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Lamprophyre

Lamprophyres (from Ancient Greek λαμπρός (lamprós) 'bright', and φύρω (phúrō) 'to mix') are uncommon, small-volume ultrapotassic igneous rocks primarily occurring as dikes, lopoliths, laccoliths, stocks, and small intrusions. They are alkaline silica-undersaturated mafic or ultramafic rocks with high magnesium oxide, >3% potassium oxide, high sodium oxide, and high nickel and chromium.

Minette (a type of lamprophyre), from Jáchymov in the Czech Republic

Lamprophyres occur throughout all geologic eras. Archaean examples are commonly associated with lode gold deposits. Cenozoic examples include magnesian rocks in Mexico and South America, and young ultramafic lamprophyres from Gympie in Australia with 18.5% MgO at ~250 Ma.

Petrology edit

Modern science treats lamprophyres as a catch-all term for ultrapotassic mafic igneous rocks which have primary mineralogy consisting of amphibole or biotite, and with feldspar in the groundmass.

Lamprophyres are not amenable to classification according to modal proportions, such as the system QAPF due to peculiar mineralogy, nor compositional discrimination diagrams, such as TAS because of their peculiar geochemistry. They are classified under the IUGS Nomenclature for Igneous Rocks (Le Maitre et al., 1989) separately; this is primarily because they are rare, have peculiar mineralogy and do not fit classical classification schemes. For example, the TAS scheme is inappropriate due to the control of mineralogy by potassium, not by calcium or sodium.

Mitchell[1] has suggested that rocks belonging to the "lamprophyre facies" are characterized by the presence of phenocrysts of mica and/or amphibole together with lesser clinopyroxene and/or melilite set in a groundmass which may consist (either singly or in various combinations) of plagioclase, alkali feldspar, feldspathoids, carbonate, monticellite, melilite, mica, amphibole, pyroxene, perovskite, Fe-Ti oxides and glass.

Classification schemes which include genetic information, may be required to properly describe lamprophyres (Tappe et al., 2005).

Genesis edit

Rock[2] considered lamprophyres to be part of a "clan" of rocks, with similar mineralogy, textures and genesis. Lamprophyres are similar to lamproites and kimberlites. While modern concepts see orangeites, lamproites and kimberlites as separate, a vast majority of lamprophyres have similar origins to these other rock types (Tappe et al., 2005).

Mitchell considered the lamprophyres as a "facies" of igneous rocks created by a set of conditions (generally; late, highly volatile differentiates of other rock types). Either scheme may apply to some, but not all, occurrences and variations of the broader group of rocks known as lamprophyres and melilitic rocks.

Leaving aside complex petrogenetic arguments, the essential components in lamprophyre genesis are:

  • high depth of melting, which yields more mafic magmas;
  • low degrees of partial melting, which yields magmas rich in the alkalis (particularly potassium);
  • lithophile element (K, Ba, Cs, Rb) enrichment, high Ni and Cr,
  • high potassium and sodium concentrations (silica undersaturation is common)
  • some form of volatile enrichment, to provide the biotite (phlogopite) and amphibole (pargasite) mineralogy
  • lack of fractional crystallisation (generally; there are exceptions)
  • high Mg# (MgO/(FeO + MgO))

Individual examples thus may have a wide variety of mineralogy and mechanisms for formation. Rock considered lamprophyres to be derived from deep, volatile-driven melting in a subduction zone setting. Others such as Mitchell consider them to be late offshoots of plutons, etc., though this can be difficult to reconcile with their primitive melt chemistry and mineralogy.

Petrography edit

 
Microscope view (long dimension 2 mm) of a thin section of minette from the Colorado Plateau. Magnesium-rich biotite (P, phlogopite) and clinopyroxene (C) phenocrysts in a groundmass of alkali feldspar, pyroxene, and iron-titanium oxides.

