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Siilinjärvi carbonatite

The Siilinjärvi carbonatite complex is located in central Finland close to the city of Kuopio. It is named after the nearby town of Siilinjärvi, located approximately 5 km west of the southern extension of the complex. Siilinjärvi is the second largest carbonatite complex in Finland after the Sokli formation, and one of the oldest carbonatites on Earth at 2610±4 Ma.[1] The carbonatite complex consists of a roughly 16 km long steeply dipping lenticular body surrounded by granite gneiss. The maximum width of the body is 1.5 km and the surface area is 14.7 km2. The complex was discovered in 1950 by the Geological Survey of Finland with help of local mineral collectors. The exploration drilling began in 1958 by Lohjan Kalkkitehdas Oy. Typpi Oy continued drilling between years 1964 and 1967, and Apatiitti Oy drilled from 1967 to 1968. After the drillings, the laboratory and pilot plant work were made. The mine was opened by Kemira Oyj in 1979 as an open pit. The operation was sold to Yara in 2007.[2]

The Särkijärvi main pit seen from southern end of the mine in April 2016.
Fertilizer factories near to the mine.
Thin section of apatite-rich carbonatite in cross polarised transmitted light.
Thin section of apatite-rich glimmerite in cross polarised transmitted light.

The Siilinjärvi apatite mine is the biggest open pit in Finland. Currently the mine comprises two pits; the larger southern Särkijärvi and the smaller northern Saarinen satellite pit. The Särkijärvi pit is approximately 250 m deep, with a bench height of 28 m.[3] The Saarinen pit is located some 5 km north of the main Särkijärvi pit.[4]

The overall blast rate at the mine is 600 kt per week, 450 kt from the Särkijärvi pit and 150 kt from the Saarinen pit. Almost all of the glimmerite-carbonatite series rocks are ore-grade rocks; the fenites and crosscutting diabases are waste rocks. There are, however, some late apatite-poor carbonatite veins and certain blocks of carbonatite-glimmerite with < 0.5 wt-% P2O5. The reason why those are barren of apatite is unknown, but it could be related to metamorphism and fluid flow.[5]

The Siilinjärvi mine is the only operating phosphorus mine in the European Union. Since 1979, over 400 Mt of rock have been mined, about 65% being ore. By year 2016, the mine had produced 24.7 Mt of the main product, apatite. Ore reserves were 205 Mt in January 2016. The current production is roughly 11 Mt of ore per year, while the average in situ grade is 4.0 wt-% of P2O5.[6] Roughly 85% of the apatite concentrate is processed on-site in Siilinjärvi to produce phosphoric acid and fertilisers, the rest of the concentrate is used in the company's other factories. The by-products are mica and calcite concentrates.[7] Apatite concentrate is produced by flotation in the concentrator near the Särkijärvi pit. The concentrate can be then processed into phosphoric acid using sulphuric acid. The sulphuric acid is currently derived from Pyhäsalmi mine pyrite.[8]

Surrounding rocks edit

 
Saarinen satellite pit.

The surrounding bedrock of Siilinjärvi intrusion is Archean, although the boundary between the Archean and Paleoproterozoic bedrock is near-by. The nearest Paleoproterozoic rocks belong to the North Savo Black Schist area.[9]

The glimmerite-carbonatite intrusion in Siilinjärvi is located in the south-eastern part of the Iisalmi granite-gneiss terrain.[10] The terrane records both some of the youngest and oldest Archean events in the Fennoscandian Shield, the 2.6 Ga Siilinjärvi intrusion and nearly 3.2 Ga mesosomes found in granulites.[11] Seismic studies have shown that the crustal thickness inside the Iisalmi terrane is unusually thick, some 55–60 km.[12] The terranes thickness is due to several processes, such as thrust-stacking during the Svecofennian collision and post-collisional underplating. At the present erosion level the western part of the terrane is mostly metamorphosed at greenschist facies during the Svecofennian orogeny.[13]

The dominating surrounding rock type in the Siilinjärvi area is a granite gneiss with varying texture and to some extent, mineralogy. The main minerals are plagioclase feldspar, quartz, microcline feldspar, biotite and hornblende. The surrounding granite gneiss extends some 100 km to the north from Siilinjärvi.[14] The Karelian (2.0-1.9 Ga) sedimentary rocks occur in the west and north-west of Siilinjärvi. The rocks are folded mica schist -like gneisses.[15]

The gabbros of Lapinlahti and Siilinjärvi are from the Archean Karelian orogeny. A fine-grained quartz-diorite, which intrudes the surrounding granitic gneiss, is located at the north-eastern side of the Siilinjärvi gabbro.[16]

Rock types of the complex edit

 
Glimmerite. Scanned image of thin section from Siilinjärvi apatite ore in cross polarised transmitted light.
 
A drill core sample from Siilinjärvi.

