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The Materials Map is an open tool for improving networking and interdisciplinary exchange within materials research. It enables cross-database search for cooperation and network partners and discovering of the research landscape.

The dashboard provides detailed information about the selected scientist, e.g. publications. The dashboard can be filtered and shows the relationship to co-authors in different diagrams. In addition, a link is provided to find contact information.

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Publications (1/1 displayed)

  • 2021Reaction coronas at olivine-plagioclase contacts in host rocks from the Nova-Bollinger Ni-Cu-Co deposit, Albany-Fraser Orogen, Western Australia: evidence of a magmatic to metamorphic continuum14citations

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Torres Rodriguez, Natalia
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Schoneveld, Louise
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Pearce, Mark
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2021

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  • Torres Rodriguez, Natalia
  • Schoneveld, Louise
  • Pearce, Mark
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article

Reaction coronas at olivine-plagioclase contacts in host rocks from the Nova-Bollinger Ni-Cu-Co deposit, Albany-Fraser Orogen, Western Australia: evidence of a magmatic to metamorphic continuum

  • Taranovic, Valentina
  • Torres Rodriguez, Natalia
  • Schoneveld, Louise
  • Pearce, Mark
Abstract

A prominent feature of the cumulate rocks of the Nova intrusions is the presence of reaction coronas between olivine and plagioclase. A particular spatial arrangement of mineral textures, typical of olivine-plagioclase coronas in high-P troctolites and olivine gabbros worldwide, is almost universally observed: partially resorbed olivine with a cuspate margin, surrounded by orthopyroxene, surrounded by a zone of symplectite comprising hornblende + clinopyroxene, orthopyroxene and Cr-poor Al-(Fe,Mg) spinel, with a cuspate boundary against plagioclase. Where amphibole-free clinopyroxene-spinel symplectite is developed it is typically as an outer layer against plagioclase. The mineralogy and composition of these coronas has been revealed by a combination of SEM and synchrotron XRF microscopy. There is a close spatial association between reaction symplectites and Bowen reaction series sequences developed by reaction between cumulus phases and fractionated trapped interstitial melt, giving rise to local Cr and Ti enrichment within the coronas relative to olivine and plagioclase, accompanying enrichment in water recorded by stabilisation of amphibole. These relationships imply that trapped liquid crystallisation and corona formation were part of a process continuum, such that the coronas record mineral reactions close to the solidus temperature of the cumulates, initially developing in the presence of evolved hydrous interstitial liquid and continuing to develop in the solid state below the solidus. The symplectites owe their fine microstructure to diffusion-limited growth of the products of solid-state reactions below the solidus. The initial magmatic stage of corona formation records conditions 0.76 and 0.96 GPa and at a temperature around 1035 °C based on THERMOCALC pseudosections calculated for the bulk composition of the corona assemblage. Two-pyroxene assemblages within the symplectites record temperatures around 850-900 °C and pressures between 0.7 and 1.1 GPa. These pressure estimates are in good agreement with those obtained from regional metamorphism studies of the country rock paragneisses, confirming independent lines of evidence that the Nova intrusions were syn-metamorphic, emplaced under granulite-facies peak metamorphic conditions at crustal depths of 28 to 35 Km. The unusually extensive development of the symplectites reflects the cooling history of the intrusions, which remained at temperatures close to solidus temperatures on the timescale of regional tectonic uplift and cooling of the deep roots of the orogen.

Topics
  • impedance spectroscopy
  • microstructure
  • mineral
  • scanning electron microscopy
  • melt
  • texture
  • interstitial
  • X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy