Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2050331311> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W2050331311 endingPage "10469" @default.
- W2050331311 startingPage "10431" @default.
- W2050331311 abstract "Petrographic descriptions and electron microprobe analyses of minerals are presented for 35 specimens from seven suites chosen to examine the transition from magnetite series to ilmenite series granitoids along two transects across the Cretaceous-Paleocene Inner Zone batholith of southwestern Japan. Regularities in chemical compositions of amphiboles, biotites, and feldspars suggest that fundamentally similar processes produced the magmas that formed the two series. Constant or decreasing Fe/(Fe+Mg) for biotites and amphiboles with increasing host rock silica content, coupled with the absence of early formed magnetite and sphene, suggest that magnetite series rocks may have become oxidized during crystallization near the level of intrusion, through the processes of second boiling and differential loss of hydrogen. For the Daito-Yokota, magnetite series suite, Fe/(Fe+Mg) for biotites decreased from 0.48 to 0.37 as SiO2 content of the host rock increased from 55.3 to 75.5 wt %; for an ilmenite series suite from the Takanawa Peninsula, Fe/(Fe+Mg) for biotites increased from 0.51 to 0.77 with an increase in host rock SiO2 from 53.4 to 75.5. Detailed consideration of amphibole chemistry shows predominance of edenitic and tschermakitic substitution schemes as well as coupling between substitutions of Ti in octahedral sites and AlIV. Interrelations between amphibole and biotite chemistry show that Fe/(Fe+Mg) and Mn contents can be interpreted in terms of equilibration, whereas Ti content cannot. The chemistry of chlorites correlates well with that of biotites; primary and secondary muscovites are distinct in composition. Plagioclase in all studied suites shows igneous zoning appropriate to host rock composition; perthitic alkali feldspars in all samples have lost albite component, and temperatures based on the two-feldspar geothermometer are low. The biotite-apatite geothermometer is also inoperative for this group of samples because fully fluorinated apatites typically occur in biotites of modest F content. Whereas magnetites have reequilibrated, analyses of ilmenites for the representative Daito-Yokota and Takanawa suites corroborate biotite compositional data and suggest that fO2 probably differed by 2 to 3 orders of magnitude during crystallization of silica-rich magnetite and ilmenite series granites. Whole-rock chemistry supports mineral chemistry in suggesting that the studied granitoids have crystallized from magmas generated in a lower crustal environment in which mantle-derived magmas partially melted source materials with igneous characteristics." @default.
- W2050331311 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W2050331311 creator A5010247097 @default.
- W2050331311 creator A5013185684 @default.
- W2050331311 creator A5018108918 @default.
- W2050331311 date "1981-11-10" @default.
- W2050331311 modified "2023-09-27" @default.
- W2050331311 title "Chemistry of rock-forming minerals of the Cretaceous-Paleocene batholith in southwestern Japan and implications for magma genesis" @default.
- W2050331311 cites W1488636630 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W1496345739 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W1965925737 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W1967390329 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W1968089636 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W1985739136 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W1992544999 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W1992873992 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W1993792288 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2002793391 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2013040079 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2017938841 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2019766381 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2021246555 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2021830725 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2026414118 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2028480661 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2034057192 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2034438956 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2035768204 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2055828600 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2056149353 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2057091716 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2068714265 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2069240891 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2073012543 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2073824474 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2074911095 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2078629430 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2078752746 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2080690165 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2083688044 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2085259574 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2086184514 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2091994782 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2096473959 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2123157409 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2124961803 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2133528821 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2146357803 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2157744390 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2164054892 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2168882659 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2315073371 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2315209585 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2316139053 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2318777624 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2321796051 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2326029980 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2327687469 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2330476109 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2331468392 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2332256264 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2332333357 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2333249572 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2333798769 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W28993445 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W2969193622 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W4212997097 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W4232677933 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W4238971721 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W4256585472 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W51453698 @default.
- W2050331311 cites W89085061 @default.
- W2050331311 doi "https://doi.org/10.1029/jb086ib11p10431" @default.
- W2050331311 hasPublicationYear "1981" @default.
- W2050331311 type Work @default.
- W2050331311 sameAs 2050331311 @default.
- W2050331311 citedByCount "139" @default.
- W2050331311 countsByYear W20503313112012 @default.
- W2050331311 countsByYear W20503313112013 @default.
- W2050331311 countsByYear W20503313112014 @default.
- W2050331311 countsByYear W20503313112015 @default.
- W2050331311 countsByYear W20503313112016 @default.
- W2050331311 countsByYear W20503313112017 @default.
- W2050331311 countsByYear W20503313112018 @default.
- W2050331311 countsByYear W20503313112019 @default.
- W2050331311 countsByYear W20503313112020 @default.
- W2050331311 countsByYear W20503313112021 @default.
- W2050331311 countsByYear W20503313112022 @default.
- W2050331311 countsByYear W20503313112023 @default.
- W2050331311 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2050331311 hasAuthorship W2050331311A5010247097 @default.
- W2050331311 hasAuthorship W2050331311A5013185684 @default.
- W2050331311 hasAuthorship W2050331311A5018108918 @default.
- W2050331311 hasConcept C120806208 @default.
- W2050331311 hasConcept C12294951 @default.
- W2050331311 hasConcept C127313418 @default.
- W2050331311 hasConcept C151730666 @default.
- W2050331311 hasConcept C172660882 @default.