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Komatiite

Komatiite (/kˈmɑːtiˌt/) is a type of ultramafic mantle-derived volcanic rock defined as having crystallised from a lava of at least 18 wt% magnesium oxide (MgO).[1] It is classified as a 'picritic rock'. Komatiites have low silicon, potassium and aluminium, and high to extremely high magnesium content. Komatiite was named for its type locality along the Komati River in South Africa,[2] and frequently displays spinifex texture composed of large dendritic plates of olivine and pyroxene.[3]

Komatiite lava at the type locality in the Komati Valley, Barberton Mountainland, South Africa, showing the distinctive "spinifex texture" formed by dendritic plates of olivine (scale shown by a hammer on the right edge of photo)

Komatiites are rare rocks; almost all komatiites were formed during the Archaean Eon (4.0–2.5 billion years ago), with few younger (Proterozoic or Phanerozoic) examples known. This restriction in age is thought to be due to cooling of the mantle, which may have been 100–250 °C (212–482 °F) hotter during the Archaean.[4][5] The early Earth had much higher heat production, due to the residual heat from planetary accretion, as well as the greater abundance of radioactive isotopes, particularly shorter lived ones like uranium 235 which produce more decay heat. Lower temperature mantle melts such as basalt and picrite have essentially replaced komatiites as an eruptive lava on the Earth's surface.

Geographically, komatiites are predominantly restricted in distribution to the Archaean shield areas, and occur with other ultramafic and high-magnesian mafic volcanic rocks in Archaean greenstone belts. The youngest komatiites are from the island of Gorgona on the Caribbean oceanic plateau off the Pacific coast of Colombia, and a rare example of Proterozoic komatiite is found in the Winnipegosis komatiite belt in Manitoba, Canada.

Petrology edit

 
Komatiite sample collected from the Abitibi greenstone belt near Englehart, Ontario, Canada. Specimen is 9 cm wide. Bladed olivine crystals are visible, though spinifex texture is weak or absent in this sample.

Magmas of komatiitic compositions have a very high melting point, with calculated eruption temperatures up to, and possibly in excess of 1600 °C.[6][7][8][9] Basaltic lavas normally have eruption temperatures of about 1100 to 1250 °C. The higher melting temperatures required to produce komatiite have been attributed to the presumed higher geothermal gradients in the Archaean Earth.

Komatiitic lava was extremely fluid when it erupted (possessing the viscosity close to that of water but with the density of rock). Compared to the basaltic lava of the Hawaiian plume basalts at ~1200 °C, which flows the way treacle or honey does, the komatiitic lava would have flowed swiftly across the surface, leaving extremely thin lava flows (down to 10 mm thick). The major komatiitic sequences preserved in Archaean rocks are thus considered to be lava tubes, ponds of lava etc., where the komatiitic lava accumulated.

Komatiite chemistry is different from that of basaltic and other common mantle-produced magmas, because of differences in degrees of partial melting. Komatiites are considered to have been formed by high degrees of partial melting, usually greater than 50%, and hence have high MgO with low K2O and other incompatible elements.

There are two geochemical classes of komatiite; aluminium undepleted komatiite (AUDK) (also known as Group I komatiites) and aluminium depleted komatiite (ADK) (also known as Group II komatiites), defined by their Al2O3/TiO2 ratios. These two classes of komatiite are often assumed to represent a real petrological source difference between the two types related to depth of melt generation. Al-depleted komatiites have been modeled by melting experiments as being produced by high degrees of partial melting at high pressure where garnet in the source is not melted, whereas Al-undepleted komatiites are produced by high degrees of partial melts at lesser depth. However, recent studies of fluid inclusions in chrome spinels from the cumulate zones of komatiite flows have shown that a single komatiite flow can be derived from the mixing of parental magmas with a range of Al2O3/TiO2 ratios, calling into question this interpretation of the formations of the different komatiite groups.[10] Komatiites probably form in extremely hot mantle plumes[11] or in Archaean subduction zones.[12]

Boninite magmatism is similar to komatiite magmatism but is produced by fluid-fluxed melting above a subduction zone. Boninites with 10–18% MgO tend to have higher large-ion lithophile elements (LILE: Ba, Rb, Sr) than komatiites.

Mineralogy edit

 
Graph of komatiite geochemistry MgO% vs Cr ppm, from basal flows, Wannaway, Western Australia

The pristine volcanic mineralogy of komatiites is composed of forsteritic olivine (Fo90 and upwards), calcic and often chromian pyroxene, anorthite (An85 and upwards) and chromite.

A considerable population of komatiite examples show a cumulate texture and morphology. The usual cumulate mineralogy is highly magnesium rich forsterite olivine, though chromian pyroxene cumulates are also possible (though rarer).

Volcanic rocks rich in magnesium may be produced by accumulation of olivine phenocrysts in basalt melts of normal chemistry: an example is picrite. Part of the evidence that komatiites are not magnesium-rich simply because of cumulate olivine is textural: some contain spinifex texture, a texture attributable to rapid crystallization of the olivine in a thermal gradient in the upper part of a lava flow. "Spinifex" texture is named after the common name for the Australian grass Triodia,[13] which grows in clumps with similar shapes.

Another line of evidence is that the MgO content of olivines formed in komatiites is toward the nearly pure MgO forsterite composition, which can only be achieved in bulk by crystallisation of olivine from a highly magnesian melt.

The rarely preserved flow top breccia and pillow margin zones in some komatiite flows are essentially volcanic glass, quenched in contact with overlying water or air. Because they are rapidly cooled, they represent the liquid composition of the komatiites, and thus record an anhydrous MgO content of up to 32% MgO. Some of the highest magnesian komatiites with clear textural preservation are those of the Barberton belt in South Africa, where liquids with up to 34% MgO can be inferred using bulk rock and olivine compositions.

The mineralogy of a komatiite varies systematically through the typical stratigraphic section of a komatiite flow and reflects magmatic processes which komatiites are susceptible to during their eruption and cooling. The typical mineralogical variation is from a flow base composed of olivine cumulate, to a spinifex textured zone composed of bladed olivine and ideally a pyroxene spinifex zone and olivine-rich chill zone on the upper eruptive rind of the flow unit.

Primary (magmatic) mineral species also encountered in komatiites include olivine, the pyroxenes augite, pigeonite and bronzite, plagioclase, chromite, ilmenite and rarely pargasitic amphibole. Secondary (metamorphic) minerals include serpentine, chlorite, amphibole, sodic plagioclase, quartz, iron oxides and rarely phlogopite, baddeleyite, and pyrope or hydrogrossular garnet.

Metamorphism edit

All known komatiites have been metamorphosed, therefore should technically be termed 'metakomatiite' though the prefix meta is inevitably assumed. Many komatiites are highly altered and serpentinized or carbonated from metamorphism and metasomatism. This results in significant changes to the mineralogy and the texture.

Hydration vs. carbonation edit

The metamorphic mineralogy of ultramafic rocks, particularly komatiites, is only partially controlled by composition. The character of the connate fluids which are present during low temperature metamorphism whether prograde or retrograde control the metamorphic assemblage of a metakomatiite (hereafter the prefix meta- is assumed).

The factor controlling the mineral assemblage is the partial pressure of carbon dioxide within the metamorphic fluid, called the XCO2. If XCO2 is above 0.5, the metamorphic reactions favor formation of talc, magnesite (magnesium carbonate), and tremolite amphibole. These are classed as talc-carbonation reactions. Below XCO2 of 0.5, metamorphic reactions in the presence of water favor production of serpentinite.

There are thus two main classes of metamorphic komatiite; carbonated and hydrated. Carbonated komatiites and peridotites form a series of rocks dominated by the minerals chlorite, talc, magnesite or dolomite and tremolite. Hydrated metamorphic rock assemblages are dominated by the minerals chlorite, serpentine-antigorite and brucite. Traces of talc, tremolite and dolomite may be present, as it is very rare that no carbon dioxide is present in metamorphic fluids. At higher metamorphic grades, anthophyllite, enstatite, olivine and diopside dominate as the rock mass dehydrates.

Mineralogic variations in komatiite flow facies edit

Komatiite tends to fractionate from high-magnesium compositions in the flow bases where olivine cumulates dominate, to lower magnesium compositions higher up in the flow. Thus, the current metamorphic mineralogy of a komatiite will reflect the chemistry, which in turn represents an inference as to its volcanological facies and stratigraphic position.

Typical metamorphic mineralogy is tremolite-chlorite, or talc-chlorite mineralogy in the upper spinifex zones. The more magnesian-rich olivine-rich flow base facies tend to be free from tremolite and chlorite mineralogy and are dominated by either serpentine-brucite +/- anthophyllite if hydrated, or talc-magnesite if carbonated. The upper flow facies tend to be dominated by talc, chlorite, tremolite, and other magnesian amphiboles (anthophyllite, cummingtonite, gedrite, etc.).

For example, the typical flow facies (see below) may have the following mineralogy;

Facies: Hydrated Carbonated
A1 Chlorite-tremolite Talc-chlorite-tremolite
A2 Serpentine-tremolite-chlorite Talc-tremolite-chlorite
A3 Serpentine-chlorite Talc-magnesite-tremolite-chlorite
B1 Serpentine-chlorite-anthophyllite Talc-magnesite
B2 Massive serpentine-brucite Massive talc-magnesite
B3 Serpentine-brucite-chlorite Talc-magnesite-tremolite-chlorite

Geochemistry edit

Komatiite can be classified according to the following geochemical criteria;

  • SiO2; typically 40–45%
  • MgO greater than 18%
  • Low K2O (<0.5%)
  • Low CaO and Na2O (<2% combined)
  • Low Ba, Cs, Rb (incompatible element) enrichment; ΣLILE <1,000 ppm
  • High Ni (>400 ppm), Cr (>800 ppm), Co (>150 ppm)

The above geochemical classification must be the essentially unaltered magma chemistry and not the result of crystal accumulation (as in peridotite). Through a typical komatiite flow sequence the chemistry of the rock will change according to the internal fractionation which occurs during eruption. This tends to lower MgO, Cr, Ni, and increase Al, K2O, Na, CaO and SiO2 toward the top of the flow.

Rocks rich in MgO, K2O, Ba, Cs, and Rb may be lamprophyres, kimberlites or other rare ultramafic, potassic or ultrapotassic rocks.

Morphology and occurrence edit

Komatiites often show pillow lava structure, autobrecciated upper margins consistent with underwater eruption forming a rigid upper skin to the lava flows. Proximal volcanic facies are thinner and interleaved with sulfidic sediments, black shales, cherts and tholeiitic basalts. Komatiites were produced from a relatively wet mantle. Evidence of this is from their association with felsics, occurrences of komatiitic tuffs, niobium anomalies and by S- and H2O-borne rich mineralizations.

