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Skarn

Skarns or tactites are coarse-grained metamorphic rocks that form by replacement of carbonate-bearing rocks during regional or contact metamorphism and metasomatism. Skarns may form by metamorphic recrystallization of impure carbonate protoliths, bimetasomatic reaction of different lithologies, and infiltration metasomatism by magmatic-hydrothermal fluids.[1] Skarns tend to be rich in calcium-magnesium-iron-manganese-aluminium silicate minerals, which are also referred to as calc-silicate minerals.[2][3][4][5] These minerals form as a result of alteration which occurs when hydrothermal fluids interact with a protolith of either igneous or sedimentary origin. In many cases, skarns are associated with the intrusion of a granitic pluton found in and around faults or shear zones that commonly intrude into a carbonate layer composed of either dolomite or limestone. Skarns can form by regional or contact metamorphism and therefore form in relatively high temperature environments.[2][3][4][5] The hydrothermal fluids associated with the metasomatic processes can originate from a variety of sources; magmatic, metamorphic, meteoric, marine, or even a mix of these.[4] The resulting skarn may consist of a variety of different minerals which are highly dependent on both the original composition of the hydrothermal fluid and the original composition of the protolith.[4]

Microscopic view of skarn under crossed polarizers
Hand sample of skarn containing serpentinite from the edge of the Alta Stock, Little Cottonwood Canyon, Utah

If a skarn has a respectable amount of ore mineralization that can be mined for a profit, it can be classified as a skarn deposit.[2][3][4]

Etymology Edit

Skarn is an old Swedish mining term originally used to describe a type of silicate gangue, or waste rock, associated with iron-ore bearing sulfide deposits apparently replacing Palaeoproterozoic age limestones in Sweden's Persberg mining district.[6]

Petrology Edit

Skarns are composed of calcium-iron-magnesium-manganese-aluminum silicate minerals. Skarn deposits are economically valuable as sources of metals such as tin, tungsten, manganese, copper, gold, zinc, lead, nickel, molybdenum and iron.[5]

A skarn is formed by a variety of metasomatic processes during metamorphism between two adjacent lithologic units. Skarns can form in almost any rock type such as shale, granite, or basalt but the majority of skarns are found in carbonate rocks containing limestone or dolomite. It is common to find skarns near plutons, along faults and major shear zones, in shallow geothermal systems, and on the bottom of the sea floor.[4] The specific mineralogy of skarns are highly related to the mineralogy of the protolith.[7]

Skarn mineralogy is dominated by garnet and pyroxene with a wide variety of calc-silicate and associated minerals, including idocrase, wollastonite, actinolite, magnetite or hematite, epidote and scapolite. Because skarns are formed from silica-rich aqueous fluids replete with incompatible elements, a variety of uncommon mineral types are found in skarns, such as: tourmaline, topaz, beryl, corundum, fluorite, apatite, barite, strontianite, tantalite, anglesite, and others.[8]

Classification Edit

Skarns can be subdivided depending on specific criteria. One way to classify a skarn is by its protolith. If the protolith is of sedimentary origin, it can be referred to as an exoskarn and if the protolith is igneous, it can be called an endoskarn.[3][4]

Further classification can be made based on the protolith by observing the skarn's dominant composition and the resulting alteration assemblage. If the skarn contains minerals such as olivine, serpentine, phlogopite, magnesium clinopyroxene, orthopyroxene, spinel, pargasite, and minerals from the humite group, it is characteristic of a dolomitic protolith and can be classed as a magnesian skarn. The other class, called calcic skarns, are the replacement products of a limestone protolith with dominant mineral assemblages containing garnet, clinopyroxene, and wollastonite.[3]

Rocks that contain garnet or pyroxene as major phases, and that are also fine-grained, lack iron, and have skarn-like appearances, are generally given the term "skarnoid". Skarnoid is therefore the intermediate stage of a fine-grained hornfels and a coarse-grained skarn.[3][4]

Skarn ore deposits Edit

Metal ore deposits that have skarn as gangue are called skarn deposits and can form by any combination of closed metamorphism or open system metasomatism, although most skarn deposits are thought to be related to magmatic-hydrothermal systems.[1] Skarn deposits are classified by their dominant economic element, e.g., a copper (Cu) skarn deposit or a molybdenum (Mo) skarn deposit.[2][3][5]