Five different rocks characterise the Siilinjärvi mine: glimmerite-carbonatite series rocks, fenites, diabase dykes, tonalite-diorites and gneisses.[17] Apatite is associated with the glimmerite-carbonatites.[18]

Commonly, carbonatite complexes contain a core of intruded carbonatite which cuts a sequence of phlogopite-rich rocks. In Siilinjärvi, however, the glimmerites and carbonatites are well mixed and occur as subvertical to vertical laminated nearly pure glimmerites and nearly pure carbonatites. The volume of the carbonatite is greater in the center of the intrusion, and rocks near the edges of the body are almost completely glimmerites.[19]

Ore-bearing rocks edit

The central ore body comprises glimmerites and carbonatites. The phlogopite-rich ore-bearing rocks vary from almost pure glimmerite to carbonate-glimmerite and silicocarbonates. Carbonatites, which contain more than 50% carbonates, represent only about 1.5 vol% of the main intrusion. These carbonatite rocks are more abundant in the center of the intrusion and they occur as thin veins in glimmerite. The ore body also contains blue-green rocks which are composed up to 50 modal% of richterite.[20] The main minerals of the ore rocks are tetraferriphlogopite, calcite, dolomite, apatite and richterite. Zircon, magnetite, pyrrhotite, chalcopyrite and pyroxenes occur as accessory minerals. The apatite is fluorapatite and the amount of CO2 varies.[21]

Glimmerite is intensely foliated, greenish black, dark or reddish brown rock (depending on the dominating mica mineral) containing 0-15 % carbonate minerals. The oriented rocks are fine- to medium-grained and usually porphyritic. The matrix is composed of fine-grained, aphanitic phlogopite and the porphyroclasts are tabular phlogopite grains. The fine-grained glimmerites are often more equigranular. The mineral composition of the glimmerites are on average 82% phlogopite, 8% apatite, 7% amphiboles, 2% calcite and 1% dolomite. At some areas, the apatite content is so high that the rock is named as apatite rock (at least 25% apatite). Apatite occurs as grand sized grains in these rocks, and the diameter of the crystals can be up to several decimeters.[22] Accessory minerals of the glimmerites include ilmenite, magnetite and pyrochlore.[23]

The carbonate-glimmerites are lighter coloured rocks compared to the pure glimmerites. That is obviously because of the carbonate content (15-25 % carbonate minerals), but also because of the lighter, reddish brown colour of the mica. They are less oriented than the glimmerites and more equigranular. The grain size is medium. The mineral composition of the carbonate-glimmerites are on average 64% phlogopite, 10% apatite, 10% calcite, 9% dolomite and 7% amphiboles.[24]

The silicocarbonates contain 25-50 % carbonate minerals and are quite light coloured, the shade is dependent on the mica colour. The texture is quite similar to the carbonate-glimmerites, excluding the areas, where the carbonates and micas are banded and occur as their own phases. The average mineral composition is 46% phlogopite, 22% dolomite, 19% calcite, 9% apatite and 4% amphiboles, although the amount of calcite should be higher than the one of dolomites.[25] The accessory minerals of the silicocarbonates include strontianite, barite, zircon, ilmenite and magnetite.[26]

The carbonatitic rocks (> 50% carbonates) in Siilinjärvi are brecciated and are mostly composed of calcite, dolomite and apatite. The accessory minerals include phlogopite, ilmenite and magnetite.[27] Generally, the dolomite content of the carbonate rocks varies quite a lot. The content is mostly very low and the rock consist mainly of calcite, but in some areas, the dolomite content can be as high as 50%. The Siilinjärvi carbonates are light grey, white or slightly reddish fine to medium grained rocks with average grain size about 0.9-1.2 mm. These rocks occur commonly as vertical dykes.[28]

Fenites edit

Fenites surround the ore-bearing rocks in the Siilinjärvi complex. They were formed metasomatically when the carbonatite-glimmerite rocks intruded into the granite gneiss host. The fenites consist mainly of perthitic microcline, richterite amphibole, and pyroxene, but there also are a wide variety of fenite types that include minerals like pyroxene, amphibole, carbonate, quartz, apatite, and quartz-aegirine.[29] The fenites are also found as xenoliths in the glimmerite-carbonatites.[30] The most common fenite type is a reddish or greenish grey rock with varying grain size.[31] Microcline content of the fenites is on average about 50% and the microcline is abundant in perthite. The amount of plagioclase varies much more, and the highest percentages found are about 20-30 %. Anorthoclase content on individual plagioclase grains is 10-15 %. Amphibole percentage is 0-30 % and pyroxene percentage 0-15 % of the rock. Some fenite types contain as much as 15% biotite.[32]

Cross-cutting dykes edit

Basaltic diabase dykes crosscut the entire Siilinjärvi complex. Their width varies from a couple of centimetres up to 60 metres. The diabase dykes have a very distinct northwest–southeast or north-northwest–south-southeast vertical orientation.[33] The diabases are dark green, almost black aphanitic rocks without macroscopic orientation. The hornblende content of the Siilinjärvi diabases is 50-70 %, and plagioclase content is 25-40 %. The hornblende is altered to biotite in contact zones, and the plagioclase is albitic. The altered margins of the hornblende dyke are about 50 cm wide. The accessory minerals include titanite, epidote, pyrite, apatite, quartz and zircon.[34] The preliminary studies show that there are at least three different diabase varieties: calcite-bearing, sulfide-bearing and barren diabase. The sulfide content is higher in the more sheared rocks.[35]

The melasyenite, which crosscuts all the other parts of the complex but the diabase dykes, is composed of alkali feldspar, biotite, alkaline amphibole, apatite, and magnetite. The mafic melasyenite dyke is 4 km long and 20–30 m wide and appears to have a lamprophyric character.[36] It is located in the northern part of the complex and is possibly related to the same intrusive event as the carbonatite.[37]

Minerals of the Siilinjärvi intrusion edit

Most common minerals of the Siilinjärvi intrusion are micas, carbonates, apatites and amphiboles. The average composition of the Siilinjärvi ore is 65% phlogopite (including tetraferriphlogopite), 19% carbonates (calcite/dolomite ratio 4:1), 10% apatite (equivalent to 4% P2O5 in the whole rock), 5% richterite, and 1% accessory minerals (mainly magnetite and zircon).[38]

Micas edit

 
Tetraferriphlogopite grains. Photomicrograph from thin section in cross and plane polarised light.