Textural features edit

 
Photomicrograph of a thin section of komatiite showing spinifex texture of pyroxene needle-like crystals

A common and distinctive texture is known as spinifex texture and consists of long acicular phenocrysts of olivine (or pseudomorphs of alteration minerals after olivine) or pyroxene which give the rock a bladed appearance especially on a weathered surface. Spinifex texture is the result of rapid crystallization of highly magnesian liquid in the thermal gradient at the margin of the flow or sill.

Harrisite texture, first described from intrusive rocks (not komatiites) at Harris Bay on the island of Rùm in Scotland, is formed by nucleation of crystals on the floor of a magma chamber.[14][15] Harrisites are known to form megacrystal aggregates of pyroxene and olivine up to 1 metre in length.[16] Harrisite texture is found in some very thick lava flows of komatiite, for example in the Norseman-Wiluna Greenstone Belt of Western Australia, in which crystallization of cumulates has occurred.[17]

 
A2 facies dendritic feathery olivine crystals, drill hole WDD18, Widgiemooltha, Western Australia
 
A3 facies bladed olivine spinifex, drill hole WDD18, Widgiemooltha Komatiite, Western Australia

Volcanology edit

Komatiite volcano morphology is interpreted to have the general form and structure of a shield volcano, typical of most large basalt edifices, as the magmatic event which forms komatiites erupts less magnesian materials.

However, the initial flux of the most magnesian magmas is interpreted to form a channelised flow facie, which is envisioned as a fissure vent releasing highly fluid komatiitic lava onto the surface. This then flows outwards from the vent fissure, concentrating into topographical lows, and forming channel environments composed of high MgO olivine adcumulate flanked by a 'sheeted flow facies' aprons of lower MgO olivine and pyroxene thin-flow spinifex sheets.

The typical komatiite lava flow has six stratigraphically related elements;

  • A1 – pillowed and variolitic chilled flow top, often grading and transitional with sediment
  • A2 – Zone of quickly chilled, feathery acicular olivine-clinopyroxene-glass representing a chilled margin on the top of the flow unit
  • A3 – Olivine spinifex sequence composed of sheaf and book-like olivine spinifex, representing a downward-growing crystal accumulation on the flow top
  • B1 – Olivine mesocumulate to orthocumulate, representing a harrisite grown in flowing liquid melt
  • B2 – Olivine adcumulate composed of >93% interlocking equant olivine crystals
  • B3 – Lower chill margin composed of olivine adcumulate to mesocumulate, with finer grain size.

Individual flow units may not be entirely preserved, as subsequent flow units may thermally erode the A zone spinifex flows. In the distal thin flow facies, B zones are poorly developed to absent, as not enough through-flowing liquid existed to grow the adcumulate.

The channel and sheeted flows are then covered by high-magnesian basalts and tholeiitic basalts as the volcanic event evolves to less magnesian compositions. The subsequent magmatism, being higher silica melts, tends to form a more typical shield volcano architecture.

Intrusive komatiites edit

Komatiite magma is extremely dense and unlikely to reach the surface, being more likely to pool lower within the crust. Modern (post-2004) interpretations of some of the larger olivine adcumulate bodies in the Yilgarn craton have revealed that the majority of komatiite olivine adcumulate occurrences are likely to be subvolcanic to intrusive in nature.

This is recognised at the Mt Keith nickel deposit where wall-rock intrusive textures and xenoliths of felsic country rocks have been recognised within the low-strain contacts. [18] The previous interpretations of these large komatiite bodies was that they were "super channels" or reactivated channels, which grew to over 500 m in stratigraphic thickness during prolonged volcanism.

These intrusions are considered to be channelised sills, formed by injection of komatiitic magma into the stratigraphy, and inflation of the magma chamber. Economic nickel-mineralised olivine adcumulate bodies may represent a form of sill-like conduit, where magma pools in a staging chamber before erupting onto the surface.

Economic importance edit

The economic importance of komatiite was first widely recognised in the early 1960s with the discovery of massive nickel sulfide mineralisation at Kambalda, Western Australia. Komatiite-hosted nickel-copper sulfide mineralisation today accounts for about 14% of the world's nickel production, mostly from Australia, Canada and South Africa.

