Composition, sources, and mechanisms of origin of rare-metal granitoids in the Late Paleozoic Eastern Sayan zone of alkaline magmatism: A case study of the Ulaan Tolgoi massif


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Abstract

The Ulaan Tolgoi massif of rare-metal (Ta, Nb, and Zr) granites was formed at approximately 300Ma in the Eastern Sayan zone of rare-metal alkaline magmatism. The massif consists of alkaline salic rocks of various composition (listed in chronologic order of their emplacement): alkaline syenite → alkaline syenite pegmatite → pantellerite → alkaline granite, including ore-bearing alkaline granite, whose Ta and Nb concentrations reach significant values. The evolution of the massif ended with the emplacement of trachybasaltic andesite. The rocks of the massif show systematic enrichment in incompatible elements in the final differentiation products of the alkaline salic magmas. The differentiation processes during the early evolution of the massif occurred in an open system, with influx of melts that contained various proportions of incompatible elements. The magma system was closed during the origin of the ore-bearing granites. Rare-metal granitoids in the Eastern Sayan zone were produced by magmas formed by interaction between mantle melts (which formed the mafic dikes) with crustal material. The mantle melts likely affected the lower parts of the crust and either induced its melting, with later mixing the anatectic and mantle magmas, or assimilated crustal material and generated melts with crustal–mantle characteristics. The origin of the Eastern Sayan zone of rare-metal alkaline magmatism was related to rifting, which was triggered by interaction between the Tarim and Barguzin mantle plumes. The Eastern Sayan zone was formed in the marginal part of the Barguzin magmatic province, and rare-metal magmas in it were likely generated in relation with the activity of the Barguzin plume.

About the authors

V. V. Yarmolyuk

Institute of the Geology of Ore Deposits, Petrography, Mineralogy, and Geochemistry (IGEM)

Author for correspondence.
Email: yarm@igem.ru
Russian Federation, Staromonetnyi per. 35, Moscow, 119017

D. A. Lykhin

Tomsk State University

Email: yarm@igem.ru
Russian Federation, pr. Lenina 36, Tomsk, 634050

A. M. Kozlovsky

Institute of the Geology of Ore Deposits, Petrography, Mineralogy, and Geochemistry (IGEM)

Email: yarm@igem.ru
Russian Federation, Staromonetnyi per. 35, Moscow, 119017

A. V. Nikiforov

Institute of the Geology of Ore Deposits, Petrography, Mineralogy, and Geochemistry (IGEM)

Email: yarm@igem.ru
Russian Federation, Staromonetnyi per. 35, Moscow, 119017

A. V. Travin

Institute of the Geology of Ore Deposits, Petrography, Mineralogy, and Geochemistry (IGEM); Institute of Geology and Mineralogy, Siberian Branch; Novosibirsk State University, ul. Pirogova 2

Email: yarm@igem.ru
Russian Federation, Staromonetnyi per. 35, Moscow, 119017; pr. Akademika Koptyuga 3, Novosibirsk, 630090; Novosibirsk, 630090


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