Eclogite xenoliths in west African kimberlites as residues from Archaean granitoid crust formation
Hugh Rollinson ()
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Hugh Rollinson: Cheltenham and Gloucester College of Higher Education, Francis Close Hall
Nature, 1997, vol. 389, issue 6647, 173-176
Abstract:
Abstract Eclogites are a comparatively rare but petrologically important member of kimberlite xenolith suites. Their broadly basaltic chemistry has led many authors to propose that they represent ancient, subducted ocean crust1,2,3. Recent studies4,5,6, however, have suggested an alternative origin and propose that kimberlitic eclogites are residues from the process of Archaean granitoid crust formation. Geochemical arguments in support of this new model were previously based on the trace-element chemistry of eclogitic minerals. Here I report that the major-element chemistry of eclogite xenoliths also supports a crustal residue model. I examine eclogite xenoliths from kimberlite pipes at Koidu, Sierra Leone, which sample the lithospheric mantle underlying the Archaean (2.8 Gyr) granitoid crust of the West African craton. Geochemical plots of major elements measured in unaltered, whole-rock samples of low-silica eclogite demonstrate that they are complementary to the granitoids of the West African craton and have compositions which indicate that both were derived from a common basaltic parent rock.
Date: 1997
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:nat:nature:v:389:y:1997:i:6647:d:10.1038_38266
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DOI: 10.1038/38266
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