Komatiites are associated with nickel and gold deposits in Australia, Canada, South Africa and most recently in the Guiana shield of South America.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Le Bas, M. J. 2000. IUGS reclassification of the high-Mg and picritic volcanic rocks. Journal of Petrology, 41(10), 1467-1470. https://doi.org/10.1093/petrology/41.10.1467
  2. ^ Viljoen, M. J., & Viljoen, R. P. 1969a. Evidence for the existence of a mobile extrusive peridotitic magma from the Komati Formation of the Onvernacht Group. Geological Survey of South Africa, Special Publication, 21, 87 - 112.
  3. ^ Arndt, N., Lesher, C. M., & Barnes, S. J. 2008. Komatiite. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  4. ^ Davies, G. F. 1999. Plates, Plumes and Mantle Convection. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  5. ^ Herzberg, C., Condie, K., & Korenaga, J. 2010. Thermal history of the Earth and its petrological expression. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 292(1-2), 79-88. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2010.01.022
  6. ^ Nisbet, E. G., Cheadle, M. J., Arndt, Nicholas T., & Bickle, M. J. 1993. Constraining the potential temperature of the Archaean mantle: A review of the evidence from komatiites. Lithos, 30(3-4), 291-307. https://doi.org/10.1016/0024-4937(93)90042-B
  7. ^ Robin-Popieul, C. C. M., Arndt, N. T., Chauvel, C., Byerly, G. R., Sobolev, A. V., & Wilson, A. 2012. A new model for Barberton komatiites: Deep critical melting with high melt retention. Journal of Petrology, 53(11), 2191-2229. https://doi.org/10.1093/petrology/egs042
  8. ^ Sossi, P. A., Eggins, S. M., Nesbitt, R. W., Nebel, O., Hergt, J. M., Campbell, I. H., O'Neill, H. St. C., Van Kranendonk, M., & Davies, R. D. 2016. Petrogenesis and geochemistry of Archean Komatiites. Journal of Petrology, 57(1), 147-184. https://doi.org/10.1093/petrology/egw004
  9. ^ Waterton, P., Pearson, D. G., Kjarsgaard, B., Hulbert, L., Locock, A., Parman, S. W., & Davis, B. 2017. Age, Origin, and Thermal Evolution of the ultra-fresh ~1.9 Ga Winnipegosis Komatiites, Manitoba, Canada. Lithos, 268-271, 114-130. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lithos.2016.10.033
  10. ^ Hanski, E.; Kamenetsky, V.S. (2013). "Chrome spinel-hosted melt inclusions in Paleoproterozoic primitive volcanic rocks, northern Finland: Evidence for coexistence and mixing of komatiitic and picritic magmas". Chemical Geology. 343: 25–37. Bibcode:2013ChGeo.343...25H. doi:10.1016/j.chemgeo.2013.02.009.
  11. ^ McDonough, W. F.; Ireland, T. R. (September 1993). "Intraplate origin of komatiites inferred from trace elements in glass inclusions". Nature. 365 (6445): 432–434. Bibcode:1993Natur.365..432M. doi:10.1038/365432a0. S2CID 4257168.
  12. ^ Parman, S. W. (1 June 2004). "A subduction origin for komatiites and cratonic lithospheric mantle". South African Journal of Geology. 107 (1–2): 107–118. Bibcode:2004SAJG..107..107P. doi:10.2113/107.1-2.107. hdl:11427/24075.
  13. ^ Dostal, J. (2008). "Igneous Rock Associations 10. Komatiites". Geoscience Canada. 35 (1).
  14. ^ O'Driscoll, B.; Donaldson, C. H.; Troll, V. R.; Jerram, D. A.; Emeleus, C. H. (2006-11-13). "An Origin for Harrisitic and Granular Olivine in the Rum Layered Suite, NW Scotland: a Crystal Size Distribution Study". Journal of Petrology. 48 (2): 253–270. doi:10.1093/petrology/egl059. ISSN 0022-3530.
  15. ^ Troll, V R; Mattsson, T; Upton, B G J; Emeleus, C H; Donaldson, C H; Meyer, R; Weis, F; Dahrén, B; Heimdal, T H (2020-10-09). "Fault-Controlled Magma Ascent Recorded in the Central Series of the Rum Layered Intrusion, NW Scotland". Journal of Petrology. 61 (10). doi:10.1093/petrology/egaa093. hdl:10023/23208. ISSN 0022-3530.
  16. ^ Emeleus, C. H.; Troll, V. R. (August 2014). "The Rum Igneous Centre, Scotland". Mineralogical Magazine. 78 (4): 805–839. Bibcode:2014MinM...78..805E. doi:10.1180/minmag.2014.078.4.04. ISSN 0026-461X.
  17. ^ Hill, R.E.T.; Barnes, S.J.; Gole, M.J.; Dowling, S.E. (1995). "The volcanology of komatiites as deduced from field relationships in the Norseman-Wiluna greenstone belt, Western Australia". Lithos. 34 (1–3): 159–188. Bibcode:1995Litho..34..159H. doi:10.1016/0024-4937(95)90019-5.
  18. ^ Rosengren, N. M., Beresford, S. W., Grguric, B. A., & Cas, R.A.F. 2005. An intrusive origin for the komatiitic dunite-hosted Mount Keith disseminated nickel sulfide deposit, Western Australia. Economic Geology, 100(1), 149–156. https://doi.org/10.2113/100.1.0149

Bibliography edit

  • Hess, P. C. (1989), Origins of Igneous Rocks, President and Fellows of Harvard College (pp. 276–285), ISBN 0-674-64481-6.
  • Hill R.E.T, Barnes S.J., Gole M.J. and Dowling S.E. (1990), Physical volcanology of komatiites; A field guide to the komatiites of the Norseman-Wiluna Greenstone Belt, Eastern Goldfields Province, Yilgarn Block, Western Australia., Geological Society of Australia. ISBN 0-909869-55-3
  • Blatt, Harvey and Robert Tracy (1996), Petrology, 2nd ed., Freeman (pp. 196–7), ISBN 0-7167-2438-3.
  • S. A. Svetov, A. I. Svetova, and H. Huhma, 1999, Geochemistry of the Komatiite–Tholeiite Rock Association in the Vedlozero–Segozero Archean Greenstone Belt, Central Karelia, Geochemistry International, Vol. 39, Suppl. 1, 2001, pp. S24–S38. accessed 7-25-2005
  • Vernon R.H., 2004, A Practical Guide to Rock Microstructure, (pp. 43–69, 150–152) Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-81443-X
  • Arndt, N.T., and Nisbet, E.G. (1982), Komatiites. Unwin Hyman, ISBN 0-04-552019-4. Hardcover.
  • Arndt, N.T., and Lesher, C.M. (2005), Komatiites, in Selley, RC, Cocks, L.R.M., Plimer, I.R. (Editors), Encyclopedia of Geology 3, Elsevier, New York, pp. 260–267
  • Faure, F., Arndt, N.T. Libourel, G. (2006), Formation of spinifex texture in komatiite: An experimental study. J. Petrol 47, 1591–1610.
  • Arndt, N.T., Lesher, C.M. and Barnes, S.J. (2008), Komatiite, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 488 pp., ISBN 978-0521874748.