Fe (Cu, Ag, Au) skarn deposits Edit

The tectonic setting for calcic Fe skarns tends to be the oceanic island arcs. The host rocks tend to range from gabbro to syenite associated with intruding limestone layers. The tectonic setting for magnesium Fe skarns tends to be the continental margin. The host rocks tend to be granodiorite to granite associated with intruding dolomite and dolomitic sedimentary rocks. Magnetite is the principal ore in these types of skarn deposits which its grade yields from 40 to 60 %. Chalcopyrite, bornite and pyrite constitute minor ores.[9][10]

Cu (Au, Ag, Mo, W) skarn deposits Edit

The tectonic setting for Cu deposits tends to be the Andean-type plutons intruding older continental-margin carbonate layers. The host rocks tend to be quartz diorite and granodiorite. Pyrite, chalcopyrite and magnetite are typically found in higher abundances.[9][10]

Formation Edit

Generally, there are two types of skarns that form, exoskarns and endoskarns.[11]

Exoskarns are more common and form on the outside of an intrusive body that comes into contact with a reactive rock unit. They are formed when fluids left over from the crystallisation of the intrusion are ejected from the mass at the waning stages of emplacement, in a process called boiling. When these fluids come into contact with reactive rocks, usually carbonates such as limestone or dolomite, the fluids react with them, producing alteration (infiltration metasomatism).[4]

Endoskarns form within the intrusive body where fracturing, cooling joints, and stockworks have been produced, which results in a permeable area. This permeable area can be altered by fluids originally sourced from the intrusion itself, after interacting with surrounding rocks (protolith). Thus, both the composition and the textures of protoliths strongly play a role in the formation of the resulting skarn. Endoskarns are considered to be rare. [4]

Reaction skarns are formed from isochemical metamorphism occurring on thinly interlayered sedimentary units, via small-scale[a] metasomatic exchange between adjacent units.[4][12]

Skarnoids are calc-silicate rocks that are fine-grained and iron poor. Skarnoids tend to be found between hornfels and coarse-grained skarn.[13][14][15] Skarnoids commonly reflect the composition of the protolith.[4]

Most large skarn deposits experience a transition from early metamorphism—which forms hornfels, reaction skarns, and skarnoids—to late metamorphism, which forms relatively coarser grained, ore-bearing skarns. The magma intrusion triggers contact metamorphism in the surrounding region, forming hornfels as a result. The recrystallization and phase change of hornfels reflects the composition of the protolith. After the formation of hornfels, metasomatism occurs involving hydrothermal fluids from a source that is magmatic, metamorphic, marine, meteoric, or even a mix of these. This process is called isochemical metamorphism, and can result in the production of a wide range of calc-silicate minerals that form in impure lithology units and along fluid boundaries where small-scale metasomatism occurs (argillite and limestone, and banded iron formation).[2][3]

The skarn deposits that are considered economically important for containing valuable metals are a result of large-scale metasomatism, where the composition of fluid controls the skarn and its ore mineralogy. They are relatively coarser grained and do not strongly reflect the composition of protolith or surrounding rocks.[3][4]

Uncommon types of skarns are formed in contact with sulfidic or carbonaceous rocks such as black shales, graphite shales, banded iron formations and, occasionally, salt or evaporites. Here, fluids react less via chemical exchange of ions, but because of the redox-oxidation potential of the wall rocks.[4]

Ore deposits Edit

The major economic metals that are sourced from skarn deposits are copper, tungsten, iron, tin, molybdenum, zinc-lead, and gold.[2][3][4][5] Other minor economic elements include uranium, silver, boron, fluorine, and rare-earth elements.[4]

Some examples of the major economic skarn deposits, both current and historical, are:

  • Iron skarns: Dashkesan Mine, Azerbaijan
  • Nickel skarns: Avebury Mine, Zeehan, Tasmania (Australia)
  • Molybdenum skarns: Yangchiachangtze mine, China

See also Edit

  • Ore genesis – How the various types of mineral deposits form within the Earth's crust

Notes Edit

  1. ^ (on the order of a few centimetres)