Lamprophyres are a group of rocks containing phenocrysts, usually of biotite and amphibole (with bright cleavage surfaces), and pyroxene, but not of feldspar. They are thus distinguished from the porphyries and porphyrites in which the feldspar has crystallized in two generations. They are essentially dike rocks, occurring as dikes and thin sills, and are also found as marginal facies of plutonic intrusions. They are usually dark in color, owing to the abundance of ferro-magnesian silicates, of high specific gravity and liable to decomposition. For these reasons they have been defined as a melanocrate series (rich in the dark minerals); and they are often accompanied by a complementary leucocrate series (rich in the white minerals feldspar and quartz) such as aplites, porphyries and felsites.[1]

Biotite (usually phlogopite) and amphibole (usually pargasite or other magnesian hornblende) are panidiomorphic; all are euhedral, well formed. Feldspar is restricted to the ground mass. In many lamprophyres the pale quartz and felspathic ingredients tend to occur in rounded spots, or ocelli, in which there has been progressive crystallization from the margins towards the center. These spots may consist of radiate or brush-like feldspars (with some phlogopite and hornblende) or of quartz and feldspar. A central area of quartz or of analcite probably represents an original miarolitic cavity infilled at a later period.[1]

The presence or absence of the four dominant minerals, orthoclase, plagioclase, biotite and hornblende, determines the species:[2]

  • Minette contains biotite and orthoclase.[3]
  • Kersantite contains biotite and plagioclase.
  • Vogesite contains hornblende and orthoclase.
  • Spessartite contains hornblende and plagioclase.
  • Monchiquite contains no feldspar, has a glassy or feldspathoid-bearing groundmass, and contains amphibole phenocrysts.

Each variety of lamprophyre may and often does contain all four minerals but is named according to the two which predominate.[1]

These rocks contain also iron oxides (usually titaniferous), apatite, sometimes sphene, augite, and olivine. The hornblende and biotite are brown or greenish-brown, and as a rule their crystals even when small are very perfect and give the thin section views an easily recognizable character. Green hornblende occurs in some of these rocks. Augite exists as euhedral crystals of pale green color, often zonal and readily weathering. Olivine in the fresh state is rare; it forms rounded, corroded grains; in many cases it is decomposed to green or colorless hornblende in radiating nests (pilite). The plagioclase occurs as small rectangular crystals; orthoclase may have similar shapes or may be fibrous and grouped in sheaf-like aggregates that are narrow in the middle and spread out towards both ends. As all lamprophyres are prone to alteration by weathering a great abundance of secondary minerals is usually found in them; the principal are calcite and other carbonates, limonite, chlorite, quartz and kaolin.[1]

Ocellar structure is common; the ocelli consist mainly of orthoclase and quartz, and may be up to one quarter of an inch in diameter. Another feature of these rocks is the presence of large foreign crystals, or xenocrysts, of feldspar and of quartz. Their forms are rounded, indicating partial resorption and the quartz may be surrounded by corrosion borders of minerals such as augite and hornblende produced where the magma is attacking the crystal.[1]

Lamprophyres (including minette) traditionally have been defined as:[4]

  • normally occurring as porphyritic dikes
  • containing matrix restricted feldspars and/or feldspathoids if present
  • biotite or phlogopite is an essential mineral phase
  • commonly extensively hydrothermally altered
  • may contain primary calcite, zeolites and other more typically hydrothermal minerals
  • higher than normal contents of K2O and/or Na2O, H2O, CO2, S, P2O5, and Ba

On a purely chemical basis, an extrusive lamprophyre (sp. minette) might be classified as potassic trachybasalt, shoshonite, or latite using the total alkali-silica diagram (see TAS classification), or as absarokite, shoshonite, or banakite using a classification sometimes applied to potassium-rich lavas. Such chemical classifications ignore the distinctive textures and mineralogies of lamprophyres.

Nomenclature edit

The naming and classification of lamprophyres has had several revisions, and much argument within the geological community. Nicholas Rock and colleagues devoted much time to a complicated descriptive system of nomenclature which took after a series of nomenclature based on regional examples of the very diverse mineralogical expression of lamprophyres. This system was based on a somewhat provincial, rustic system of naming after French villages nearby were found the first described examples of various species of lamprophyre (Vosges being the prime example).