The most common mica mineral in Siilinjärvi complex is tetraferriphlogopite, which comprises 65% of the intrusion. Some glimmerites contain over 90% tetraferriphlogopite. The colour of the mineral is black or greenish black, dark brown or reddish brown. The colour is dependent on the host rock and the intensity of the deformation of the rock. The reddish brown mica usually occurs with the carbonate-glimmerites and the black mica occurs with the glimmerites.[39] Phlogopites show very strong red-brown to pinkish yellow reverse pleocroism, which is due to high Fe3+ contents.[40] The phlogopite of Siilinjärvi is sold as soil conditioner under the trade name “Yara biotite”.

Phlogopite occurs as disseminated flakes, tabular crystals and lamellar or foliated aggregates. The grain size of the micas varies from only a couple of µm to several centimetres, the average size is 1–2 mm in diameter.[41] The phlogopite is altered into brown biotite-phlogopite in the shear zones, and in the most intensely sheared zones, into biotite and chlorite.[42] The most common inclusion mineral in micas is magnetite, but generally the inclusions are rare. Some zircon inclusions can also be found.[43]

Carbonates edit

 
Carbonate vein. Photomicrograph from thin section in cross and plane polarised light.

The dolomite of Siilinjärvi is yellowish or brownish white and it is hard to distinguish it from calcite. The most common form of dolomite is roundish anhedral grains with diameter of 0.2-0.4 mm. The dolomites are also found as large, almost euhedral, grains with diameter of 4–6 mm. Other common textures are myrmekite and exsolution lamellae with calcite. Euhedral grains are only found in carbonatites.[44] The microprobe studies of Siilinjärvi dolomite show homogeneous compositions with low FeO-, SrO- and MnO –content.[45]

Apatites edit

 
Fluorapatite grains in carbonate groundmass. The sample is taken from non-sheared ore, and apatite grains are large, rounded and elongated. Photomicrograph from thin section in cross and plane polarised light.

The apatite in Siilinjärvi is mainly fluorapatite, but also carbonate-fluorapatite can be found.[46] The ore-bearing rocks of Siilinjärvi contain roughly equal amounts (about 10%) of light green to grey apatite. The amount of fluorine is about 2-4 wt-% in the Siilinjärvi apatite.[47] The apatites of the mine contain quite high amounts of SrO, and sometimes also CO2. Apatite is found in companion with mica in mica rich rocks and with calcite, dolomite or mica in carbonate-rich rocks.[48]

Typically, the apatite occurs as rounded grains or as hexagonal prismatic crystals.[49] The grain size varies from 10 µm to several decimeters in diameter, so the deposit is disseminated. Usually the grain size of apatite is bigger in the carbonates and smaller in the deformed areas. The hexagonal rods and cross sections are sparse in deformed areas, where the grains are disintegrated and broken. The inclusions in the apatite are more abundant in the sheared parts of the ore. The amount is also greater in bigger grains compared to smaller ones. Some grains do not have inclusions at all. The most common inclusion minerals are carbonates, mostly dolomite. Opaques appear also as inclusions, but they are rare.[50]

Amphiboles edit

 
Almost euhedral amphibole crystal in carbonate groundmass. Photomicrograph from thin section in cross and plane polarised light.

The most common amphibole in Siilinjärvi is blue-green richterite, which forms about 5% of the overall volume of the intrusion and usually less than 15 vol-% of the glimmerites.[51] The greatest percentages of amphiboles are found in the sheared parts of the ore glimmerites, where the percentage can be locally up to 40-50 %. Some carbonatite veins do not have amphiboles at all. The amphiboles of Siilinjärvi are usually subhedral and the typical grain size is about 0.1 mm. However, the grain size varies quite a lot, and large crystals with diameter of several centimeters are not uncommon. The largest found crystal clusters are up to 30 cm long. Inclusions are rare and the inclusion minerals are most commonly phlogopite and opaques. Altering of the mineral is uncommon.[52]

Accessory minerals edit

 
Rutile grains as accessory post-kinematic mineral in highly deformed mica-rich zone. Photomicrograph from thin section in cross and plane polarised light.

