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The Rustenburg Layered Suite formed as a stack of mush with transient magma chambers

Zhuosen Yao, James E. Mungall () and M. Christopher Jenkins
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Zhuosen Yao: Carleton University
James E. Mungall: Carleton University
M. Christopher Jenkins: Carleton University

Nature Communications, 2021, vol. 12, issue 1, 1-13

Abstract: Abstract The Rustenburg Layered Suite of the Bushveld Complex of South Africa is a vast layered accumulation of mafic and ultramafic rocks. It has long been regarded as a textbook result of fractional crystallization from a melt-dominated magma chamber. Here, we show that most units of the Rustenburg Layered Suite can be derived with thermodynamic models of crustal assimilation by komatiitic magma to form magmatic mushes without requiring the existence of a magma chamber. Ultramafic and mafic cumulate layers below the Upper and Upper Main Zone represent multiple crystal slurries produced by assimilation-batch crystallization in the upper and middle crust, whereas the chilled marginal rocks represent complementary supernatant liquids. Only the uppermost third formed via lower-crustal assimilation–fractional crystallization and evolved by fractional crystallization within a melt-rich pocket. Layered intrusions need not form in open magma chambers. Mineral deposits hitherto attributed to magma chamber processes might form in smaller intrusions of any geometric form, from mushy systems entirely lacking melt-dominated magma chambers.

Date: 2021
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DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-20778-w

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