Modern nomenclature has been derived from an attempt to constrain some genetic parameters of lamprophyre genesis.[5] This has, by and large, dispensed with the previous provincial names of lamprophyre species, in favor of a mineralogical name. The old names are still used for convenience.

Vogesite edit

Vogesite was first described from the Vosges mountains, France, where rocks of this type (actually, minette) were described in the early 20th century.

Minette edit

 
A dike of minette near Shiprock, Navajo Volcanic Field

A historical view of minette was provided by Johannsen (1937). He wrote that the name was " ... used by the miners in the Vosges apparently for oolitic or granular iron ore, and possibly derived from the valley of Minkette, where it occurs...."

Examples include minettes in the Navajo Volcanic Field (e.g. dikes near Shiprock and Mitten Rock, NM) of the Colorado Plateau[6] and in the Mexican Volcanic Belt.[7]

Kersantite edit

Kersantite is named after the village of Kersanton, Brittany, France, where the rock was first identified. An obsolete name for kersantite is kersanton.[8]

Distribution edit

Lamprophyres are usually associated with voluminous granodiorite intrusive episodes.[9] They occur as marginal facies to some granites, though usually as dikes and sills marginal to and crosscutting the granites and diorites.[10] In other districts where granites are abundant no rocks of this class are known. It is rare to find only one member of the group present, but minettes, vogesites, kersantites, etc., all appear and there are usually transitional forms.[1]

Lamprophyres are also known to be spatially and temporally associated with gold mineralisation, for example orogenic gold deposits.[11] Rock (1991) considered lamprophyres to be possible source rocks for the gold,[9] but this view is not generally supported. The more reasonable explanation for the correlation is that lamprophyres, representing "wet" melts of the asthenosphere and mantle, correlate with a period of high fluid flow from the mantle through the crust, during subduction-related metamorphism, which drives gold mineralisation.[12]