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Einaudi, M. T.; Meinert, L. D.; Newberry, R. J. (1981), "Skarn Deposits", Seventy-Fifth Anniversary Volume, Society of Economic Geologists, doi:10.5382/av75.11, ISBN 978-1-9349-6953-3, retrieved 2023-07-14
  2. ^ a b c d e f Einaudi, Marco T.; Burt, Donald M. (1982). "Introduction; terminology, classification, and composition of skarn deposits". Economic Geology. 77 (4): 745–754. Bibcode:1982EcGeo..77..745E. doi:10.2113/gsecongeo.77.4.745.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Ray, G.E., and Webster, I.C.L. (1991): An Overview of Skarn Deposits; in Ore Deposits, Tectonics and Metallogeny in the Canadian Cordillera; McMillan, W.J., compiler, B. C. Ministry of Energy, Mines and Petroleum Resources, Paper 1991-4, pages 213-252.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Meinert, L.D., 1992. Skarns and Skarn Deposits; Geoscience Canada, Vol. 19, No. 4, p. 145-162.
  5. ^ a b c d e Hammarstrom, J.M., Kotlyar, B.B., Theodore, T.G., Elliott, J.E., John, D.A., Doebrich, J.L., Nash, J.T., Carlson, R.R., Lee, G.K., Livo, K.E., Klein, D.P., 1995. Cu, Au, and Zn-Pb Skarn Deposits, Chapter 12; United States Geological Survey: Preliminary Compilation of Descriptive Geoenvironmental Mineral Deposit Models: https://pubs.usgs.gov/of/1995/ofr-95-0831/CHAP12.pdf.
  6. ^ Burt, Donald M. (1977). "Mineralogy and petrology of skarn deposits" (PDF). Societa Italiana Mineralogia Petrolgia Rendiconti. 33 (2): 859–873.
  7. ^ Jolis, E. M.; Troll, V. R.; Harris, C.; Freda, C.; Gaeta, M.; Orsi, G.; Siebe, C. (2015-11-15). "Skarn xenolith record crustal CO2 liberation during Pompeii and Pollena eruptions, Vesuvius volcanic system, central Italy". Chemical Geology. 415: 17–36. Bibcode:2015ChGeo.415...17J. doi:10.1016/j.chemgeo.2015.09.003. ISSN 0009-2541.
  8. ^ "Hydrothermal and Skarn Deposits". www.geol-amu.org. Retrieved 2018-03-29.
  9. ^ a b Nadoll, Patrick; Mauk, Jeffrey L.; Leveille, Richard A.; Koenig, Alan E. (2015-04-01). "Geochemistry of magnetite from porphyry Cu and skarn deposits in the southwestern United States". Mineralium Deposita. 50 (4): 493–515. Bibcode:2015MinDe..50..493N. doi:10.1007/s00126-014-0539-y. ISSN 0026-4598. S2CID 128816207.
  10. ^ a b Soloviev, Serguei G.; Kryazhev, Sergey (2017). "Geology, mineralization, and fluid inclusion characteristics of the Chorukh-Dairon W–Mo–Cu skarn deposit in the Middle Tien Shan, Northern Tajikistan". Ore Geology Reviews. 80: 79–102. Bibcode:2017OGRv...80...79S. doi:10.1016/j.oregeorev.2016.06.021.
  11. ^ Whitley, Sean; Halama, Ralf; Gertisser, Ralf; Preece, Katie; Deegan, Frances M.; Troll, Valentin R. (2020-10-18). "Magmatic and Metasomatic Effects of Magma–Carbonate Interaction Recorded in Calc-silicate Xenoliths from Merapi Volcano (Indonesia)". Journal of Petrology. 61 (4). doi:10.1093/petrology/egaa048. ISSN 0022-3530.
  12. ^ Zarayskiy, G. P.; Zharikov, V. A.; Stoyanovskaya, F. M.; Balashov, V. N. (1987). "The experimental study of bimetasomatic skarn formation". International Geology Review (published 29 June 2010). 29 (6): 761–858. Bibcode:1987IGRv...29..629Z. doi:10.1080/00206818709466179.
  13. ^ Korzhinskii, D.S. (1948). "Petrology of the Tur'insk skarn deposits of copper". 68 (10). Ser. Rundnykh Mestorozhdenii. Academy nauk SSSR: Institute of Geology Nauk Trudy: 147. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  14. ^ Zharikov, V. A. (1970). "Skarns (Part I)". International Geology Review (published 7 September 2009). 12 (5): 541–559. Bibcode:1970IGRv...12..541Z. doi:10.1080/00206817009475262.
  15. ^ Zharikov, V. A. (1970). "Skarns (Part II)". International Geology Review (published 7 September 2009). 12 (6): 619–647, 760–775. Bibcode:1970IGRv...12..619Z. doi:10.1080/00206817009475270.

