Rare Earth Elements in Middle Precambrian Volcanic Rocks of Finland, with a Discussion of the Origin of the Rocks

The contents of rare earth elements (REE) have been determined in five Svecofennian metamorphosed volcanic rocks and are compared with those found in the Karelian zone and Recent tholeiites. In the Svecofennian zone, REE contents in low silica volcanic rocks are like those in the calc-alkalic series...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Bulletin of the Geological Society of Finland
Main Authors: T. Koljonen, R.J. Rosenberg
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Geological Society of Finland 1975
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.17741/bgsf/47.1-2.015
https://doaj.org/article/b429c086c76d4967bae407b944f324b3
Description
Summary:The contents of rare earth elements (REE) have been determined in five Svecofennian metamorphosed volcanic rocks and are compared with those found in the Karelian zone and Recent tholeiites. In the Svecofennian zone, REE contents in low silica volcanic rocks are like those in the calc-alkalic series and in continental tholeiites, whereas in the Karelian zone they are like those in island arc tholeiites. It is argued that in the Karelian zone, where magmatism initiated, tholeiitic basalts originated in the upper mantle; as shown in normalized form, the light REE are depleted, reflecting the distribution pattern found, for example, in rocks of pyrrolite composition. As orogeny advanced, more and more crustal material — basement and geosynclinal sediments — was recycled and the REE distribution pattern changed to that found in the synorogenic calc – alkalic rocks (1.8–1.95 Ga), reflecting the REE pattern present in sediments. The chemical composition of the magmatic rock series formed during Svecokarelian folding is quite like that observed in island arc systems.