Non-melilitic lamprophyres are found in many districts where granites and diorites occur, such as the Scottish Highlands and Southern Uplands of Scotland;[13][14] the Lake District of northwest England; Ireland; the Vosges Mountains of France; the Black Forest and Harz mountain regions of Germany; Mascota, Mexico; Jamaica[10] and in certain locations of British Columbia, Canada.[15]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Flett 1911, p. 135.
  2. ^ Le Bas, M. J.; Streckeisen, A. L. (1991). "The IUGS systematics of igneous rocks". Journal of the Geological Society. 148 (5): 825–833. Bibcode:1991JGSoc.148..825L. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.692.4446. doi:10.1144/gsjgs.148.5.0825. S2CID 28548230.
  3. ^ Johannsen, A., 1937, A Descriptive Petrography of the Igneous Rocks: Volume III, The Intermediate Rocks. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, Illinois
  4. ^ Le Maitre, R. W., editor, 2002, Igneous Rocks: A Classification and Glossary of Terms. Recommendations of the International Union of Geological Sciences, Subcommission of the Systematics of Igneous Rocks. Cambridge University Press.
  5. ^ Mitchell, R.H., 1994b. Suggestions for revisions to the terminology of kimberlites and lamprophyres from a genetic viewpoint. In Proc. Fifth Int. Kimberlite Conf. 1. Kimberlites and Related Rocks and Mantle Xenoliths (H.O.A. Meyer & O.H. Leonardos, eds.). Companhia de Pesquisa de Recursos Minerais (Brasilia), Spec. Publ. 1/A, 15-26.
  6. ^ Roden, M. F. and Smith, D., 1979, Field geology, chemistry, and petrology of Buell Park minette diatreme, Apache County, Arizona: In Kimberlites, Diatremes, and Diamonds: Their Geology, Petrology, and Geochemistry, Boyd, F. R., and Meyer, H. O. A., eds., American Geophysical Union: Proceedings of the Second International Kimberlite Conference, v 1, pp. 364–381.
  7. ^ Wallace, P., and Carmichael, I. S. E., 1989, Minette lavas and associated leucitites from the Western Front of the Mexican Volcanic Belt: petrology, chemistry, and origin. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology, v 103, pp. 470–492.
  8. ^ Le Maitre, R. W., ed. (13 January 2005). Igneous Rocks: A Classification and Glossary of Terms. Cambridge University Press. p. 97. ISBN 9780521662154. Retrieved 7 October 2020.
  9. ^ a b Rock, N.M.S., 1991, Lamprophyres, Blackie, Glasgow, UK ISBN 978-0442303969
  10. ^ a b Jackson, T. A., Lewis, J. F., Scot, P. W., Manning, P. A. S., 1998, The Petrology of Lamprophyre Dykes in the Above Rocks Granitoid, Jamaica: Evidence of rifting above a subduction zone during the early Tertiary. Caribbean Journal of Science, vol. 34, no. 1-2, pp. 1-11, 1998.
  11. ^ Müller D., Groves D.I. (2019) Potassic igneous rocks and associated gold-copper mineralization (5th ed.). Mineral Resource Reviews. Springer-Verlag Heidelberg, 398 pp
  12. ^ Kenworthy, Shane; Hagemann, Steffen G. (2005). Mineral Deposit Research: Meeting the Global Challenge. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. pp. 987–990. doi:10.1007/3-540-27946-6_252. ISBN 978-3540279464.
  13. ^ Thorpe R.S., Gaskarth J.W. & Henney P.J., 1993. Composite Ordovician lamprophyre (spessartite) intrusions around the Midlands Microcraton in central Britain. Geological Magazine, vol. 130, pp. 657-663, 1993.
  14. ^ Rock, N.M.S, Gaskarth J.W., Rundle C.C., 1986. Late Caledonian dyke-swarms in southern Scotland: A regional zone of primitive K-rich Lamprophyres and associated vents. Journal of Geology, vol. 94, pp. 505-522, 1986.
  15. ^ Adams , M., Lentz, D.R., Shaw, C., Williams, P., Archibald, D.A., Cousens, B., 2005. Eocene Lamprophyre Dykes intruding the Monashee Complex, B.C.: Petrochemical to Petrogenetic Relationships with the Kamloops Group Volcanic Sequence. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, v. 42, p. 11-24.

Tappe, S., Foley, S.F., Jenner, G.A. and Kjarsgaard, B.A., 2005. Integrating ultramafic lamprophyres into the IUGS classification of igneous rocks: Rational and implications. Journal of Petrology, 46(9): 1893-1900.

External links edit

  • IUGS addendum
  • List of alkaline rocks in the Americas 2007-11-08 at the Wayback Machine

lamprophyre, from, ancient, greek, λαμπρός, lamprós, bright, φύρω, phúrō, uncommon, small, volume, ultrapotassic, igneous, rocks, primarily, occurring, dikes, lopoliths, laccoliths, stocks, small, intrusions, they, alkaline, silica, undersaturated, mafic, ultr. Lamprophyres from Ancient Greek lampros lampros bright and fyrw phurō to mix are uncommon small volume ultrapotassic igneous rocks primarily occurring as dikes lopoliths laccoliths stocks and small intrusions They are alkaline silica undersaturated mafic or ultramafic rocks with high magnesium oxide gt 3 potassium oxide high sodium oxide and high nickel and chromium Minette a type of lamprophyre from Jachymov in the Czech Republic Lamprophyres occur throughout all geologic eras Archaean examples are commonly associated with lode gold deposits Cenozoic examples include magnesian rocks in Mexico and South America and young ultramafic lamprophyres from Gympie in Australia with 18 5 MgO at 250 Ma Contents 1 Petrology 2 Genesis 3 Petrography 4 Nomenclature 4 1 Vogesite 4 2 Minette 4 3 Kersantite 5 Distribution 6 References 7 External linksPetrology editModern science treats lamprophyres as a catch all term for ultrapotassic mafic igneous rocks which have primary mineralogy consisting of amphibole or biotite and with feldspar in the groundmass Lamprophyres are not amenable to classification according to modal proportions such as the system QAPF due to peculiar mineralogy nor compositional discrimination diagrams such as TAS because of their peculiar geochemistry They are classified under the IUGS Nomenclature for Igneous Rocks Le Maitre et al 1989 separately this is primarily because they are rare have peculiar mineralogy and do not fit classical classification schemes For example the TAS scheme is inappropriate due to the control of mineralogy by potassium not by calcium or sodium Mitchell 1 has suggested that rocks belonging to the lamprophyre facies are characterized by the presence of phenocrysts of mica and or amphibole together with lesser clinopyroxene and or melilite set in a groundmass which may consist either singly or in various combinations of plagioclase alkali feldspar feldspathoids carbonate monticellite melilite mica amphibole pyroxene perovskite Fe Ti oxides and glass Classification schemes which include genetic information may be required to properly describe lamprophyres Tappe et al 2005 Genesis editRock 2 considered lamprophyres to be part of a clan of rocks with similar mineralogy textures and genesis Lamprophyres are similar to lamproites and kimberlites While modern concepts see orangeites lamproites and kimberlites as separate a vast majority of lamprophyres have similar origins to these other rock types Tappe et al 2005 Mitchell considered the lamprophyres as a facies of igneous rocks created by a set of conditions generally late highly volatile differentiates of other rock types Either scheme may apply to some but not all occurrences and variations of the broader group of rocks known as lamprophyres and melilitic rocks Leaving aside complex petrogenetic arguments the essential components in lamprophyre genesis are high depth of melting which yields more mafic magmas low degrees of partial melting which yields magmas rich in the alkalis particularly potassium lithophile element K Ba Cs Rb enrichment high Ni and Cr high potassium and sodium concentrations silica undersaturation is common some form of volatile enrichment to provide the biotite phlogopite and amphibole pargasite mineralogy lack of fractional crystallisation generally there are exceptions high Mg MgO FeO MgO Individual examples thus may have a wide variety of mineralogy and mechanisms for formation Rock considered lamprophyres to be derived from deep volatile driven melting in a subduction zone setting Others such as Mitchell consider them to be late offshoots of plutons etc though this can be difficult to reconcile with their primitive melt chemistry and mineralogy Petrography edit nbsp Microscope view long dimension 2 mm of a thin section of minette from the Colorado Plateau Magnesium rich biotite P phlogopite and clinopyroxene C phenocrysts in a groundmass of alkali feldspar pyroxene and iron titanium oxides Lamprophyres are a group of rocks containing phenocrysts usually of biotite and amphibole with bright cleavage surfaces and pyroxene but not of feldspar They are thus distinguished from the porphyries and porphyrites in which the feldspar has crystallized in two generations They are essentially dike rocks occurring as dikes and thin sills and are also found as marginal facies of plutonic intrusions They are usually dark in color owing to the abundance of ferro magnesian silicates of high specific gravity and liable to decomposition For these reasons they have been defined as a melanocrate series rich in the dark minerals and they are often accompanied by a complementary leucocrate series rich in the white minerals feldspar and quartz such as aplites porphyries and felsites 1 Biotite usually phlogopite and amphibole usually