Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-mkpzs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-27T23:16:08.707Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Petrochemistry of metamorphosed pillows, and the geochemical status of the amphibolites (Proterozoic) from the Sirohi district, Rajasthan, India

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

P. K. Bhattacharyya
Affiliation:
Department of Geological Sciences, Jadavpur University, Calcutta 700032, India
A. D. Mukherjee
Affiliation:
Department of Geological Sciences, Jadavpur University, Calcutta 700032, India

Abstract

Relic pillows in the middle Proterozoic amphibolites, occurring in the Sirohi Road–Abu Road tract of Rajasthan, India exhibit contrasted mineral assemblages from core to rim – mimetic after the crystalline core, the zone of incipient crystallization, and the rim of the original pillows. The major element distribution pattern across the pillows indicates exchange of Na–Al for Ca (Mg, Fe) in an inner reaction zone, surrounding the core and in the inner margin of the rim, and Fe–Al exchange for Ca–Si at the outer margin of the rim.

Despite such exchanges around the rims, these pillows have retained their initial geochemical characteristics internally and thus have largely acted as closed systems during post-emplacement metamorphism. Mineral parageneses indicate that the contrasted mineral assemblages could evolve from domainal characters of the co-existing fluids, the compositions of which were only buffered by the reacting minerals during regional metamorphism.

The major, minor and trace element contents of the pillows and of amphibolites of diverse petrographic character in the region further establish that the pillow interiors and the massive amphibolites were least modified during metamorphism(s), and represent oceanic tholeiites. Their average 2300 ppm K, 4.5 ppm Rb, 150 ppm Sr, along with the K/Rb and K/Sr ratios of 510 and 15 respectively resemble that of the low K-tholeiites, occurring nearest to the trenches in modern island arcs. On the other hand, the higher values of 17300 ppm K, 4.9 ppm Rb, and 210 ppm Sr of the banded and the schistose amphibolites indicate that they were contaminated in various magnitudes by oceanic sediments.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1984