External links Edit

skarn, tactites, coarse, grained, metamorphic, rocks, that, form, replacement, carbonate, bearing, rocks, during, regional, contact, metamorphism, metasomatism, form, metamorphic, recrystallization, impure, carbonate, protoliths, bimetasomatic, reaction, diffe. Skarns or tactites are coarse grained metamorphic rocks that form by replacement of carbonate bearing rocks during regional or contact metamorphism and metasomatism Skarns may form by metamorphic recrystallization of impure carbonate protoliths bimetasomatic reaction of different lithologies and infiltration metasomatism by magmatic hydrothermal fluids 1 Skarns tend to be rich in calcium magnesium iron manganese aluminium silicate minerals which are also referred to as calc silicate minerals 2 3 4 5 These minerals form as a result of alteration which occurs when hydrothermal fluids interact with a protolith of either igneous or sedimentary origin In many cases skarns are associated with the intrusion of a granitic pluton found in and around faults or shear zones that commonly intrude into a carbonate layer composed of either dolomite or limestone Skarns can form by regional or contact metamorphism and therefore form in relatively high temperature environments 2 3 4 5 The hydrothermal fluids associated with the metasomatic processes can originate from a variety of sources magmatic metamorphic meteoric marine or even a mix of these 4 The resulting skarn may consist of a variety of different minerals which are highly dependent on both the original composition of the hydrothermal fluid and the original composition of the protolith 4 Microscopic view of skarn under crossed polarizersHand sample of skarn containing serpentinite from the edge of the Alta Stock Little Cottonwood Canyon UtahIf a skarn has a respectable amount of ore mineralization that can be mined for a profit it can be classified as a skarn deposit 2 3 4 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Petrology 3 Classification 3 1 Skarn ore deposits 3 2 Fe Cu Ag Au skarn deposits 3 3 Cu Au Ag Mo W skarn deposits 4 Formation 5 Ore deposits 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksEtymology EditSkarn is an old Swedish mining term originally used to describe a type of silicate gangue or waste rock associated with iron ore bearing sulfide deposits apparently replacing Palaeoproterozoic age limestones in Sweden s Persberg mining district 6 Petrology EditSkarns are composed of calcium iron magnesium manganese aluminum silicate minerals Skarn deposits are economically valuable as sources of metals such as tin tungsten manganese copper gold zinc lead nickel molybdenum and iron 5 A skarn is formed by a variety of metasomatic processes during metamorphism between two adjacent lithologic units Skarns can form in almost any rock type such as shale granite or basalt but the majority of skarns are found in carbonate rocks containing limestone or dolomite It is common to find skarns near plutons along faults and major shear zones in shallow geothermal systems and on the bottom of the sea floor 4 The specific mineralogy of skarns are highly related to the mineralogy of the protolith 7 Skarn mineralogy is dominated by garnet and pyroxene with a wide variety of calc silicate and associated minerals including idocrase wollastonite actinolite magnetite or hematite epidote and scapolite Because skarns are formed from silica rich aqueous fluids replete with incompatible elements a variety of uncommon mineral types are found in skarns such as tourmaline topaz beryl corundum fluorite apatite barite strontianite tantalite anglesite and others 8 Classification EditSkarns can be subdivided depending on specific criteria One way to classify a skarn is by its protolith If the protolith is of sedimentary origin it can be referred to as an exoskarn and if the protolith is igneous it can be called an endoskarn 3 4 Further classification can be made based on the protolith by observing the skarn s dominant composition and the resulting alteration assemblage If the skarn contains minerals such as olivine serpentine phlogopite magnesium clinopyroxene orthopyroxene spinel pargasite and minerals from the humite group it is characteristic of a dolomitic protolith and can be classed as a magnesian skarn The other class called calcic skarns are the replacement products of a limestone protolith with dominant mineral assemblages