The Victor Mine (Superior Craton, Canada): Neoproterozoic lherzolitic diamonds from a thermally-modified cratonic root

被引:0
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作者
Thomas Stachel
Anetta Banas
Sonja Aulbach
Karen V. Smit
Pamela Wescott
Ingrid L. Chinn
Julie Kong
机构
[1] University of Alberta,Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences
[2] APEX Geosciences Ltd.,Institut für Geowissenschaften, Petrologie und Geochemie
[3] Goethe-Universität Frankfurt,undefined
[4] Gemological Institute of America,undefined
[5] De Beers Group Services (Pty) Ltd,undefined
[6] De Beers – Exploration Canada,undefined
来源
Mineralogy and Petrology | 2018年 / 112卷
关键词
Inclusion in diamond; Garnet lherzolite; Geothermobarometry; Nitrogen aggregation; Rare earth elements;
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摘要
The Jurassic Victor kimberlite (Attawapiskat Field) was emplaced into an area of the central Superior Craton that was affected by a lithosphere-scale thermal event at ~1.1 Ga. Victor diamonds formed ca. 400 million years after this event, in a lithospheric mantle characterized by an unusually cool model geotherm (37–38 mW/m2; Hasterok and Chapman 2011). The bulk of Victor diamonds derives from a thin (<10 km thick) layer that is located at about 180 km depth and represents lherzolitic substrates (for 85% of diamonds). Geothermobarometric calculations (average pressure and temperature at the 1 sigma level are 57 ± 2 kbar and 1129 ± 16 °C) coupled with typical fluid metasomatism-associated trace element patterns for garnet inclusions indicate diamond precipitation under sub-solidus (lherzolite + H2O) conditions. This conclusion links the presence of a diamond-rich lherzolitic layer in the lithospheric mantle, just above the depth where ascending melts would freeze, to the unusually low paleogeotherm beneath Attawapiskat, because along an average cratonic geotherm (40 mW/m2) lherzolite in the presence of hydrous fluid would melt at depths >140 km.
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页码:325 / 336
页数:11
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