External links edit

  • Unusual lava types 2017-10-23 at the Wayback Machine accessed 7-25-2005
  • Komatiites and astrobiology
  • Komatiites and the Plume Debate
  • Volcanic fireworks on Io
  • Photos of Abitibi komatiite, Canada (with text in French) retrieved 2009-05-17

komatiite, ɑː, type, ultramafic, mantle, derived, volcanic, rock, defined, having, crystallised, from, lava, least, magnesium, oxide, classified, picritic, rock, have, silicon, potassium, aluminium, high, extremely, high, magnesium, content, named, type, local. Komatiite k oʊ ˈ m ɑː t i ˌ aɪ t is a type of ultramafic mantle derived volcanic rock defined as having crystallised from a lava of at least 18 wt magnesium oxide MgO 1 It is classified as a picritic rock Komatiites have low silicon potassium and aluminium and high to extremely high magnesium content Komatiite was named for its type locality along the Komati River in South Africa 2 and frequently displays spinifex texture composed of large dendritic plates of olivine and pyroxene 3 Komatiite lava at the type locality in the Komati Valley Barberton Mountainland South Africa showing the distinctive spinifex texture formed by dendritic plates of olivine scale shown by a hammer on the right edge of photo Komatiites are rare rocks almost all komatiites were formed during the Archaean Eon 4 0 2 5 billion years ago with few younger Proterozoic or Phanerozoic examples known This restriction in age is thought to be due to cooling of the mantle which may have been 100 250 C 212 482 F hotter during the Archaean 4 5 The early Earth had much higher heat production due to the residual heat from planetary accretion as well as the greater abundance of radioactive isotopes particularly shorter lived ones like uranium 235 which produce more decay heat Lower temperature mantle melts such as basalt and picrite have essentially replaced komatiites as an eruptive lava on the Earth s surface Geographically komatiites are predominantly restricted in distribution to the Archaean shield areas and occur with other ultramafic and high magnesian mafic volcanic rocks in Archaean greenstone belts The youngest komatiites are from the island of Gorgona on the Caribbean oceanic plateau off the Pacific coast of Colombia and a rare example of Proterozoic komatiite is found in the Winnipegosis komatiite belt in Manitoba Canada Contents 1 Petrology 2 Mineralogy 3 Metamorphism 3 1 Hydration vs carbonation 3 2 Mineralogic variations in komatiite flow facies 4 Geochemistry 5 Morphology and occurrence 5 1 Textural features 5 2 Volcanology 5 3 Intrusive komatiites 6 Economic importance 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksPetrology edit nbsp Komatiite sample collected from the Abitibi greenstone belt near Englehart Ontario Canada Specimen is 9 cm wide Bladed olivine crystals are visible though spinifex texture is weak or absent in this sample Magmas of komatiitic compositions have a very high melting point with calculated eruption temperatures up to and possibly in excess of 1600 C 6 7 8 9 Basaltic lavas normally have eruption temperatures of about 1100 to 1250 C The higher melting temperatures required to produce komatiite have been attributed to the presumed higher geothermal gradients in the Archaean Earth Komatiitic lava was extremely fluid when it erupted possessing the viscosity close to that of water but with the density of rock Compared to the basaltic lava of the Hawaiian plume basalts at 1200 C which flows the way treacle or honey does the komatiitic lava would have flowed swiftly across the surface leaving extremely thin lava flows down to 10 mm thick The major komatiitic sequences preserved in Archaean rocks are thus considered to be lava tubes ponds of lava etc where the komatiitic lava accumulated Komatiite chemistry is different from that of basaltic and other common mantle produced magmas because of differences in degrees of partial melting Komatiites are considered to have been formed by high degrees of partial melting usually greater than 50 and hence have high MgO with low K2O and other incompatible elements There are two geochemical classes of komatiite aluminium undepleted komatiite AUDK also known as Group I komatiites and aluminium depleted komatiite ADK also known as Group II komatiites defined by their Al2O3 TiO2 ratios These two classes of komatiite are often assumed to represent a real petrological source difference between the two types related to depth of melt generation Al depleted komatiites have been modeled by melting experiments as being produced by high degrees of partial melting at high pressure where garnet in the source is not melted whereas Al undepleted komatiites are produced by high degrees of partial melts at lesser depth However recent studies of fluid inclusions in chrome spinels from the cumulate zones of komatiite flows have shown that a single komatiite flow can be derived from the mixing of parental magmas with a range of Al2O3 TiO2 ratios calling into question this interpretation of the formations of the different komatiite groups 10 Komatiites probably form in extremely hot mantle plumes 11 or in Archaean subduction zones 12 Boninite magmatism is similar to komatiite magmatism but is produced by fluid fluxed melting above a subduction zone Boninites with 10 18 MgO tend to have higher large ion lithophile elements LILE Ba Rb Sr than komatiites Mineralogy edit nbsp Graph of komatiite geochemistry MgO vs Cr ppm from basal flows Wannaway Western AustraliaThe pristine volcanic mineralogy of komatiites is composed of forsteritic olivine Fo90 and upwards calcic and often chromian pyroxene anorthite An85 and upwards and chromite A considerable population of komatiite examples show a cumulate texture and morphology The usual cumulate mineralogy is highly magnesium rich forsterite