containing garnet clinopyroxene and wollastonite 3 Rocks that contain garnet or pyroxene as major phases and that are also fine grained lack iron and have skarn like appearances are generally given the term skarnoid Skarnoid is therefore the intermediate stage of a fine grained hornfels and a coarse grained skarn 3 4 Skarn ore deposits Edit Metal ore deposits that have skarn as gangue are called skarn deposits and can form by any combination of closed metamorphism or open system metasomatism although most skarn deposits are thought to be related to magmatic hydrothermal systems 1 Skarn deposits are classified by their dominant economic element e g a copper Cu skarn deposit or a molybdenum Mo skarn deposit 2 3 5 Fe Cu Ag Au skarn deposits Edit The tectonic setting for calcic Fe skarns tends to be the oceanic island arcs The host rocks tend to range from gabbro to syenite associated with intruding limestone layers The tectonic setting for magnesium Fe skarns tends to be the continental margin The host rocks tend to be granodiorite to granite associated with intruding dolomite and dolomitic sedimentary rocks Magnetite is the principal ore in these types of skarn deposits which its grade yields from 40 to 60 Chalcopyrite bornite and pyrite constitute minor ores 9 10 Cu Au Ag Mo W skarn deposits Edit The tectonic setting for Cu deposits tends to be the Andean type plutons intruding older continental margin carbonate layers The host rocks tend to be quartz diorite and granodiorite Pyrite chalcopyrite and magnetite are typically found in higher abundances 9 10 Formation EditGenerally there are two types of skarns that form exoskarns and endoskarns 11 Exoskarns are more common and form on the outside of an intrusive body that comes into contact with a reactive rock unit They are formed when fluids left over from the crystallisation of the intrusion are ejected from the mass at the waning stages of emplacement in a process called boiling When these fluids come into contact with reactive rocks usually carbonates such as limestone or dolomite the fluids react with them producing alteration infiltration metasomatism 4 Endoskarns form within the intrusive body where fracturing cooling joints and stockworks have been produced which results in a permeable area This permeable area can be altered by fluids originally sourced from the intrusion itself after interacting with surrounding rocks protolith Thus both the composition and the textures of protoliths strongly play a role in the formation of the resulting skarn Endoskarns are considered to be rare 4 Reaction skarns are formed from isochemical metamorphism occurring on thinly interlayered sedimentary units via small scale a metasomatic exchange between adjacent units 4 12 Skarnoids are calc silicate rocks that are fine grained and iron poor Skarnoids tend to be found between hornfels and coarse grained skarn 13 14 15 Skarnoids commonly reflect the composition of the protolith 4 Most large skarn deposits experience a transition from early metamorphism which forms hornfels reaction skarns and skarnoids to late metamorphism which forms relatively coarser grained ore bearing skarns The magma intrusion triggers contact metamorphism in the surrounding region forming hornfels as a result The recrystallization and phase change of hornfels reflects the composition of the protolith After the formation of hornfels metasomatism occurs involving hydrothermal fluids from a source that is magmatic metamorphic marine meteoric or even a mix of these This process is called isochemical metamorphism and can result in the production of a wide range of calc silicate minerals that form in impure lithology units and along fluid boundaries where small scale metasomatism occurs argillite and limestone and banded iron formation 2 3 The skarn deposits that are considered economically important for containing valuable metals are a result of large scale metasomatism where the composition of fluid controls the skarn and its ore mineralogy They are relatively coarser grained and do not strongly reflect the composition of protolith or surrounding rocks 3 4 Uncommon types of skarns are formed in contact with sulfidic or carbonaceous rocks such as black shales graphite shales banded iron formations and occasionally salt or evaporites Here fluids react less via chemical exchange of ions but because of the redox oxidation potential of