Rare and new mineralogical phases in the Ni-Cu-Sb-As system from the Gomati ophiolite, Northern Greece
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Data di Pubblicazione:
2019
Citazione:
Rare and new mineralogical phases in the Ni-Cu-Sb-As system from the Gomati ophiolite, Northern Greece / M. Bussolesi, F. Zaccarini, G. Grieco, E. Tzamos. ((Intervento presentato al convegno Congresso Nazionale SIMP-SGI-SOGEI : Il tempo del pianeta Terra e il tempo dell'uomo: Le geoscienze fra passato e futuro tenutosi a Parma nel 2019.
Abstract:
The Gomati ultramafic body (Chalkidiki peninsula, Northern Greece) is located in the Serbo-Macedonian
Massif, one of the geotectonic terranes composing the Hellenides orogenic belt. Ophiolite occurrences in
this domain have an unclear origin, and consist of altered peridotites hosting scattered chromitite bodies with
massive, schlieren and disseminated textures. These ultramafic bodies are enclosed in the Vertiskos unit,
an alternation of Silurian gneisses and schists, and are sometimes in contact with late Cenozoic granites.
The present work focuses on several accessory minerals in the Ni-Cu-Sb-As system, found in a chloritized
clinopyroxenite in contact with chromitite. The composition of these accessory minerals was determined
through electron microprobe analyses. Well known mineralogical phases are represented by orcelite (Ni5As2)
and breithauptite (NiSb), while other detected phases have been either not well described or never reported.
The chemistry of the Gomati minerals clusters around the following ideal stoichiometries: (Ni,Cu)7(Sb,As)3,
(Ni,Cu)2(Sb,As), (Ni,Cu)11(Sb,As)8, Ni3As, Ni5(As,Sb)2 and Ni7(As,Sb)3. As orcelite (Ni5As2) is a nonstoichiometric
mineral, (Ni,Cu)7(Sb,As)3, Ni5(As,Sb)2 and Ni7(As,Sb)3 may correspond to Cu and/or Sb-rich
terms of this phase. A mineral phase corresponding to the (Ni,Cu)2(Sb,As) stoichiometry was first described in
the Alaskan-type Tulameen complex of Canada as unknown phase by Nixon and Cabri (1990). A phase with
stoichiometry Ni3As is reported by Tredoux et al. (2016), from Bon Accord oxide body (South Africa), and
corresponds to the mineral dienerite, known only from one loose crystal found in Austria in 1921 and recently
discredited my IMA. (Ni,Cu)11(Sb,As)8 probably represents a Cu-rich Sb analogue of the mineral maucherite
(Ni11As8).
Such an anomalous mineral assemblage in the Gomati ophiolite is puzzling. While ultramafic rocks contain
Ni and As of magmatic origin, the presence of Sb and Cu could be indicative of a metasomatic enrichment,
probably linked to the presence of fluids emanating from the granite body in contact with the Gomati ophiolite.
Tipologia IRIS:
14 - Intervento a convegno non pubblicato
Elenco autori:
M. Bussolesi, F. Zaccarini, G. Grieco, E. Tzamos
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