Genesis of monazite-rich, orthopyroxene-bearing veins in the Kliphoog area of the Concordia Granite, Springbok, Namaqualand, South Africa: Sources, fluids, and the mobility of actinides and REE

A network of monazite-rich, coarse-grained veins and fine-grained veins permeating the mid-Proterozoic Concordia Granite in the Kliphoog area near Springbok, Namaqualand, North Cape Province, South Africa, are described with respect to their whole-rock chemistry, petrography, mineralogy, and mineral...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Lithos
Main Authors: Harlov, D., Ballouard, C., Elburg, M., Knoper, M., Wilke, F., Ning, W., Andreoli, M.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://gfzpublic.gfz-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_5003372
Description
Summary:A network of monazite-rich, coarse-grained veins and fine-grained veins permeating the mid-Proterozoic Concordia Granite in the Kliphoog area near Springbok, Namaqualand, North Cape Province, South Africa, are described with respect to their whole-rock chemistry, petrography, mineralogy, and mineral chemistry along with zircon and monazite geochronology. Chondrite-normalized trace element data indicate that the coarse-grained veins are enriched in LREE relative to the Concordia Granite with HREE enrichment being somewhat variable. HREE in altered Concordia Granite, at the contact with the coarse-grained vein, are heavily depleted compared to unaltered Concordia Granite while the LREE show the same approximate abundances. Chloritization is common in the coarse-grained veins along mineral grain boundaries with chlorite replacing most of the orthopyroxene megacrysts, though occasional remnants of orthopyroxene remain in the core. A traverse across one of the coarse-grained veins showed no obvious mineral chemical trends between the vein and surrounding granite. Relic Fe-rich megacryst orthopyroxene has an Al2O3 content of around 2.0 wt% suggesting formation at around 700 °C. The Fe-rich biotite has mean Ti values ranging from TiO2 = 4.1 to 1.2 wt% indicating formation at 700–800 °C. The coarse-grained veins and fine-grained veins are characterized by abundant accessory Th-rich monazite, heterogeneously distributed in the veins. Lesser amounts of monazite are found in the granite. Other accessory minerals in the veins and granite include zircon and rare fluorapatite. Back-scattered electron imaging shows that the anhedral to euhedral monazite grains (up to more than 1500 μm in size) tend to be complexly zoned with light and dark areas. Lighter areas are more enriched in Th and/or Ce than darker areas. This complex zoning can occur as magmatic/sector zoning and more commonly as a complex series of metasomatic alteration events. Metasomatic textures, which are due to variable fluid-induced mobility of Th, U, and REE, ...