Magnetite is the most common accessory mineral in the ore rocks, and constitute usually less than 1 vol% of the ore. It is mostly found in the glimmerites.[53] Sulfide minerals represented in the ore are pyrite, pyrrhotite, and lesser amounts of chalcopyrite. Sulfides can locally occur in massive form, despite their proportional rarity.[54]

Barite, strontianite, monazite, pyrochlore, zircon, baddeleyite, rutile and ilmenite have been identified in Siilinjärvi as rare accessory minerals. Barite can occur as intergrowths with strontianite in < 50 μm inclusions in calcite. Monazite can be found in two types: <50 μm subhedral inclusions in calcite or apatite and slightly larger sub-anhedral grains along grain boundaries. Pyrochlorite exists as inclusions mostly in phlogopite, grains are usually 50–200 μm wide. Zircon occurs as euhedral grains, which vary in size from 100 μm up to several centimeters long grains. However, zircon is an uncommon mineral in carbonates because of the low silica activity in the melt. Baddeleyite is found as inclusions in zircon.[55]

Geological structures edit

The dominant foliation dip direction in the Särkijärvi area is almost N-S (265-275°) and it dips nearly vertically (85-90°) towards west. The strike of the foliation is also the dominant direction of shearing. Other shearing trend is north-west to south-east, but it is weaker. This direction is also the dominating direction of the diabases.[56]

Shearing is a common feature in the main Siilinjärvi ore body and the contact zone between the country rock and ore body. There are also contact zones which show the primary magmatic contact. Paleoproterozoic diabase dykes crosscut the sheared zone. At least two stages of deformation can be found in the Siilinjärvi complex rocks. The deformation took certainly place during the Svecofennian orogeny, but other earlier stages of deformation may have occurred.[57]

References edit

Sources edit

  • Al-Ani, T. 2013. Mineralogy and petrography of Siilinjärvi carbonatite and glimmerite rocks, eastern Finland. Geological Survey of Finland, Archive Report, 164.
  • Härmälä, O. 1981. Siilinjärven kaivoksen mineraaleista ja malmin rikastusmineralogisista ominaisuuksista. Master's thesis, University of Turku, Department of Geology and Mineralogy. 121 p.
  • Korsman, K., Korja, T., Pajunen, M., Virransalo, P., & GGT/SVEKA working group. 1999. The GGT/SVEKA transect: structure and evolution of the continental crust in the Paleoproterozoic Svecofennian orogen in Finland. International Geology Review 41, 287–333.
  • Lukkarinen, H. 2008. Siilinjärven ja Kuopion kartta-alueiden kallioperä. Summary: Pre-Quaternary rocks of the Siilinjärvi and Kuopio map-sheet areas. Suomen geologinen kartta 1:100 000: kallioperäkarttojen selitykset lehdet 3331, 3242. Geological Survey of Finland. 228 p.
  • Mänttäri, I. & Hölttä, P. 2002. U–Pb dating of zircons and monazites from Archean granulites in Varpaisjärvi, Central Finland:: Evidence for multiple metamorphism and Neoarchean terrane accretion. Precambrian Research 118, 101–131.
  • O’Brien, H., Heilimo, E. & Heino, P. 2015. The Archean Siilinjärvi carbonatite complex. In: Maier, W., O’Brien, H., Lahtinen, R. (Eds.) Mineral Deposits of Finland, Elsevier, Amsterdam, 327–343.
  • Puustinen, K. 1971. Geology of the Siilinjarvi carbonatite complex, Eastern Finland. Geological Survey of Finland. Bulletin of the Geological Society of Finland 249, 43 p.
  • Salo, A. 2016. Geology of the Jaakonlampi area in the Siilinjärvi carbonatite complex. Bachelor's thesis, Oulu Mining School, University of Oulu. 27 p.
  • Sorjonen-Ward, P., & Luukkonen, E. J. 2005. Archean rocks. In: M. Lehtinen, P.A. Nurmi, O.T. Rämö (Eds.), Precambrian Geology of Finland—Key to the Evolution of the Fennoscandian Shield, Elsevier, 19–99.

Citations edit

  1. ^ Kouvo, O., 1984. GTK internal report to H. Lukkarinen, 4 p.
  2. ^ O’Brien et al. 2015
  3. ^ O’Brien et al. 2015
  4. ^ Salo 2016
  5. ^ O’Brien et al. 2015
  6. ^ O’Brien et al. 2015
  7. ^ Salo 2016
  8. ^ O’Brien et al. 2015
  9. ^ Lukkarinen 2008
  10. ^ Härmälä 1981
  11. ^ Mänttäri & Hölttä 2002
  12. ^ Korsman et al. 1999
  13. ^ Sorjonen-Ward & Luukkonen 2005
  14. ^ Puustinen 1971
  15. ^ Härmälä 1981
  16. ^ Härmälä 1981
  17. ^ O’Brien et al. 2015
  18. ^ Härmälä 1981
  19. ^ O’Brien et al. 2015
  20. ^ O’Brien et al. 2015
  21. ^ Härmälä 1981
  22. ^ Härmälä 1981
  23. ^ Al-Ani 2013
  24. ^ Härmälä 1981
  25. ^ Härmälä 1981
  26. ^ Al-Ani 2013
  27. ^ Al-Ani 2013
  28. ^ Härmälä 1981
  29. ^ O’Brien et al. 2015
  30. ^ Härmälä 1981
  31. ^ Puustinen 1971
  32. ^ Härmälä 1981
  33. ^ O’Brien et al. 2015
  34. ^ Härmälä 1981
  35. ^ O’Brien et al. 2015
  36. ^ Puustinen 1971
  37. ^ O’Brien et al. 2015
  38. ^ O’Brien et al. 2015
  39. ^ Härmälä 1981
  40. ^ Al-Ani 2013
  41. ^ Härmälä 1981
  42. ^ O’Brien et al. 2015
  43. ^ Härmälä 1981
  44. ^ Härmälä 1981
  45. ^ Al-Ani 2013
  46. ^ Härmälä 1981
  47. ^ O’Brien et al. 2015
  48. ^ Härmälä 1981
  49. ^ O’Brien et al. 2015
  50. ^ Härmälä 1981
  51. ^ O’Brien et al. 2015
  52. ^ Härmälä 1981
  53. ^ Härmälä 1981
  54. ^ O’Brien et al. 2015
  55. ^ O’Brien et al. 2015
  56. ^ Härmälä 1981
  57. ^ O’Brien et al. 2015