pargasite or other magnesian hornblende are panidiomorphic all are euhedral well formed Feldspar is restricted to the ground mass In many lamprophyres the pale quartz and felspathic ingredients tend to occur in rounded spots or ocelli in which there has been progressive crystallization from the margins towards the center These spots may consist of radiate or brush like feldspars with some phlogopite and hornblende or of quartz and feldspar A central area of quartz or of analcite probably represents an original miarolitic cavity infilled at a later period 1 The presence or absence of the four dominant minerals orthoclase plagioclase biotite and hornblende determines the species 2 Minette contains biotite and orthoclase 3 Kersantite contains biotite and plagioclase Vogesite contains hornblende and orthoclase Spessartite contains hornblende and plagioclase Monchiquite contains no feldspar has a glassy or feldspathoid bearing groundmass and contains amphibole phenocrysts Each variety of lamprophyre may and often does contain all four minerals but is named according to the two which predominate 1 These rocks contain also iron oxides usually titaniferous apatite sometimes sphene augite and olivine The hornblende and biotite are brown or greenish brown and as a rule their crystals even when small are very perfect and give the thin section views an easily recognizable character Green hornblende occurs in some of these rocks Augite exists as euhedral crystals of pale green color often zonal and readily weathering Olivine in the fresh state is rare it forms rounded corroded grains in many cases it is decomposed to green or colorless hornblende in radiating nests pilite The plagioclase occurs as small rectangular crystals orthoclase may have similar shapes or may be fibrous and grouped in sheaf like aggregates that are narrow in the middle and spread out towards both ends As all lamprophyres are prone to alteration by weathering a great abundance of secondary minerals is usually found in them the principal are calcite and other carbonates limonite chlorite quartz and kaolin 1 Ocellar structure is common the ocelli consist mainly of orthoclase and quartz and may be up to one quarter of an inch in diameter Another feature of these rocks is the presence of large foreign crystals or xenocrysts of feldspar and of quartz Their forms are rounded indicating partial resorption and the quartz may be surrounded by corrosion borders of minerals such as augite and hornblende produced where the magma is attacking the crystal 1 Lamprophyres including minette traditionally have been defined as 4 normally occurring as porphyritic dikes containing matrix restricted feldspars and or feldspathoids if present biotite or phlogopite is an essential mineral phase commonly extensively hydrothermally altered may contain primary calcite zeolites and other more typically hydrothermal minerals higher than normal contents of K2O and or Na2O H2O CO2 S P2O5 and Ba On a purely chemical basis an extrusive lamprophyre sp minette might be classified as potassic trachybasalt shoshonite or latite using the total alkali silica diagram see TAS classification or as absarokite shoshonite or banakite using a classification sometimes applied to potassium rich lavas Such chemical classifications ignore the distinctive textures and mineralogies of lamprophyres Nomenclature editThe naming and classification of lamprophyres has had several revisions and much argument within the geological community Nicholas Rock and colleagues devoted much time to a complicated descriptive system of nomenclature which took after a series of nomenclature based on regional examples of the very diverse mineralogical expression of lamprophyres This system was based on a somewhat provincial rustic system of naming after French villages nearby were found the first described examples of various species of lamprophyre Vosges being the prime example Modern nomenclature has been derived from an attempt to constrain some genetic parameters of lamprophyre genesis 5 This has by and large dispensed with the previous provincial names of lamprophyre species in favor of a mineralogical name The old names are still used for convenience Vogesite edit Vogesite was first described from the Vosges mountains France where rocks of this type actually minette were described in the early 20th century Minette edit nbsp A dike of minette near Shiprock Navajo Volcanic Field A historical view of minette was provided by Johannsen 1937 He wrote that the name was used by the miners in the Vosges apparently for oolitic or granular iron ore and possibly derived from the valley of Minkette where it occurs Examples include minettes in the Navajo Volcanic Field e g dikes near Shiprock and Mitten Rock NM of the Colorado Plateau 6 and in the Mexican Volcanic Belt 7 Kersantite edit Kersantite is named after the village of Kersanton Brittany France where the rock was first identified An obsolete name for kersantite is kersanton 8 Distribution editLamprophyres are usually associated with