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Macdonald, R., Marshall, A. S., Dawson, J. B., Hinton, R. W., Hill, P. G. (2002) Chevkinite-group minerals from salic volcanic rocks of the East African Rift. Mineralogical Magazine, 66 (2) 287-299 doi:10.1180/0026461026620029

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Reference TypeJournal (article/letter/editorial)
TitleChevkinite-group minerals from salic volcanic rocks of the East African Rift
JournalMineralogical Magazine
AuthorsMacdonald, R.Author
Marshall, A. S.Author
Dawson, J. B.Author
Hinton, R. W.Author
Hill, P. G.Author
Year2002 (April)Volume66
Issue2
PublisherMineralogical Society
DOIdoi:10.1180/0026461026620029Search in ResearchGate
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Mindat Ref. ID243344Long-form Identifiermindat:1:5:243344:2
GUID0
Full ReferenceMacdonald, R., Marshall, A. S., Dawson, J. B., Hinton, R. W., Hill, P. G. (2002) Chevkinite-group minerals from salic volcanic rocks of the East African Rift. Mineralogical Magazine, 66 (2) 287-299 doi:10.1180/0026461026620029
Plain TextMacdonald, R., Marshall, A. S., Dawson, J. B., Hinton, R. W., Hill, P. G. (2002) Chevkinite-group minerals from salic volcanic rocks of the East African Rift. Mineralogical Magazine, 66 (2) 287-299 doi:10.1180/0026461026620029
Abstract/NotesAbstractElectron microprobe analyses are presented of chevkinite-group minerals occurring as microphenocrysts in peralkaline rhyolites of the Greater Olkaria Volcanic Complex (Kenya) and as a groundmass phase in a peralkaline quartz trachyte lava from the Tarosero volcano (Tanzania), both in the East African Rift Valley. Their compositions conform closely to the formula: (REE, Ca, Th)4 Fe2+ (Fe2+, Al, Ti, Zr, Nb)2 Ti2 (Si4O22). Compared to published analyses of chevkinite-group minerals, the Olkaria phases are relatively enriched in Nb and the LREE; the Tarosero phase is more calcic and relatively Zr- and Nb-rich. The main substitution in the A site at Olkaria is Ca ⇌ Ce. The overall charge-balancing substitution seems to be (McDowell, 1979):Phenocryst/glass ratios are presented for Nb, REE, Sr, Th, U and Y in two, and Ba, Zr and Hf in one, Kenyan samples. Partition coefficients are lower in the more peralkaline rock, with the exception of Sr, which is higher. The lower values are consistent with a lower degree of polymerization of more peralkaline melts. The higher Sr value may be a function of Sr partitioning into phenocryst phases coexisting with chevkinite.


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