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ROBINS, BRIAN (1998) The mode of emplacement of the Honningsvåg Intrusive Suite, Magerøya, northern Norway. Geological Magazine, 135 (2) 231-244 doi:10.1017/s0016756898008395

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Reference TypeJournal (article/letter/editorial)
TitleThe mode of emplacement of the Honningsvåg Intrusive Suite, Magerøya, northern Norway
JournalGeological Magazine
AuthorsROBINS, BRIANAuthor
Year1998 (March)Volume135
Issue2
PublisherCambridge University Press (CUP)
DOIdoi:10.1017/s0016756898008395Search in ResearchGate
Generate Citation Formats
Mindat Ref. ID257658Long-form Identifiermindat:1:5:257658:3
GUID0
Full ReferenceROBINS, BRIAN (1998) The mode of emplacement of the Honningsvåg Intrusive Suite, Magerøya, northern Norway. Geological Magazine, 135 (2) 231-244 doi:10.1017/s0016756898008395
Plain TextROBINS, BRIAN (1998) The mode of emplacement of the Honningsvåg Intrusive Suite, Magerøya, northern Norway. Geological Magazine, 135 (2) 231-244 doi:10.1017/s0016756898008395
In(1998, March) Geological Magazine Vol. 135 (2) Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Abstract/NotesThe Honningsvåg Intrusive Suite consists of several layered

mafic/ultramafic intrusions and a
transgressive body of igneous breccia that appears to represent a magma

conduit. It is emplaced into a
Silurian, flysch-type sedimentary sequence that is thermally metamorphosed
to spotted slate,
cordierite–andalusite or pyroxene hornfels and agmatitic migmatite.

Folds and flattened reduction spots in
the hornfelses suggest that emplacement took place after Caledonian
deformation and development of a
slaty cleavage. Tectonic rotation subsequent to emplacement has led to

exposure of the Honningsvåg
Intrusive Suite in a natural cross-section corresponding to ∼10 km

of crustal depth. Basaltic magma was initially
emplaced as a several-kilometre-tall pipe that crystallized to form
Intrusion 1. A second magma chamber
was initiated alongside this pipe and subsequently expanded laterally
into a sill-like magma body as
batches of olivine-saturated basalt were added. A later magma chamber,

represented by Intrusion 4, developed
largely within the cumulates forming the upper part of Intrusion 2 and

appears to have been accompanied
by opening of a broad inclined feeder into which blocks and slabs of
older cumulates collapsed. The
resulting igneous breccias of Intrusion 3 are chaotic and largely
clast-dominated in the lower part of the conduit,
but enclosed slabs are matrix supported and orientated parallel to an
originally subhorizontal banding
in the feldspathic peridotite matrix in the upper part. The core of
the breccia body has a troctolite matrix and
contains blocks of older breccia, suggesting re-opening of the conduit,

either during the crystallization of
Intrusion 4 or possibly during the development of chambers represented

by the younger layered intrusions.
The cumulates in Intrusion 4 subsided sufficiently to invert marginal
parts of the Layered Series before a
further magma chamber was initiated in its roof rocks. The last major
magma chamber opened alongside
Intrusion 5 and extended upwards as a pipe or broad dyke to the highest

structural levels exposed. Cross-cutting
relationships show that the Honningsvåg magma chambers were not
active simultaneously but were
emplaced sequentially, generally at successively higher structural
levels. Olivine tholeiite magma initially
pooled in a crustal zone where it had neutral buoyancy. Subsequent
chambers are suggested to have been initiated
by emplacement of magma along the density discontinuities that existed
above
and around crystallized
intrusions and their associated hornfelses. Chambers evolved by
fractional crystallization, assimilation
of country rocks and periodic replenishment. The abandonment of magma
chambers may have resulted
from the expulsion of low-density residual melts.


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