The occurrence, origin and fate of water in chromitites in ophiolites

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The occurrence, origin and fate of water in chromitites in ophiolites. / Su, Ben-Xun; Robinson, Paul T.; Chen, Chen et al.
In: American mineralogist, The, Vol. 105.2020, No. 6, 25.06.2020, p. 894-903.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Su, B-X, Robinson, PT, Chen, C, Xiao, Y, Melcher, F, Bai, Y, Gu, X-Y, Uysal, I & Lenaz, D 2020, 'The occurrence, origin and fate of water in chromitites in ophiolites', American mineralogist, The, vol. 105.2020, no. 6, pp. 894-903. https://doi.org/10.2138/am-2020-7270

APA

Su, B.-X., Robinson, P. T., Chen, C., Xiao, Y., Melcher, F., Bai, Y., Gu, X.-Y., Uysal, I., & Lenaz, D. (2020). The occurrence, origin and fate of water in chromitites in ophiolites. American mineralogist, The, 105.2020(6), 894-903. https://doi.org/10.2138/am-2020-7270

Vancouver

Su BX, Robinson PT, Chen C, Xiao Y, Melcher F, Bai Y et al. The occurrence, origin and fate of water in chromitites in ophiolites. American mineralogist, The. 2020 Jun 25;105.2020(6):894-903. doi: 10.2138/am-2020-7270

Author

Su, Ben-Xun ; Robinson, Paul T. ; Chen, Chen et al. / The occurrence, origin and fate of water in chromitites in ophiolites. In: American mineralogist, The. 2020 ; Vol. 105.2020, No. 6. pp. 894-903.

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@article{3ff732d4bc8f41c1b48d51eae4be8853,
title = "The occurrence, origin and fate of water in chromitites in ophiolites",
abstract = "We present petrological investigations and mineral chemistry of several Tethyan ophiolites to reveal the occurrence, origin, and fate of water in podiform chromitites. The results show that clinopyroxene and olivine in chromitites have H2O contents of 801-366 and 53-17 ppm, respectively. The highest water contents of olivine occur in massive chromitite and the lowest always in the clinopyroxenebearing ores because much of the available hydrous fluids was taken up by the clinopyroxene during crystallization. The major and trace elemental and Li isotopic compositions of clinopyroxene associated with chromite and olivine in podiform chromitites indicate formation from a mixture of surface hydrous fluids on chromite grains and evolved melts from which olivine crystallized. The hydrous fluids initially originated from dehydration of a subducting slab as revealed by Li isotopic compositions of clinopyroxene and olivine in the chromitites. High fluid/rock ratios facilitated concentration of chromite to form chromitite, suppressing crystallization of olivine. The hydrous fluids that were collected on the chromite grain surface during crystallization allowed chromite grains to rise via decreasing density in the form of bubbles, thus promoting their gathering and concentration. The fate of these hydrous fluids depends on ambient physical and chemical conditions. Mostly they hydrate adjacent olivine grains in the chromitite or penetrate the surrounding dunite envelope. In some cases, the fluids dissolve into silicate melts to produce water-bearing clinopyroxene and/or hydrous minerals, such as amphibole, or infiltrate silicate and chromite grains to form inclusions, which may exsolve later in the form of mineral lamellae. Our investigations provide direct natural evidence for the presence and importance of water in the formation and evolution of chromite deposits, as inferred by earlier experimental studies.",
author = "Ben-Xun Su and Robinson, {Paul T.} and Chen Chen and Yan Xiao and Frank Melcher and Yang Bai and Xiao-Yan Gu and Ibrahim Uysal and Davide Lenaz",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2020 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston 2020.",
year = "2020",
month = jun,
day = "25",
doi = "10.2138/am-2020-7270",
language = "English",
volume = "105.2020",
pages = "894--903",
journal = "American mineralogist, The",
issn = "0003-004X",
publisher = "Mineralogical Society of America",
number = "6",

}

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TY - JOUR

T1 - The occurrence, origin and fate of water in chromitites in ophiolites

AU - Su, Ben-Xun

AU - Robinson, Paul T.

AU - Chen, Chen

AU - Xiao, Yan

AU - Melcher, Frank

AU - Bai, Yang

AU - Gu, Xiao-Yan

AU - Uysal, Ibrahim

AU - Lenaz, Davide

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2020 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston 2020.

PY - 2020/6/25

Y1 - 2020/6/25

N2 - We present petrological investigations and mineral chemistry of several Tethyan ophiolites to reveal the occurrence, origin, and fate of water in podiform chromitites. The results show that clinopyroxene and olivine in chromitites have H2O contents of 801-366 and 53-17 ppm, respectively. The highest water contents of olivine occur in massive chromitite and the lowest always in the clinopyroxenebearing ores because much of the available hydrous fluids was taken up by the clinopyroxene during crystallization. The major and trace elemental and Li isotopic compositions of clinopyroxene associated with chromite and olivine in podiform chromitites indicate formation from a mixture of surface hydrous fluids on chromite grains and evolved melts from which olivine crystallized. The hydrous fluids initially originated from dehydration of a subducting slab as revealed by Li isotopic compositions of clinopyroxene and olivine in the chromitites. High fluid/rock ratios facilitated concentration of chromite to form chromitite, suppressing crystallization of olivine. The hydrous fluids that were collected on the chromite grain surface during crystallization allowed chromite grains to rise via decreasing density in the form of bubbles, thus promoting their gathering and concentration. The fate of these hydrous fluids depends on ambient physical and chemical conditions. Mostly they hydrate adjacent olivine grains in the chromitite or penetrate the surrounding dunite envelope. In some cases, the fluids dissolve into silicate melts to produce water-bearing clinopyroxene and/or hydrous minerals, such as amphibole, or infiltrate silicate and chromite grains to form inclusions, which may exsolve later in the form of mineral lamellae. Our investigations provide direct natural evidence for the presence and importance of water in the formation and evolution of chromite deposits, as inferred by earlier experimental studies.

AB - We present petrological investigations and mineral chemistry of several Tethyan ophiolites to reveal the occurrence, origin, and fate of water in podiform chromitites. The results show that clinopyroxene and olivine in chromitites have H2O contents of 801-366 and 53-17 ppm, respectively. The highest water contents of olivine occur in massive chromitite and the lowest always in the clinopyroxenebearing ores because much of the available hydrous fluids was taken up by the clinopyroxene during crystallization. The major and trace elemental and Li isotopic compositions of clinopyroxene associated with chromite and olivine in podiform chromitites indicate formation from a mixture of surface hydrous fluids on chromite grains and evolved melts from which olivine crystallized. The hydrous fluids initially originated from dehydration of a subducting slab as revealed by Li isotopic compositions of clinopyroxene and olivine in the chromitites. High fluid/rock ratios facilitated concentration of chromite to form chromitite, suppressing crystallization of olivine. The hydrous fluids that were collected on the chromite grain surface during crystallization allowed chromite grains to rise via decreasing density in the form of bubbles, thus promoting their gathering and concentration. The fate of these hydrous fluids depends on ambient physical and chemical conditions. Mostly they hydrate adjacent olivine grains in the chromitite or penetrate the surrounding dunite envelope. In some cases, the fluids dissolve into silicate melts to produce water-bearing clinopyroxene and/or hydrous minerals, such as amphibole, or infiltrate silicate and chromite grains to form inclusions, which may exsolve later in the form of mineral lamellae. Our investigations provide direct natural evidence for the presence and importance of water in the formation and evolution of chromite deposits, as inferred by earlier experimental studies.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85085194593&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.2138/am-2020-7270

DO - 10.2138/am-2020-7270

M3 - Article

VL - 105.2020

SP - 894

EP - 903

JO - American mineralogist, The

JF - American mineralogist, The

SN - 0003-004X

IS - 6

ER -