Title of article
Emplacement history of Granophyre dikes in the Vredefort Impact Structure, South Africa, inferred from geochemical evidence
Author/Authors
O. Lieger، نويسنده , , Daniel and Riller، نويسنده , , Ulrich، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages
13
From page
168
To page
180
Abstract
The central Vredefort Impact Structure is characterised by impact melt rocks, known as the Vredefort Granophyre dikes, the mode of emplacement of which is not well known. Whole-rock and petrographic analyses of two dikes were conducted and compared to published geochemical data to elucidate the mode and timing of dike formation. The dikes are characterised by compositional and textural heterogeneity between, and within, individual dikes. Specifically, central dike portions are felsic and rich in wall rock fragments, whereas marginal dike phases are more mafic and fragment-poor. Collectively, this suggests that melt was derived from compositionally different parental melts and emplaced in at least two pulses. In addition, the chemical heterogeneity between fragment-rich and fragment-poor dike zones can be explained by variable assimilation of a mafic component, notably Ventersdorp basalt, at the base of the impact melt sheet, from which melt of the Granophyre dikes is derived. This scenario accounts for the mafic and fragment-poor character of melt emplaced first in the dikes and the more felsic and fragment-rich nature of melts of the following emplacement pulse, i.e., when the impact melt was less hot and thus less capable of digesting large quantities of (mafic) wall rock fragments. Differences in geometrical, textural, chemical and fragment characteristics between the Granophyre dikes and pseudotachylite bodies can be explained by the same process, i.e., impact melt drainage, but operating at different times after impact.
Keywords
Earth , Mineralogy , Impact processes
Journal title
Icarus
Serial Year
2012
Journal title
Icarus
Record number
2378984
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