siilinjärvi, carbonatite, complex, located, central, finland, close, city, kuopio, named, after, nearby, town, siilinjärvi, located, approximately, west, southern, extension, complex, siilinjärvi, second, largest, carbonatite, complex, finland, after, sokli, f. The Siilinjarvi carbonatite complex is located in central Finland close to the city of Kuopio It is named after the nearby town of Siilinjarvi located approximately 5 km west of the southern extension of the complex Siilinjarvi is the second largest carbonatite complex in Finland after the Sokli formation and one of the oldest carbonatites on Earth at 2610 4 Ma 1 The carbonatite complex consists of a roughly 16 km long steeply dipping lenticular body surrounded by granite gneiss The maximum width of the body is 1 5 km and the surface area is 14 7 km2 The complex was discovered in 1950 by the Geological Survey of Finland with help of local mineral collectors The exploration drilling began in 1958 by Lohjan Kalkkitehdas Oy Typpi Oy continued drilling between years 1964 and 1967 and Apatiitti Oy drilled from 1967 to 1968 After the drillings the laboratory and pilot plant work were made The mine was opened by Kemira Oyj in 1979 as an open pit The operation was sold to Yara in 2007 2 The Sarkijarvi main pit seen from southern end of the mine in April 2016 Fertilizer factories near to the mine Thin section of apatite rich carbonatite in cross polarised transmitted light Thin section of apatite rich glimmerite in cross polarised transmitted light The Siilinjarvi apatite mine is the biggest open pit in Finland Currently the mine comprises two pits the larger southern Sarkijarvi and the smaller northern Saarinen satellite pit The Sarkijarvi pit is approximately 250 m deep with a bench height of 28 m 3 The Saarinen pit is located some 5 km north of the main Sarkijarvi pit 4 The overall blast rate at the mine is 600 kt per week 450 kt from the Sarkijarvi pit and 150 kt from the Saarinen pit Almost all of the glimmerite carbonatite series rocks are ore grade rocks the fenites and crosscutting diabases are waste rocks There are however some late apatite poor carbonatite veins and certain blocks of carbonatite glimmerite with lt 0 5 wt P2O5 The reason why those are barren of apatite is unknown but it could be related to metamorphism and fluid flow 5 The Siilinjarvi mine is the only operating phosphorus mine in the European Union Since 1979 over 400 Mt of rock have been mined about 65 being ore By year 2016 the mine had produced 24 7 Mt of the main product apatite Ore reserves were 205 Mt in January 2016 The current production is roughly 11 Mt of ore per year while the average in situ grade is 4 0 wt of P2O5 6 Roughly 85 of the apatite concentrate is processed on site in Siilinjarvi to produce phosphoric acid and fertilisers the rest of the concentrate is used in the company s other factories The by products are mica and calcite concentrates 7 Apatite concentrate is produced by flotation in the concentrator near the Sarkijarvi pit The concentrate can be then processed into phosphoric acid using sulphuric acid The sulphuric acid is currently derived from Pyhasalmi mine pyrite 8 Contents 1 Surrounding rocks 2 Rock types of the complex 2 1 Ore bearing rocks 2 2 Fenites 2 3 Cross cutting dykes 3 Minerals of the Siilinjarvi intrusion 3 1 Micas 3 2 Carbonates 3 3 Apatites 3 4 Amphiboles 3 5 Accessory minerals 4 Geological structures 5 References 5 1 Sources 5 2 CitationsSurrounding rocks edit nbsp Saarinen satellite pit The surrounding bedrock of Siilinjarvi intrusion is Archean although the boundary between the Archean and Paleoproterozoic bedrock is near by The nearest Paleoproterozoic rocks belong to the North Savo Black Schist area 9 The glimmerite carbonatite intrusion in Siilinjarvi is located in the south eastern part of the Iisalmi granite gneiss terrain 10 The terrane records both some of the youngest and oldest Archean events in the Fennoscandian Shield the 2 6 Ga Siilinjarvi intrusion and nearly 3 2 Ga mesosomes found in granulites 11 Seismic studies have shown that the crustal thickness inside the Iisalmi terrane is unusually thick some 55 60 km 12 The terranes thickness is due to several processes such as thrust stacking during the Svecofennian collision and post collisional underplating At the present erosion level the western part of the terrane is mostly metamorphosed at greenschist facies during the Svecofennian orogeny 13 The dominating surrounding rock type in the Siilinjarvi area is a granite gneiss with varying texture and to some extent mineralogy The main minerals are plagioclase feldspar quartz microcline feldspar biotite and hornblende The surrounding granite gneiss extends some 100 km to the north from Siilinjarvi 14 The Karelian 2 0 1 9 Ga sedimentary rocks occur in the west and north west of Siilinjarvi The rocks are folded mica schist like gneisses 15 The gabbros of Lapinlahti and Siilinjarvi are from the Archean Karelian orogeny A fine grained quartz diorite which intrudes the surrounding granitic gneiss is located at the north eastern side of the Siilinjarvi gabbro 16 Rock types of the complex edit nbsp Glimmerite Scanned image of thin section from Siilinjarvi apatite ore in cross