Apatite: A mineral with many uses
Apatite has recently gained considerable
attention as a mineral with many uses within the Earth and planetary
sciences. Apatite chemistry has recently given new insight into a wide
range of geological processes and tools, such as magmatism,
metasomatism, planetary geochemistry, and geochronology.
In a Geology article, Emilie Bruand and colleagues
expand the utility of apatite by presenting a novel way to fingerprint
magma chemistry and petrogenesis using apatite inclusions within robust
titanite and zircon.
Bruand and colleagues presented trace element data from apatite mineral
inclusions shielded within magmatic zircon and titanite. Importantly,
apatite inclusion and host titanite chemistries detailed in this study
allow estimation of the whole-rock Sr and SiO2.
They show how these data
can be used to assess the degree of fractionation of the host magma and
to calculate key trace element abundances and ratios. They also
demonstrated that the inclusions can be linked to discrete periods in the
crystallization history of the host phases, thus providing insight into
petrogenesis.
These results highlight the fact that apatite compositions might
discriminate modern granitoids (younger than 2.5 Ga) from
Archean-Proterozoic transitional granitoid compositions (sanukitoid
signatures). Development of such a petrological tool has important
potential for interpretation of provenance and a better understanding of
the secular evolution of the continental crust, including that of early
Earth.
SD
No comments:
Post a Comment