olivine though chromian pyroxene cumulates are also possible though rarer Volcanic rocks rich in magnesium may be produced by accumulation of olivine phenocrysts in basalt melts of normal chemistry an example is picrite Part of the evidence that komatiites are not magnesium rich simply because of cumulate olivine is textural some contain spinifex texture a texture attributable to rapid crystallization of the olivine in a thermal gradient in the upper part of a lava flow Spinifex texture is named after the common name for the Australian grass Triodia 13 which grows in clumps with similar shapes Another line of evidence is that the MgO content of olivines formed in komatiites is toward the nearly pure MgO forsterite composition which can only be achieved in bulk by crystallisation of olivine from a highly magnesian melt The rarely preserved flow top breccia and pillow margin zones in some komatiite flows are essentially volcanic glass quenched in contact with overlying water or air Because they are rapidly cooled they represent the liquid composition of the komatiites and thus record an anhydrous MgO content of up to 32 MgO Some of the highest magnesian komatiites with clear textural preservation are those of the Barberton belt in South Africa where liquids with up to 34 MgO can be inferred using bulk rock and olivine compositions The mineralogy of a komatiite varies systematically through the typical stratigraphic section of a komatiite flow and reflects magmatic processes which komatiites are susceptible to during their eruption and cooling The typical mineralogical variation is from a flow base composed of olivine cumulate to a spinifex textured zone composed of bladed olivine and ideally a pyroxene spinifex zone and olivine rich chill zone on the upper eruptive rind of the flow unit Primary magmatic mineral species also encountered in komatiites include olivine the pyroxenes augite pigeonite and bronzite plagioclase chromite ilmenite and rarely pargasitic amphibole Secondary metamorphic minerals include serpentine chlorite amphibole sodic plagioclase quartz iron oxides and rarely phlogopite baddeleyite and pyrope or hydrogrossular garnet Metamorphism editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message All known komatiites have been metamorphosed therefore should technically be termed metakomatiite though the prefix meta is inevitably assumed Many komatiites are highly altered and serpentinized or carbonated from metamorphism and metasomatism This results in significant changes to the mineralogy and the texture Hydration vs carbonation edit The metamorphic mineralogy of ultramafic rocks particularly komatiites is only partially controlled by composition The character of the connate fluids which are present during low temperature metamorphism whether prograde or retrograde control the metamorphic assemblage of a metakomatiite hereafter the prefix meta is assumed The factor controlling the mineral assemblage is the partial pressure of carbon dioxide within the metamorphic fluid called the XCO2 If XCO2 is above 0 5 the metamorphic reactions favor formation of talc magnesite magnesium carbonate and tremolite amphibole These are classed as talc carbonation reactions Below XCO2 of 0 5 metamorphic reactions in the presence of water favor production of serpentinite There are thus two main classes of metamorphic komatiite carbonated and hydrated Carbonated komatiites and peridotites form a series of rocks dominated by the minerals chlorite talc magnesite or dolomite and tremolite Hydrated metamorphic rock assemblages are dominated by the minerals chlorite serpentine antigorite and brucite Traces of talc tremolite and dolomite may be present as it is very rare that no carbon dioxide is present in metamorphic fluids At higher metamorphic grades anthophyllite enstatite olivine and diopside dominate as the rock mass dehydrates Mineralogic variations in komatiite flow facies edit Komatiite tends to fractionate from high magnesium compositions in the flow bases where olivine cumulates dominate to lower magnesium compositions higher up in the flow Thus the current metamorphic mineralogy of a komatiite will reflect the chemistry which in turn represents an inference as to its volcanological facies and stratigraphic position Typical metamorphic mineralogy is tremolite chlorite or talc chlorite mineralogy in the upper spinifex zones The more magnesian rich olivine rich flow base facies tend to be free from tremolite and chlorite mineralogy and are dominated by either serpentine brucite anthophyllite if hydrated or talc magnesite if carbonated The upper flow facies tend to be dominated by talc chlorite tremolite and other magnesian amphiboles anthophyllite cummingtonite gedrite etc For example the typical flow facies see below may have the following mineralogy Facies Hydrated CarbonatedA1 Chlorite tremolite Talc chlorite tremoliteA2 Serpentine tremolite chlorite Talc tremolite chloriteA3 Serpentine chlorite Talc magnesite tremolite chloriteB1 Serpentine chlorite anthophyllite Talc magnesiteB2 Massive serpentine brucite Massive talc magnesiteB3 Serpentine brucite chlorite Talc magnesite tremolite chloriteGeochemistry editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Komatiite can be classified according to the following geochemical criteria SiO2 typically 40 45 MgO greater than 18 Low K2O lt 0 5 Low CaO and Na2O lt 2 combined Low Ba Cs Rb incompatible element enrichment SLILE lt 1 000 ppm High Ni gt 400 ppm Cr gt 800 ppm Co gt 150 ppm The above geochemical classification must be the essentially unaltered magma chemistry and not the result of crystal accumulation as in peridotite Through a typical komatiite flow sequence the chemistry of the rock will change according to the internal fractionation which occurs during eruption