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A geochemical and petrological study of the Tertiary minor intrusions of Rhum, northwest Scotland

R. M. Forster
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TLDR
In this paper, the composition of the Rhum minor intrusion suite has been investigated and it has been shown that the majority of the basic rocks are aphyric dolerites but olivine phyric (picritic) and plagioclase phyllospar (big feldspar) dolerite is also present and several medium to coarse grained gabbro and peridotite plugs occur.
Abstract
The Rhum minor intrusion suite is petrographically and compositionally variable, the majority of the basic rocks are aphyric dolerites but olivine phyric (picritic) and plagioclase phyric (big feldspar) dolerites are also present. In addition, several medium to coarse grained gabbro and peridotite plugs occur. Intermediate rocks are not abundant and acid dykes are rare. The basic and intermediate intrusions occur in a variety of structural environments all over the island, the gabbros and peridotites are generally emplaced as plugs in the northern and southern Torridonian tracts, while the few acid dykes are usually closely associated with the plutonic acid rocks. Twelve classes of dolerite (Groups 1-12) and five classes of gabbro have been distinguished on geochemical and petrographic grounds. The suite as a whole is characterised by high MgO levels when compared with rocks of analogous differentiation in other Tertiary suites of North-West Britain, Several of the group 1 picrites are believed to have existed as mafic liquids with 15-20 wt% MgO at high crustal levels. In addition the basic members (dolerite groups 2 to 4) and several of the gabbros are characterised by higher Ni and Cr and lower Al(_2)O(_3) than comparable British Tertiary rocks. Discriminant Function analysis of the compositional variation within the basic members of the Rhum minor intrusion suite has shown that the majority of these rocks are completely transitional between alkali olivine basalt and tholeiite basalt and contrast with the mildly alkaline Skye Main Lava Series and the mildly tholeiitic Ardnamurchan cone sheets. In contrast, the dolerite groups 5 and 6 are very similar to some of the Skye magma types and consequently are believed to be outlying members of the Skye regional dyke swarm. Of the intermediate rocks, the dolerite groups 8 and 9 and the gabbroic differentiates are tholeiitic in affinity and the dolerite groups 10 to 12 are alkalic in affinity. Detailed field and geochemical investigation has shown there is a progression from tholeiitic basic magmas to high MgO more alkalic composition with time. Despite the known presence of a large upper crustal magma chamber on Rhum, the geochemical variation of the majority of the basic rocks is cottatible with processes operating below 15 km within the lower crust, or in the upper mantle at depths up to 80 km. In contrast the big feldspar (group 7) dolerites and the magmas which gave rise to the peridotite plugs are believed to have been tapped from a high level crustal magma chamber. In addition the divergence towards more extreme alkalic and tholeiitic compositions in the intermediate rocks coupled with their general porphyritic nature and their major oxide and trace element variation suggests that they are the product of low pressure fractionation processes.

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Citations
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Book ChapterDOI

The Rum Layered Suite

TL;DR: In the Rum Central Complex as discussed by the authors, the formation of the ultrabasic and gabbroic rocks of the Layered Suite represents a continuum in time during which replenishments of picritic (MgO 15-20 wt.%) and basaltic (mgO 20-30 wt.) magmas ponded in thin sill-like bodies at the Lewisian gneiss - Torridonian sandstone unconformity.
Book ChapterDOI

The Rhum Layered Complex, Inner Hebrides, Scotland

TL;DR: The lower Eocene Rhum Central complex has a core of ultra-basic rocks and gabbros which formed at a late stage in the centre's evolution as mentioned in this paper, which is noteworthy for its abundant development of ultrabasic breccias.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review of silicic pyroclastic rocks of the British Tertiary Volcanic Province

TL;DR: The field relations of the silicic tuffs suggest that the associated pyroclastic breccias are also often extrusive and together they form crater infills as mentioned in this paper.
Dissertation

Petrology and evolution of the Northern part of the Rhum Ultrabasic Complex

TL;DR: The central region of the Rhum ul-trabasic complex comprises three major sequences of olivine, and plagioclase-olivine cirulates: (i) the westerly continuation of the Eastern Layered Series; (ii) the northernmost extension of a redefined Western Layered series, and (iii) a newly defined Central Series as discussed by the authors.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Petrology of Thingmuli, a Tertiary Volcano in Eastern Iceland

TL;DR: The Tertiary flood-basalt sequence of eastern Iceland is intermittently disturbed by central volcanic activity with the voluminous eruption of acid magma as mentioned in this paper, which produces a swarm of acid and basic dykes and extensive superimposed hydrothermal alteration.
Journal ArticleDOI

Geochemistry of Viti Levu, Fiji, and its evolution as an island arc

TL;DR: In this article, a geochemical and field data suggest that three different periods of igneous activity have occurred on Viti Levu, and the temporal sequence also corresponds to a spatial zonation analogous to that observed in many currently active island arcs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Early stages in the differentiation of the Skaergaard magma as revealed by a closely related suite of dike rocks

TL;DR: In this article, the chemistry of the Skaergaard initial magma has been investigated using computer least squares and Rayleigh fractionation modeling, showing that the only important cumulus phases at this stage were olivine and plagioclase but clmopyroxene grew by heteradcumulus growth and effectively eliminated all intercumulus liquid.
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