Publication details

DISTRIBUTION AND EVOLUTION OF ZIRCONIUM MINERALIZATION IN PERALKALINE GRANITES AND ASSOCIATED PEGMATITES OF THE KHAN BOGD COMPLEX, SOUTHERN MONGOLIA

Authors

KYNICKÝ Jindřich CHAKHMOURADIAN Anton R. XU Cheng KRMÍČEK Lukáš VAŠINOVÁ GALIOVÁ Michaela

Year of publication 2011
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source CANADIAN MINERALOGIST
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.3749/canmin.49.4.947
Field Analytic chemistry
Keywords peralkaline granite; granitic pegmatite; Zr mineralization; elpidite; armstrongite; gittinsite; zircon
Description The western part of the Khan Bogd complex comprises (in order of emplacement): microcline-phyric granite, peralkaline aegirine-arfvedsonite granite (main intrusive phase) and aplite-pegmatite veins confined predominantly to the apical parts of the intrusion. These rocks are interpreted to represent products of extreme fractional crystallization what involved an increase in index of peralkalinity (from 1.0 in the porphyritic granite to 1.3 in the main phase to 2.5 in the pegmatite) and whole-rock Zr content (864 to 1130 to 16900 ppm). The hydrothermal stage involved replacement of the primary elpidite by late-stage Ca-rich elpidite or armstrongite, and then precipitation of minor gittinsite and abundant zircon. With the exception of zircon, all secondary zirconosilicates exhibit relative enrichment in light REE.
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