polarised transmitted light nbsp A drill core sample from Siilinjarvi Five different rocks characterise the Siilinjarvi mine glimmerite carbonatite series rocks fenites diabase dykes tonalite diorites and gneisses 17 Apatite is associated with the glimmerite carbonatites 18 Commonly carbonatite complexes contain a core of intruded carbonatite which cuts a sequence of phlogopite rich rocks In Siilinjarvi however the glimmerites and carbonatites are well mixed and occur as subvertical to vertical laminated nearly pure glimmerites and nearly pure carbonatites The volume of the carbonatite is greater in the center of the intrusion and rocks near the edges of the body are almost completely glimmerites 19 Ore bearing rocks edit The central ore body comprises glimmerites and carbonatites The phlogopite rich ore bearing rocks vary from almost pure glimmerite to carbonate glimmerite and silicocarbonates Carbonatites which contain more than 50 carbonates represent only about 1 5 vol of the main intrusion These carbonatite rocks are more abundant in the center of the intrusion and they occur as thin veins in glimmerite The ore body also contains blue green rocks which are composed up to 50 modal of richterite 20 The main minerals of the ore rocks are tetraferriphlogopite calcite dolomite apatite and richterite Zircon magnetite pyrrhotite chalcopyrite and pyroxenes occur as accessory minerals The apatite is fluorapatite and the amount of CO2 varies 21 Glimmerite is intensely foliated greenish black dark or reddish brown rock depending on the dominating mica mineral containing 0 15 carbonate minerals The oriented rocks are fine to medium grained and usually porphyritic The matrix is composed of fine grained aphanitic phlogopite and the porphyroclasts are tabular phlogopite grains The fine grained glimmerites are often more equigranular The mineral composition of the glimmerites are on average 82 phlogopite 8 apatite 7 amphiboles 2 calcite and 1 dolomite At some areas the apatite content is so high that the rock is named as apatite rock at least 25 apatite Apatite occurs as grand sized grains in these rocks and the diameter of the crystals can be up to several decimeters 22 Accessory minerals of the glimmerites include ilmenite magnetite and pyrochlore 23 The carbonate glimmerites are lighter coloured rocks compared to the pure glimmerites That is obviously because of the carbonate content 15 25 carbonate minerals but also because of the lighter reddish brown colour of the mica They are less oriented than the glimmerites and more equigranular The grain size is medium The mineral composition of the carbonate glimmerites are on average 64 phlogopite 10 apatite 10 calcite 9 dolomite and 7 amphiboles 24 The silicocarbonates contain 25 50 carbonate minerals and are quite light coloured the shade is dependent on the mica colour The texture is quite similar to the carbonate glimmerites excluding the areas where the carbonates and micas are banded and occur as their own phases The average mineral composition is 46 phlogopite 22 dolomite 19 calcite 9 apatite and 4 amphiboles although the amount of calcite should be higher than the one of dolomites 25 The accessory minerals of the silicocarbonates include strontianite barite zircon ilmenite and magnetite 26 The carbonatitic rocks gt 50 carbonates in Siilinjarvi are brecciated and are mostly composed of calcite dolomite and apatite The accessory minerals include phlogopite ilmenite and magnetite 27 Generally the dolomite content of the carbonate rocks varies quite a lot The content is mostly very low and the rock consist mainly of calcite but in some areas the dolomite content can be as high as 50 The Siilinjarvi carbonates are light grey white or slightly reddish fine to medium grained rocks with average grain size about 0 9 1 2 mm These rocks occur commonly as vertical dykes 28 Fenites edit Fenites surround the ore bearing rocks in the Siilinjarvi complex They were formed metasomatically when the carbonatite glimmerite rocks intruded into the granite gneiss host The fenites consist mainly of perthitic microcline richterite amphibole and pyroxene but there also are a wide variety of fenite types that include minerals like pyroxene amphibole carbonate quartz apatite and quartz aegirine 29 The fenites are also found as xenoliths in the glimmerite carbonatites 30 The most common fenite type is a reddish or greenish grey rock with varying grain size 31 Microcline content of the fenites is on average about 50 and the microcline is abundant in perthite The amount of plagioclase varies much more and the highest percentages found are about 20 30 Anorthoclase content on individual plagioclase grains is 10 15 Amphibole percentage is 0 30 and pyroxene percentage 0 15 of the rock Some fenite types contain as much as 15 biotite 32 Cross cutting dykes edit Basaltic diabase dykes crosscut the entire Siilinjarvi complex Their width varies from a couple of centimetres up to 60 metres The diabase dykes have a very distinct northwest southeast or north northwest south southeast vertical orientation 33 The diabases are dark green almost black aphanitic rocks without macroscopic orientation The hornblende content of the Siilinjarvi diabases is 50 70 and plagioclase content is 25 40 The hornblende is altered to biotite in contact zones and the plagioclase is albitic The altered margins of the hornblende dyke are about 50 cm wide The accessory minerals include titanite epidote pyrite apatite quartz and zircon 34 The preliminary studies show that there are at least three different diabase varieties calcite bearing sulfide bearing and barren diabase The sulfide content is higher in the more sheared rocks 35 The melasyenite which crosscuts all the other parts of the complex but the diabase dykes is composed of alkali feldspar biotite alkaline amphibole apatite and magnetite The mafic melasyenite dyke is 4 km long and 20 30 m wide and appears to have a lamprophyric character 36 It is located in the northern part of the complex and is possibly related to the same intrusive event as the carbonatite 37 Minerals of the Siilinjarvi intrusion editMost common minerals of the Siilinjarvi intrusion are micas carbonates apatites and amphiboles The average composition of the Siilinjarvi ore is 65 phlogopite including tetraferriphlogopite 19 carbonates calcite dolomite ratio 4 1 10 apatite equivalent to 4 P2O5 in the whole rock 5 richterite and 1 accessory minerals mainly magnetite and zircon 38 Micas edit nbsp Tetraferriphlogopite grains Photomicrograph from thin section in cross and plane polarised light The most common mica mineral in Siilinjarvi complex is tetraferriphlogopite which comprises 65 of the intrusion Some glimmerites contain over 90 tetraferriphlogopite The colour of the mineral is black or greenish black dark brown or reddish brown The colour is dependent on the host rock and the intensity of the deformation of the rock The reddish brown mica usually occurs with the carbonate glimmerites and the black mica occurs with the glimmerites 39 Phlogopites show very strong red brown to pinkish yellow reverse pleocroism which is due to high Fe3 contents 40 The phlogopite of Siilinjarvi is sold as soil conditioner under the trade name Yara biotite Phlogopite occurs as disseminated flakes tabular crystals and lamellar or foliated aggregates The grain size of the micas varies from only a couple of µm to several centimetres the average size is 1 2 mm in diameter 41 The phlogopite is altered into brown biotite phlogopite in the shear zones and in the most intensely sheared zones into biotite and chlorite 42 The most common inclusion mineral in micas is magnetite but generally the inclusions are rare Some zircon inclusions can also be found 43 Carbonates edit nbsp Carbonate vein Photomicrograph from thin section in cross and plane polarised light The dolomite of Siilinjarvi is yellowish or brownish white and it is hard to distinguish it from calcite The most common form of dolomite is roundish anhedral grains with diameter of 0 2 0 4 mm The dolomites are also found as large almost euhedral grains with diameter of 4 6 mm Other common textures are myrmekite and exsolution lamellae with calcite Euhedral grains are only found in carbonatites 44 The microprobe studies of Siilinjarvi dolomite show homogeneous compositions with low FeO SrO and MnO content 45 Apatites edit nbsp Fluorapatite grains in carbonate groundmass The sample is taken from non sheared ore and apatite grains are large rounded and elongated Photomicrograph from thin section in cross and plane polarised light The apatite in Siilinjarvi is mainly fluorapatite but also carbonate fluorapatite can be found 46 The ore bearing rocks of Siilinjarvi contain roughly equal amounts about 10 of light green to grey apatite The amount of fluorine is about 2 4 wt in the Siilinjarvi apatite 47 The apatites of the mine contain quite high amounts of SrO and sometimes also CO2 Apatite is found in companion with mica in mica rich rocks and with calcite dolomite or mica in carbonate rich rocks 48 Typically the apatite occurs as rounded grains or as hexagonal prismatic crystals 49 The grain size varies from 10 µm to several decimeters in diameter so the deposit is disseminated Usually the grain size of apatite is bigger in the carbonates and smaller in the deformed areas The hexagonal rods and cross sections are sparse in deformed areas where the grains are disintegrated and broken The inclusions in the apatite are more abundant in the sheared parts of the ore The amount is also greater in bigger grains compared to smaller ones Some grains do not have inclusions at all The most common inclusion minerals are carbonates mostly dolomite Opaques appear also as inclusions but they are rare 50 Amphiboles edit nbsp Almost euhedral amphibole crystal in carbonate groundmass Photomicrograph from thin section in cross and plane polarised light The most common amphibole in Siilinjarvi is blue green richterite which forms about 5 of the overall volume of the intrusion and usually less than 15 vol of the glimmerites 51 The greatest percentages of amphiboles are found in the sheared parts of the ore glimmerites where the percentage can be locally up to 40 50 Some carbonatite veins do not have amphiboles at all The amphiboles of Siilinjarvi are usually subhedral and the typical grain size is about 0 1 mm However the grain size varies quite a lot and large crystals with diameter of several