the wall rocks 4 Ore deposits EditThe major economic metals that are sourced from skarn deposits are copper tungsten iron tin molybdenum zinc lead and gold 2 3 4 5 Other minor economic elements include uranium silver boron fluorine and rare earth elements 4 Some examples of the major economic skarn deposits both current and historical are Iron skarns Dashkesan Mine AzerbaijanCopper skarns Bingham Canyon Mine Utah U S ATungsten skarns Sangdong mine South KoreaGold bearing skarns Hedley Mascot Mine British Columbia CanadaZinc lead skarns Santa Eulalia Chihuahua MexicoNickel skarns Avebury Mine Zeehan Tasmania Australia Molybdenum skarns Yangchiachangtze mine ChinaSee also EditOre genesis How the various types of mineral deposits form within the Earth s crust nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Skarn Notes Edit on the order of a few centimetres References Edit a b Einaudi M T Meinert L D Newberry R J 1981 Skarn Deposits Seventy Fifth Anniversary Volume Society of Economic Geologists doi 10 5382 av75 11 ISBN 978 1 9349 6953 3 retrieved 2023 07 14 a b c d e f Einaudi Marco T Burt Donald M 1982 Introduction terminology classification and composition of skarn deposits Economic Geology 77 4 745 754 Bibcode 1982EcGeo 77 745E doi 10 2113 gsecongeo 77 4 745 a b c d e f g h i j Ray G E and Webster I C L 1991 An Overview of Skarn Deposits in Ore Deposits Tectonics and Metallogeny in the Canadian Cordillera McMillan W J compiler B C Ministry of Energy Mines and Petroleum Resources Paper 1991 4 pages 213 252 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Meinert L D 1992 Skarns and Skarn Deposits Geoscience Canada Vol 19 No 4 p 145 162 a b c d e Hammarstrom J M Kotlyar B B Theodore T G Elliott J E John D A Doebrich J L Nash J T Carlson R R Lee G K Livo K E Klein D P 1995 Cu Au and Zn Pb Skarn Deposits Chapter 12 United States Geological Survey Preliminary Compilation of Descriptive Geoenvironmental Mineral Deposit Models https pubs usgs gov of 1995 ofr 95 0831 CHAP12 pdf Burt Donald M 1977 Mineralogy and petrology of skarn deposits PDF Societa Italiana Mineralogia Petrolgia Rendiconti 33 2 859 873 Jolis E M Troll V R Harris C Freda C Gaeta M Orsi G Siebe C 2015 11 15 Skarn xenolith record crustal CO2 liberation during Pompeii and Pollena eruptions Vesuvius volcanic system central Italy Chemical Geology 415 17 36 Bibcode 2015ChGeo 415 17J doi 10 1016 j chemgeo 2015 09 003 ISSN 0009 2541 Hydrothermal and Skarn Deposits www geol amu org Retrieved 2018 03 29 a b Nadoll Patrick Mauk Jeffrey L Leveille Richard A Koenig Alan E 2015 04 01 Geochemistry of magnetite from porphyry Cu and skarn deposits in the southwestern United States Mineralium Deposita 50 4 493 515 Bibcode 2015MinDe 50 493N doi 10 1007 s00126 014 0539 y ISSN 0026 4598 S2CID 128816207 a b Soloviev Serguei G Kryazhev Sergey 2017 Geology mineralization and fluid inclusion characteristics of the Chorukh Dairon W Mo Cu skarn deposit in the Middle Tien Shan Northern Tajikistan Ore Geology Reviews 80 79 102 Bibcode 2017OGRv 80 79S doi 10 1016 j oregeorev 2016 06 021 Whitley Sean Halama Ralf Gertisser Ralf Preece Katie Deegan Frances M Troll Valentin R 2020 10 18 Magmatic and Metasomatic Effects of Magma Carbonate Interaction Recorded in Calc silicate Xenoliths from Merapi Volcano Indonesia Journal of Petrology 61 4 doi 10 1093 petrology egaa048 ISSN 0022 3530 Zarayskiy G P Zharikov V A Stoyanovskaya F M Balashov V N 1987 The experimental study of bimetasomatic skarn formation International Geology Review published 29 June 2010 29 6 761 858 Bibcode 1987IGRv 29 629Z doi 10 1080 00206818709466179 Korzhinskii D S 1948 Petrology of the Tur insk skarn deposits of copper 68 10 Ser Rundnykh Mestorozhdenii Academy nauk SSSR Institute of Geology Nauk Trudy 147 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Zharikov V A 1970 Skarns Part I International Geology Review published 7 September 2009 12 5 541 559 Bibcode 1970IGRv 12 541Z doi 10 1080 00206817009475262 Zharikov V A 1970 Skarns Part II International Geology Review published 7 September 2009 12 6 619 647 760 775 Bibcode 1970IGRv 12 619Z doi 10 1080 00206817009475270 External links Edit nbsp Look up skarn or tactite in Wiktionary the free dictionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Skarn amp oldid 1174534302, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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