This tends to lower MgO Cr Ni and increase Al K2O Na CaO and SiO2 toward the top of the flow Rocks rich in MgO K2O Ba Cs and Rb may be lamprophyres kimberlites or other rare ultramafic potassic or ultrapotassic rocks Morphology and occurrence editKomatiites often show pillow lava structure autobrecciated upper margins consistent with underwater eruption forming a rigid upper skin to the lava flows Proximal volcanic facies are thinner and interleaved with sulfidic sediments black shales cherts and tholeiitic basalts Komatiites were produced from a relatively wet mantle Evidence of this is from their association with felsics occurrences of komatiitic tuffs niobium anomalies and by S and H2O borne rich mineralizations Textural features edit nbsp Photomicrograph of a thin section of komatiite showing spinifex texture of pyroxene needle like crystalsA common and distinctive texture is known as spinifex texture and consists of long acicular phenocrysts of olivine or pseudomorphs of alteration minerals after olivine or pyroxene which give the rock a bladed appearance especially on a weathered surface Spinifex texture is the result of rapid crystallization of highly magnesian liquid in the thermal gradient at the margin of the flow or sill Harrisite texture first described from intrusive rocks not komatiites at Harris Bay on the island of Rum in Scotland is formed by nucleation of crystals on the floor of a magma chamber 14 15 Harrisites are known to form megacrystal aggregates of pyroxene and olivine up to 1 metre in length 16 Harrisite texture is found in some very thick lava flows of komatiite for example in the Norseman Wiluna Greenstone Belt of Western Australia in which crystallization of cumulates has occurred 17 nbsp A2 facies dendritic feathery olivine crystals drill hole WDD18 Widgiemooltha Western Australia nbsp A3 facies bladed olivine spinifex drill hole WDD18 Widgiemooltha Komatiite Western AustraliaVolcanology edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Komatiite volcano morphology is interpreted to have the general form and structure of a shield volcano typical of most large basalt edifices as the magmatic event which forms komatiites erupts less magnesian materials However the initial flux of the most magnesian magmas is interpreted to form a channelised flow facie which is envisioned as a fissure vent releasing highly fluid komatiitic lava onto the surface This then flows outwards from the vent fissure concentrating into topographical lows and forming channel environments composed of high MgO olivine adcumulate flanked by a sheeted flow facies aprons of lower MgO olivine and pyroxene thin flow spinifex sheets The typical komatiite lava flow has six stratigraphically related elements A1 pillowed and variolitic chilled flow top often grading and transitional with sediment A2 Zone of quickly chilled feathery acicular olivine clinopyroxene glass representing a chilled margin on the top of the flow unit A3 Olivine spinifex sequence composed of sheaf and book like olivine spinifex representing a downward growing crystal accumulation on the flow top B1 Olivine mesocumulate to orthocumulate representing a harrisite grown in flowing liquid melt B2 Olivine adcumulate composed of gt 93 interlocking equant olivine crystals B3 Lower chill margin composed of olivine adcumulate to mesocumulate with finer grain size Individual flow units may not be entirely preserved as subsequent flow units may thermally erode the A zone spinifex flows In the distal thin flow facies B zones are poorly developed to absent as not enough through flowing liquid existed to grow the adcumulate The channel and sheeted flows are then covered by high magnesian basalts and tholeiitic basalts as the volcanic event evolves to less magnesian compositions The subsequent magmatism being higher silica melts tends to form a more typical shield volcano architecture Intrusive komatiites edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Komatiite magma is extremely dense and unlikely to reach the surface being more likely to pool lower within the crust Modern post 2004 interpretations of some of the larger olivine adcumulate bodies in the Yilgarn craton have revealed that the majority of komatiite olivine adcumulate occurrences are likely to be subvolcanic to intrusive in nature This is recognised at the Mt Keith nickel deposit where wall rock intrusive textures and xenoliths of felsic country rocks have been recognised within the low strain contacts 18 The previous interpretations of these large komatiite bodies was that they were super channels or reactivated channels which grew to over 500 m in stratigraphic thickness during prolonged volcanism These intrusions are considered to be channelised sills formed by injection of komatiitic magma into the stratigraphy and inflation of the magma chamber Economic nickel mineralised olivine adcumulate bodies may represent a form of sill like conduit where magma pools in a staging chamber before erupting onto the surface Economic importance editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The economic importance of komatiite was first widely recognised in the early 1960s with the discovery of massive nickel sulfide mineralisation at Kambalda Western Australia Komatiite hosted nickel copper sulfide mineralisation today accounts for about 14 of the world s nickel production mostly from Australia Canada and South Africa Komatiites are associated with nickel and gold deposits in Australia Canada South Africa and most recently in the Guiana shield of South America See also editList of rock textures List of rock textural and morphological terms List of rock types List of rock types recognized by geologists Igneous rock Rock formed through the cooling and solidification of magma or lava Rock microstructure size shape and mutual relations of the particles of a rockPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Komatiitic Ni Cu PGE mineralisation Fe Ni Cu PGE ore deposit Ultramafic rock Type of igneous and meta igneous rock Cumulate rock Igneous rocks formed by the accumulation of crystals from a magma either by settling or floating References edit Le Bas M J 2000 IUGS reclassification of the high Mg and picritic volcanic rocks Journal of Petrology 41 10 1467 1470 https doi org 10 1093 petrology 41 10 1467 Viljoen M J amp Viljoen R P 1969a Evidence for the existence of a mobile extrusive peridotitic magma from the Komati Formation of the Onvernacht Group Geological Survey of South Africa Special Publication 21 87 112 Arndt N Lesher C M amp Barnes S J 2008 Komatiite Cambridge Cambridge University Press Davies G F 1999 Plates Plumes and Mantle Convection Cambridge Cambridge University Press Herzberg C Condie K amp Korenaga J 2010 Thermal history of the Earth and its petrological expression Earth and Planetary Science Letters 292 1 2 79 88 https doi org 10 1016 j epsl 2010 01 022 Nisbet E G Cheadle M J Arndt Nicholas T amp Bickle M J 1993 Constraining the potential temperature of the Archaean mantle A review of the evidence from komatiites Lithos 30 3 4 291 307 https doi org 10 1016 0024 4937 93 90042 B Robin Popieul C C M Arndt N T Chauvel C Byerly G R Sobolev A V amp Wilson A 2012 A new model for Barberton komatiites Deep critical melting with high melt retention Journal of Petrology 53 11 2191 2229 https doi org 10 1093 petrology egs042 Sossi P A Eggins S M Nesbitt R W Nebel O Hergt J M Campbell I H O Neill H St C Van Kranendonk M amp Davies R D 2016 Petrogenesis and geochemistry of Archean Komatiites Journal of Petrology 57 1 147 184 https doi org 10 1093 petrology egw004 Waterton P Pearson D G Kjarsgaard B Hulbert L Locock A Parman S W amp Davis B 2017 Age Origin and Thermal Evolution of the ultra fresh 1 9 Ga Winnipegosis Komatiites Manitoba Canada Lithos 268 271 114 130 https doi org 10 1016 j lithos 2016 10 033 Hanski E Kamenetsky V S 2013 Chrome spinel hosted melt inclusions in Paleoproterozoic primitive volcanic rocks northern Finland Evidence for coexistence and mixing of komatiitic and picritic magmas Chemical Geology 343 25 37 Bibcode 2013ChGeo 343 25H doi 10 1016 j chemgeo 2013 02 009 McDonough W F Ireland T R September 1993 Intraplate origin of komatiites inferred from trace elements in glass inclusions Nature 365 6445 432 434 Bibcode 1993Natur 365 432M doi 10 1038 365432a0 S2CID 4257168 Parman S W 1 June 2004 A subduction origin for komatiites and cratonic lithospheric mantle South African Journal of Geology 107 1 2 107 118 Bibcode 2004SAJG 107 107P doi 10 2113 107 1 2 107 hdl 11427 24075 Dostal J 2008 Igneous Rock Associations 10 Komatiites Geoscience Canada 35 1 O Driscoll B Donaldson C H Troll V R Jerram D A Emeleus C H 2006 11 13 An Origin for Harrisitic and Granular Olivine in the Rum Layered Suite NW Scotland a Crystal Size Distribution Study Journal of Petrology 48 2 253 270 doi 10 1093 petrology egl059 ISSN 0022 3530 Troll V R Mattsson T Upton B G J Emeleus C H Donaldson C H Meyer R Weis F Dahren B Heimdal T H 2020 10 09 Fault Controlled Magma Ascent Recorded in the Central Series of the Rum Layered Intrusion NW Scotland Journal of Petrology 61 10 doi 10 1093 petrology egaa093 hdl 10023 23208 ISSN 0022 3530 Emeleus C H Troll V R August 2014 The Rum Igneous Centre Scotland Mineralogical Magazine 78 4 805 839 Bibcode 2014MinM 78 805E doi 10 1180 minmag 2014 078 4 04 ISSN 0026 461X Hill R E T Barnes S J Gole M J Dowling S E 1995 The volcanology of komatiites as deduced from field relationships in the Norseman Wiluna greenstone belt Western Australia Lithos 34 1 3 159 188 Bibcode 1995Litho 34 159H doi 10 1016 0024 4937 95 90019 5 Rosengren N M Beresford S W Grguric B A amp Cas R A F 2005 An intrusive origin for the komatiitic dunite hosted Mount Keith disseminated nickel sulfide deposit Western Australia Economic Geology 100 1 149 156 https doi org 10 2113 100 1 0149Bibliography editHess P C 1989 Origins of Igneous Rocks President and Fellows of Harvard College pp 276 285 ISBN 0 674 64481 6 Hill R E T Barnes S J Gole M J and Dowling S E 1990 Physical volcanology of komatiites A field guide to the komatiites of the Norseman Wiluna Greenstone Belt Eastern Goldfields Province Yilgarn Block Western Australia Geological Society of Australia ISBN 0 909869 55 3 Blatt Harvey and Robert Tracy 1996 Petrology 2nd ed Freeman pp 196 7 ISBN 0 7167 2438 3 S A Svetov A I Svetova and H Huhma 1999 Geochemistry of the Komatiite Tholeiite Rock Association in the Vedlozero Segozero Archean Greenstone Belt Central Karelia Geochemistry International Vol 39 Suppl 1 2001 pp S24 S38 PDF accessed 7 25 2005 Vernon R H 2004 A Practical Guide to Rock Microstructure pp 43 69 150 152 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 81443 X Arndt N T and Nisbet E G 1982 Komatiites Unwin Hyman ISBN 0 04 552019 4 Hardcover Arndt N T and Lesher C M 2005 Komatiites in Selley RC Cocks L R M Plimer I R Editors Encyclopedia of Geology 3 Elsevier New York pp 260 267 Faure F Arndt N T Libourel G 2006 Formation of spinifex texture in komatiite An experimental study J Petrol 47 1591 1610 Arndt N T Lesher C M and Barnes S J 2008 Komatiite Cambridge University Press Cambridge 488 pp ISBN 978 0521874748 External links editUnusual lava types Archived 2017 10 23 at the Wayback Machine accessed 7 25 2005 Komatiites and astrobiology Komatiites and the Plume Debate Volcanic fireworks on Io Photos of Abitibi komatiite Canada with text in French retrieved 2009 05 17 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Komatiite amp oldid 1193590114, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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