centimeters are not uncommon The largest found crystal clusters are up to 30 cm long Inclusions are rare and the inclusion minerals are most commonly phlogopite and opaques Altering of the mineral is uncommon 52 Accessory minerals edit nbsp Rutile grains as accessory post kinematic mineral in highly deformed mica rich zone Photomicrograph from thin section in cross and plane polarised light Magnetite is the most common accessory mineral in the ore rocks and constitute usually less than 1 vol of the ore It is mostly found in the glimmerites 53 Sulfide minerals represented in the ore are pyrite pyrrhotite and lesser amounts of chalcopyrite Sulfides can locally occur in massive form despite their proportional rarity 54 Barite strontianite monazite pyrochlore zircon baddeleyite rutile and ilmenite have been identified in Siilinjarvi as rare accessory minerals Barite can occur as intergrowths with strontianite in lt 50 mm inclusions in calcite Monazite can be found in two types lt 50 mm subhedral inclusions in calcite or apatite and slightly larger sub anhedral grains along grain boundaries Pyrochlorite exists as inclusions mostly in phlogopite grains are usually 50 200 mm wide Zircon occurs as euhedral grains which vary in size from 100 mm up to several centimeters long grains However zircon is an uncommon mineral in carbonates because of the low silica activity in the melt Baddeleyite is found as inclusions in zircon 55 Geological structures editThe dominant foliation dip direction in the Sarkijarvi area is almost N S 265 275 and it dips nearly vertically 85 90 towards west The strike of the foliation is also the dominant direction of shearing Other shearing trend is north west to south east but it is weaker This direction is also the dominating direction of the diabases 56 Shearing is a common feature in the main Siilinjarvi ore body and the contact zone between the country rock and ore body There are also contact zones which show the primary magmatic contact Paleoproterozoic diabase dykes crosscut the sheared zone At least two stages of deformation can be found in the Siilinjarvi complex rocks The deformation took certainly place during the Svecofennian orogeny but other earlier stages of deformation may have occurred 57 References edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Siilinjarvi apatite deposit Sources edit Al Ani T 2013 Mineralogy and petrography of Siilinjarvi carbonatite and glimmerite rocks eastern Finland Geological Survey of Finland Archive Report 164 Harmala O 1981 Siilinjarven kaivoksen mineraaleista ja malmin rikastusmineralogisista ominaisuuksista Master s thesis University of Turku Department of Geology and Mineralogy 121 p Korsman K Korja T Pajunen M Virransalo P amp GGT SVEKA working group 1999 The GGT SVEKA transect structure and evolution of the continental crust in the Paleoproterozoic Svecofennian orogen in Finland International Geology Review 41 287 333 Lukkarinen H 2008 Siilinjarven ja Kuopion kartta alueiden kalliopera Summary Pre Quaternary rocks of the Siilinjarvi and Kuopio map sheet areas Suomen geologinen kartta 1 100 000 kallioperakarttojen selitykset lehdet 3331 3242 Geological Survey of Finland 228 p Manttari I amp Holtta P 2002 U Pb dating of zircons and monazites from Archean granulites in Varpaisjarvi Central Finland Evidence for multiple metamorphism and Neoarchean terrane accretion Precambrian Research 118 101 131 O Brien H Heilimo E amp Heino P 2015 The Archean Siilinjarvi carbonatite complex In Maier W O Brien H Lahtinen R Eds Mineral Deposits of Finland Elsevier Amsterdam 327 343 Puustinen K 1971 Geology of the Siilinjarvi carbonatite complex Eastern Finland Geological Survey of Finland Bulletin of the Geological Society of Finland 249 43 p Salo A 2016 Geology of the Jaakonlampi area in the Siilinjarvi carbonatite complex Bachelor s thesis Oulu Mining School University of Oulu 27 p Sorjonen Ward P amp Luukkonen E J 2005 Archean rocks In M Lehtinen P A Nurmi O T Ramo Eds Precambrian Geology of Finland Key to the Evolution of the Fennoscandian Shield Elsevier 19 99 Citations edit Kouvo O 1984 GTK internal report to H Lukkarinen 4 p O Brien et al 2015 O Brien et al 2015 Salo 2016 O Brien et al 2015 O Brien et al 2015 Salo 2016 O Brien et al 2015 Lukkarinen 2008 Harmala 1981 Manttari amp Holtta 2002 Korsman et al 1999 Sorjonen Ward amp Luukkonen 2005 Puustinen 1971 Harmala 1981 Harmala 1981 O Brien et al 2015 Harmala 1981 O Brien et al 2015 O Brien et al 2015 Harmala 1981 Harmala 1981 Al Ani 2013 Harmala 1981 Harmala 1981 Al Ani 2013 Al Ani 2013 Harmala 1981 O Brien et al 2015 Harmala 1981 Puustinen 1971 Harmala 1981 O Brien et al 2015 Harmala 1981 O Brien et al 2015 Puustinen 1971 O Brien et al 2015 O Brien et al 2015 Harmala 1981 Al Ani 2013 Harmala 1981 O Brien et al 2015 Harmala 1981 Harmala 1981 Al Ani 2013 Harmala 1981 O Brien et al 2015 Harmala 1981 O Brien et al 2015 Harmala 1981 O Brien et al 2015 Harmala 1981 Harmala 1981 O Brien et al 2015 O Brien et al 2015 Harmala 1981 O Brien et al 2015 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Siilinjarvi carbonatite amp oldid 1181668974, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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