voluminous granodiorite intrusive episodes 9 They occur as marginal facies to some granites though usually as dikes and sills marginal to and crosscutting the granites and diorites 10 In other districts where granites are abundant no rocks of this class are known It is rare to find only one member of the group present but minettes vogesites kersantites etc all appear and there are usually transitional forms 1 Lamprophyres are also known to be spatially and temporally associated with gold mineralisation for example orogenic gold deposits 11 Rock 1991 considered lamprophyres to be possible source rocks for the gold 9 but this view is not generally supported The more reasonable explanation for the correlation is that lamprophyres representing wet melts of the asthenosphere and mantle correlate with a period of high fluid flow from the mantle through the crust during subduction related metamorphism which drives gold mineralisation 12 Non melilitic lamprophyres are found in many districts where granites and diorites occur such as the Scottish Highlands and Southern Uplands of Scotland 13 14 the Lake District of northwest England Ireland the Vosges Mountains of France the Black Forest and Harz mountain regions of Germany Mascota Mexico Jamaica 10 and in certain locations of British Columbia Canada 15 References edit a b c d e f Flett 1911 p 135 Le Bas M J Streckeisen A L 1991 The IUGS systematics of igneous rocks Journal of the Geological Society 148 5 825 833 Bibcode 1991JGSoc 148 825L CiteSeerX 10 1 1 692 4446 doi 10 1144 gsjgs 148 5 0825 S2CID 28548230 Johannsen A 1937 A Descriptive Petrography of the Igneous Rocks Volume III The Intermediate Rocks University of Chicago Press Chicago Illinois Le Maitre R W editor 2002 Igneous Rocks A Classification and Glossary of Terms Recommendations of the International Union of Geological Sciences Subcommission of the Systematics of Igneous Rocks Cambridge University Press Mitchell R H 1994b Suggestions for revisions to the terminology of kimberlites and lamprophyres from a genetic viewpoint In Proc Fifth Int Kimberlite Conf 1 Kimberlites and Related Rocks and Mantle Xenoliths H O A Meyer amp O H Leonardos eds Companhia de Pesquisa de Recursos Minerais Brasilia Spec Publ 1 A 15 26 Roden M F and Smith D 1979 Field geology chemistry and petrology of Buell Park minette diatreme Apache County Arizona In Kimberlites Diatremes and Diamonds Their Geology Petrology and Geochemistry Boyd F R and Meyer H O A eds American Geophysical Union Proceedings of the Second International Kimberlite Conference v 1 pp 364 381 Wallace P and Carmichael I S E 1989 Minette lavas and associated leucitites from the Western Front of the Mexican Volcanic Belt petrology chemistry and origin Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology v 103 pp 470 492 Le Maitre R W ed 13 January 2005 Igneous Rocks A Classification and Glossary of Terms Cambridge University Press p 97 ISBN 9780521662154 Retrieved 7 October 2020 a b Rock N M S 1991 Lamprophyres Blackie Glasgow UK ISBN 978 0442303969 a b Jackson T A Lewis J F Scot P W Manning P A S 1998 The Petrology of Lamprophyre Dykes in the Above Rocks Granitoid Jamaica Evidence of rifting above a subduction zone during the early Tertiary Caribbean Journal of Science vol 34 no 1 2 pp 1 11 1998 Muller D Groves D I 2019 Potassic igneous rocks and associated gold copper mineralization 5th ed Mineral Resource Reviews Springer Verlag Heidelberg 398 pp Kenworthy Shane Hagemann Steffen G 2005 Mineral Deposit Research Meeting the Global Challenge Springer Berlin Heidelberg pp 987 990 doi 10 1007 3 540 27946 6 252 ISBN 978 3540279464 Thorpe R S Gaskarth J W amp Henney P J 1993 Composite Ordovician lamprophyre spessartite intrusions around the Midlands Microcraton in central Britain Geological Magazine vol 130 pp 657 663 1993 Rock N M S Gaskarth J W Rundle C C 1986 Late Caledonian dyke swarms in southern Scotland A regional zone of primitive K rich Lamprophyres and associated vents Journal of Geology vol 94 pp 505 522 1986 Adams M Lentz D R Shaw C Williams P Archibald D A Cousens B 2005 Eocene Lamprophyre Dykes intruding the Monashee Complex B C Petrochemical to Petrogenetic Relationships with the Kamloops Group Volcanic Sequence Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences v 42 p 11 24 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Flett John Smith 1911 Lamprophyres In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 16 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 135 136 Tappe S Foley S F Jenner G A and Kjarsgaard B A 2005 Integrating ultramafic lamprophyres into the IUGS classification of igneous rocks Rational and implications Journal of Petrology 46 9 1893 1900 External links editIUGS addendum Igneous geology classification flowchart List of alkaline rocks in the Americas Archived 2007 11 08 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lamprophyre amp oldid 1223036789 Vogesite, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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