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The origin of Kenya rift plateau‐type flood phonolites: Results of high‐pressure/high‐temperature experiments in the systems phonolite‐H2O and phonolite‐H2O‐CO2

 

作者: David E. Hay,   Richard F. Wendlandt,  

 

期刊: Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth  (WILEY Available online 1995)
卷期: Volume 100, issue B1  

页码: 401-410

 

ISSN:0148-0227

 

年代: 1995

 

DOI:10.1029/94JB02160

 

数据来源: WILEY

 

摘要:

Near‐liquidus melting relations have been determined for a mafic, plateau‐type, flood phonolite from the Kenya rift at 0.5, 0.7, 0.9, and 1.2 GPa, with H2O added through saturation, and at 0.7 GPa with H2O and CO2added. Mixed‐volatile experiments at 0.7 GPa delineate a near‐liquidus multiple saturation of augite, andesine, phlogopite, oxides, and apatite at 1000°C,XCo2= 0.42, with calcic amphibole melting above 975°C. The multiple saturation and phase assemblage are interpreted to indicate that plateau phonolites were in equilibrium with the residuum of a parental alkali basaltic composition at 0.7 GPa consisting of augite, andesine, titanomagnetite, and olivine (a product of incongruent melting of phlogopite and, possibly, amphibole). This evidence for lower crustal equilibration refutes suggestions that plateau phonolites are low‐pressure differentiates. Their enormous volumes (about 50,000 km3), restricted eruptive period (14–11 Ma), uniform major element compositions, and the paucity of associated mafic‐intermediate rocks also argue against a deep origin by fractional crystallization. A two‐stage process for the origin of the phonolites is consistent with the thermal evolution of the rift. The lower crust was pervasively injected by alkali basaltic magmas during the period of voluminous eruption of early to middle Miocene basalts. Rising isotherms during rift evolution caused subsequent partial melting of this predominantly basaltic lower crust in the late Miocene, generating the p

 

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