

Abstract

The magnetite–apatite ores in the Kiruna area, northern Sweden, are generally considered to be of magmatic origin formed in a subvolcanic–volcanic environment during the early Proterozoic. They are thought to have crystallised from volatile-rich iron oxide magmas derived by immiscibility in calc-alkaline to slightly alkaline parental magmas. Three major morphological types of the magnetite–apatite ore (primary, brecciated, and banded) have been investigated for textural relations and mineral chemistry using transmitted light, back-scattered electron imaging (BSE), electron microprobe analysis (EMPA), and laser ablation–inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (LA–ICPMS). In all three types, Th- and U-poor monazite is present as small inclusions in the apatite. Larger (up to 150 μm) recrystallised monazite grains, both along apatite grain boundaries and intergrown with magnetite and silicate minerals, are present in the brecciated and banded samples. Primary apatite grains, without monazite inclusions, are generally enriched in light rare earth elements (LREEs) together with Na and Si.

Petrological and mineralogical evidence suggest that the Kiruna magnetite–apatite ore experienced successive stages of fluid–rock interaction. The first stage occurred under high-temperature conditions (700–800 °C) shortly after emplacement and crystallisation of the ore magmas and involved concentrated, probably Cl-dominated brines expelled from the magma. This fluid is held to be responsible for the nucleation of the numerous small monazite inclusions within the apatite due to high-temperature leaching of Na and Si, while the LREEs were concentrated in the monazite. The large monazite grains in the brecciated and banded samples are proposed to be the product of recrystallisation from the much smaller monazite inclusions.

During greenschist-facies metamorphism (T=300–400 °C), fluids from the surrounding country rock caused strong (LREE+Na+Si) depletion along apatite grain boundaries and cracks in the apatite. LREEs were either redeposited as monazite grains along apatite grain boundaries or were flushed out of the ore. This fluid interaction also introduced the silicate components responsible for the interstitial formation of allanite, talc, tremolite, chlorite, serpentine, muscovite, quartz, and carbonates along apatite grain boundaries.

Author Keywords: Kiruna; Apatite; Magnetite; Monazite; Brines; Orebody

Article Outline
'Eyes haven't seen, ears haven't heard, nor have the hearts of men even thought about all the things that Yahweh, the Eternal Father, has prepared for those who Love Him.'