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Data Publication

Accessory Minerals in Felsic Igneous Rocks - Part 3: Composition of monazite-(Ce) from Paleoproterozoic granitoids and gneisses from the Fort McMurray area (Alberta, Canada)

Förster, Hans-Jürgen | Walsh, Nathanial John

GFZ Data Services

(2018)

This data set is the third of a series reporting chemical data for accessory minerals from felsic igneous rocks. It compiles the results of electron-microprobe spot analyses of monazite-(Ce) from various Paleoproterozoic granitoids and spatially associated gneisses located in the wider Fort McMurray area in northeastern Alberta, Canada. The data were generated in connection with the Master of Science thesis of Nathanial John Walsh (Walsh 2013) at the Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences of the University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada, but remained unpublished. The thesis was part of the Helmholtz - Alberta - Initiative (HAI) between the University of Alberta and the Helmholtz Association. Interestingly, monazite from the diverse basement rocks display various kinds of pattern with respect to composition and origin. The great bulk of measured grains display variably declined chondrite-normalized LREE patterns virtually free of anomalies indicative for significant fluid-induced overprinting. We have rocks characterized by largely unzoned, chemically homogeneous grains. There are as well rocks containing nicely patchy-zoned grains showing a wide range in composition, in particular regarding the Th/LREE proportions. Here, maximum measured Th concentration amounted to 33 wt% ThO2. Incorporation of Th into the crystal structure is almost exclusively governed by the huttonite substitution reaction, i.e., Th^4+ + Si^4+ = REE^3+ + P^5+, as characteristic for this chemical type of granites (Förster 1998). The suite of rocks also included samples containing small-sized inclusions of Th-poor monazite in apatite, which formed in response to metamorphic, fluid-aided dissolution-reprecipitation processes (Harlov and Förster 2003, Harlov et al. 2005). Finally, we have a quartz monzonite containing Th-poor monazite in apatite together with matrix monazite of normal Th concentration, the origin if which is not yet fully resolved (cf. Foerster-2018-004_monazite-alberta-BSE images.pdf. presenting back-scattered electron images of monazite grains). In brief, the data set provides information on several aspects of formation and alteration of monazite in non-metamorphic and metamorphic granite. The data set published here contains the complete pile of data acquired for monazite-(Ce) and back-scattered electron (BSE) images of many of the probed grains. Chemical data are provided as Excel and machine-readable .csv files, which contain the information listed in Table 1 of the data description file. Column headers in red (only in the Excel version) indicate that the data and information provided in these columns is from Walsh (2013). “0.00” means that the concentrations of the respective elements were measured, but were below their limits of detection. Blank boxes in oxide concentrations columns indicate that the respective elements were not sought. The collection of BSE images is presented as pdf.file. The sample and grain numbers are given below each mineral image and are corresponding to the Sample No. and the Grain No. in the data table. The thesis of N. Walsh "Walsh, N.J. (2013) Geochemistry and geochronology of the Precambrian basement domains in the vicinity of Fort MacMurray, Alberta: a geothermal perspective. Master of Science thesis, Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, University of Alberta, Canada" is not available online.

Keywords


Originally assigned keywords
monazite
mineral composition
granitoids
electronmicroprobe analysis
rare earth elements
gneisses
thorium
uranium
gneiss
granitoid
ELEMENTS
IGNEOUS ROCKS
MINERALS

Corresponding MSL vocabulary keywords
monazite
thorium
uranium
gneiss
minerals

MSL enriched keywords
minerals
phosphate minerals
monazite
measured property
thorium
uranium
metamorphic rock
gneiss
Precambrian
Proterozoic
Paleoproterozoic
igneous rock - intrusive
acidic intrusive
granite
intermediate intrusive
monzonite
carbonate minerals
apatite
silicate minerals
tectosilicates
quartz
antropogenic setting
geothermal energy field
analysis
geochronology
equipment
electron probe micro-analyzer
Apparatus
microchemical analysis
electron probe micro analyser
subsurface energy production
geothermal energy extraction

MSL enriched sub domains i

geochemistry
microscopy and tomography


Source publisher

GFZ Data Services


DOI

10.5880/gfz.6.2.2018.004


Authors

Förster, Hans-Jürgen

GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences, Potsdam, Germany;

Walsh, Nathanial John

Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada;


Contributers

Rhede, Dieter

Other

GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences, Potsdam, Germany;


References

References

Harlov, D. E., & Förster, H.-J. (2003). Fluid-induced nucleation of (Y+REE)-phosphate minerals within apatite: Nature and experiment. Part II. Fluorapatite. American Mineralogist, 88(8–9), 1209–1229. https://doi.org/10.2138/am-2003-8-905

10.2138/am-2003-8-905

References

Harlov, D. E., Wirth, R., & Förster, H.-J. (2005). An experimental study of dissolution–reprecipitation in fluorapatite: fluid infiltration and the formation of monazite. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology, 150(3), 268–286. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00410-005-0017-8

10.1007/s00410-005-0017-8

References


Citiation

Förster, H.-J., & Walsh, N. J. (2018). Accessory Minerals in Felsic Igneous Rocks - Part 3: Composition of monazite-(Ce) from Paleoproterozoic granitoids and gneisses from the Fort McMurray area (Alberta, Canada) [Data set]. GFZ Data Services. https://doi.org/10.5880/GFZ.6.2.2018.004


Geo location(s)

Fort McMurray, Alberta, Canada