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Banerjee, A. K. & Singh, S. P. 1978. Pillow lavas in the Pali district of Rajasthan. Geological Survey of India, News Bulletin 8, no. 2.Google Scholar
Baragar, W. R. A., Plant, A. G., Pringle, G. J. & Mikkel, S. 1979. Diagenetic and post-diagenetic changes in the composition of an Archaean pillow. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 16, 2102–21.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bhattacharyya, H. N., Ghosh, T. K. & Mukherjee, A. D. 1983. Pillow and Metahyaloclastite Structures in Amphibolites from Delhi Supergroup of rocks, Sirohi district, Rajasthan. Journal of Geological Society of India (in press).Google Scholar
Bhattacharyya, P. K. 1980. Metamorphic reactions in static and dynamic environments – a petrographic illustration from the metapelites in Khetri copper belt, Rajasthan, India. Neues Jahrbuch für Mineralogie, Abhandlugen 139, 191204.Google Scholar
Chowdhury, A. K., Gopalan, K., Bose, U., Gupta, S. N., Ravindra, R. & Sastry, C. A. 1981. Rb–Sr Geochronology of Granites from the Delhi Formation of Rajasthan. Proceedings Symposium on Three decades of development in Petrology. Mineralogy & Petrochemistry in India, Abstract, p. 52.Google Scholar
Coombs, D. S. 1954. The nature and alteration of some Triassic sediments from Southland, New Zealand, N.S.W. Journal of the Geological Society of Australia 15, 87102.Google Scholar
Coulson, A. L. 1933. The Geology of Sirohi, Rajputana. Memoir of the Geological Survey of India, no. 63 (1), 184 p.Google Scholar
Crawford, A. F. 1970. The Precambrian Geochronology of Rajasthan and Bundelkhand, Northern India. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 7, 91110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crawford, A. F. & Compston, W. 1970. The age of Vindhyan System of Peninsular India. Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London 125, 351–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dasgupta, S. P. 1968. The structural history of the Khetri copper belt, Jhunjhunu and Sikar district, Rajasthan. Memoir, Geological Survey of India 98, 110 p.Google Scholar
Dhar, A. 1980. Some observations on rock characters and ore mineralisation around Basantgarh, Sirohi district, Rajasthan. Journal, Mines, Metals & Fuels, 06, 133–9.Google Scholar
Floyd, P. A. & Winchester, J. A. 1975. Magma type and tectonic setting using immobile elements. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 29, 211–18.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gopalan, K., Trivedi, J. R., Balasubramanyan, M. N., Roy, S. K. & Sastry, C. A. 1979. Rb–Sr chronology of the Khetri copper belt, Rajasthan. Journal of the Geological Society of India 20, 450–6.Google Scholar
Hart, R., Brooks, C., Krough, T. E., Davis, G. L. & Nara, D. 1970. Ancient and modern volcanic rocks. A trace element model. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 10, 1728.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heron, A. M. 1953. The geology of Central Rajputana. Memoir, Geological Survey of India 79, 389 p.Google Scholar
Lal, R. K. & Shukla, R. S. 1975. Low pressure regional metamorphism in the northern portion of the Khetri copper belt, Rajasthan, India. Neues Jahrbuch für Mineralogie. Abhandlungen 124, 294325.Google Scholar
Leake, B. E. 1964. The chemical distinction between ortho and para amphibolites. Journal of Petrology 5, 238–54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mukherjee, A. D. & Bhattacharyya, P. K. 1977. Preliminary Report on Geology of the area around Basantgarh, Sirohi district, Rajasthan. Unpublished report submitted to the University Grants Commission of India and State Department of Mines & Geology, Rajasthan.Google Scholar
Pearce, J. A. & Cann, J. R. 1971. Ophiolite origin investigated by discriminant analysis using Ti, Zr & Y. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 12, 339–49.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pearce, J. A. & Cann, J. R. 1973. Tectonic setting of basic volcanic rocks determined using trace elements analyses. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 12, 290300.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Preto, V. A. G. 1970. Amphibolites from Grand Fork Quadrangle of British Columbia, Canada. Bulletin, Geological Society of America 81, 763–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roy, S. K. 1974. Structural history of Saladipura pyritepyrrhotite deposit and associated rocks, Khetri copper belt, Rajasthan. Journal of the Geological Society of India 15, 227–38.Google Scholar
Sarkar, S. N. 1972. Present status of Precambrian geochronology of Peninsular India. 24th International Geological Congress, Section 1, 260–72.Google Scholar
Sarkar, S. N. 1980. Precambrian Stratigraphy and Geochronology of India: A Review. Indian Journal of Earth Sciences, 7, 1226.Google Scholar
Sarkar, S. C., Bhattacharyya, P. K. & Mukherjee, A. D. 1980. Evolution of sulfide ores of Saladipura, Rajasthan, India. Economic Geology 75, 1152–67.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scott, R. D. & Hajash, A. 1976. Initial Submarine alteration of Basaltic Pillow Lavas: A microprobe study. American Journal of Science 276, 480501.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sen, R. & Mukherjee, A. D. 1972. On the origin of amphibolites and hornblende schists of Delhi System from Ajmer district, Rajasthan, India. Quarterly Journal of the Geological, Mining and Metallurgical Society of India 44, 33–9.Google Scholar
Shaw, D. M. & Kudo, A. M. 1965. A test of discriminant function in the amphibolite problem. Mineralogical Magazine 34, 423–5.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shido, F., Miyashiro, A. & Ewing, M. 1974. Compositional variation in pillow lavas from Mid-Atlantic Ridge. Marine Geology 16, 177–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Silvestri, S. C. 1963. Proposal for a genetic classification of Hyaloclastites. Bulletin of Volcanology 25, 315–21.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Singh, S. P. 1983. Pillow lavas from Delhi Supergroup near Bambholai, pali district, Rajasthan. Journal of the Geological Society of India 24, 208–11.Google Scholar
Smith, R. E. 1968. Redistribution of major elements in the alteration of some basic lavas during burial metamorphism. Journal of Petrology 9, 191219.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thomson, G. 1973. A Geochemical study of low temperature interaction of sea-water and oceanic igneous rocks. American Geophysical Union Transactions 54, 1015–19.Google Scholar
Walker, K. R., Joplin, G. A., Lovering, J. F. & Green, R. 1960. Metamorphic and metasomatic convergence of basic igneous rocks and lime-magnesia sediments of the Precambrians of Northwestern Queensland. Journal of the Geological Society of Australia 6, 149–77.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, A. J. R., Jakes, P. & Christie, D. M. 1971. Composition of greenstones and the hypothesis of sea floor spreading in the Archaean. Geological Society of Australia, Special Publication, no. 3, 4756.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, J. M. & Cann, J. R. 1974. Trace elements of tectonic relationships of basaltic rocks in Ballomtrae igneous complex, Ayrshire. Geological Magazine 111, 3541.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yellur, D. D. & Nair, R. S. 1978. Assigning a magmatically defined tectonic environment to Chitradurga metabasalts, India by Geochemical Methods. Precambrian Research 7, 258–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar