ALBERT

All Library Books, journals and Electronic Records Telegrafenberg

feed icon rss

Your email was sent successfully. Check your inbox.

An error occurred while sending the email. Please try again.

Proceed reservation?

Export
Filter
  • tourmaline  (3)
  • Aluminium oxide; Calcium oxide; Central America; Chlorine; Chromium(III) oxide; Depth, continental, geothermobarometry; Depth, oceanic, geothermobarometry; E012; E014; Eruption; Event label; Fluorine; Fugacity of oxygen, logarithm; Fugacity of oxygen, logarithm, uncertainty; Fugacity of oxygen, relative; Geochemistry; geochronology; GLASS; Iron oxide, FeO; Magnesium oxide; Manganese oxide; Melt water content; Melt water content, uncertainty; Potassium oxide; Pressure, calculated; Pressure, calculated, uncertainty; ROCK; Rock sample; Sample code/label; Sample ID; Silicon dioxide; Sodium oxide; TB_E029; TB_E032; TB_E042; TB_E17-4; Temperature, calculated; Temperature, calculated, uncertainty; Titanium dioxide; Total; zircon  (1)
  • Birimian Supergroup  (1)
Collection
Keywords
Publisher
Years
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2021-11-03
    Description: Abstract
    Description: Analyzing the chemical composition of rocks and minerals is an important tool for exploring and understanding mineral resources. Typically, hydrothermal ore deposits are characterized by primary alteration halos. At the world-class Panasqueira W-Sn-Cu deposit, the hydrothermal alteration of the wall rocks produced concentric zones with progressively greater distance from the veins, consisting of a proximal tourmaline-quartz-muscovite zone and a distal muscovite-quartz zone.Tourmaline and mica are ubiquitous minerals at Panasqueira W-Sn-Cu and coexist in many other hydrothermal ore deposits worldwide. Both minerals are well-known to host variable amounts of trace elements and to have potential as pathfinder minerals as well as fluid monitors.We analyzed major, minor and trace element contents of altered and unaltered metasediments from the Panasqueira by XRF and ICP-MS and tourmaline and white mica major, minor and trace element compositions by laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) in previously well-characterized samples from different locations/setting in the mine (greisen, vein-selvages, wall-rock alteration zones, fault zone, and late vugs).Detailed information about the samples used, the location, and general geological background of the samples, and the analytical method is provided in the data description "2020-002_Codeco-et-al_data-description.pdf ".Detailed information about the the samples used, the location and general geological background of the samples and the analytical methods are provided in the data description file (2020-002_Codeco-et-al_data-description.pdf).
    Description: Other
    Description: Panasqueira is a world-class W-Sn-Cu lode-type deposit located in the Castelo Branco district (Beira Baixa, central Portugal). The ore deposit consists of a swarm of sub-horizontal veins associated with a Late-Variscan S-type granite and enclosed by a metasedimentary unit of Late Ediacaran to Early Cambrian age (e.g., Kelly and Rye, 1979; Romão et al., 2013).The veins are mainly composed of gangue quartz, muscovite and minor carbonates, apatite, topaz,  topaz, fluorite, tourmaline, rutile, ilmenite, arsenopyrite, sphalerite, pyrite, marcasite, stannite, and pyrrhotite. Mineralization of wolframite, chalcopyrite, and cassiterite is predominantly hosted in veins with minor stringers and lenses of sulfide minerals in the wall rocks (e.g., Kelly and Rye, 1979; Polya, 1989; Polya et al., 2000). Although there is a strong variation in the vein mineralogy, typically, the quartz vein-filling is rimmed by a muscovite selvage up to 4-5 cm thick. The hydrothermal alteration produced a 2 to 30 cm thick tourmaline-rich alteration halo in the metasedimentary host rock (Bussink, 1984).
    Description: Methods
    Description: The analyzed samples are described by Codeço et al. (2017), Codeço et al. (2019), and Codeço et al. (in review). These studies discuss the chemical (major, minor, and trace elements) and boron-isotopic compositions of tourmaline and white mica, and whole-rock chemistry of altered and unaltered metasediments. Further details on sample description can be found in the folder "2020-002_Codeco-et-al_Samples" and the analytical methods are described in " 2020-002_Codeco-et-al_data-description.pdf".
    Keywords: Geochemistry ; hydrothermal alteration ; whole-rock chemistry ; tourmaline ; white mica ; muscovite ; LA-ICP-MS ; trace elements ; Panasqueira ; magmatic-hydrothermal systems ; EARTH SCIENCE 〉 SOLID EARTH 〉 ROCKS/MINERALS/CRYSTALS 〉 IGNEOUS ROCKS 〉 IGNEOUS ROCK PHYSICAL/OPTICAL PROPERTIES 〉 COMPOSITION/TEXTURE ; EARTH SCIENCE 〉 SOLID EARTH 〉 ROCKS/MINERALS/CRYSTALS 〉 METAMORPHIC ROCKS 〉 METAMORPHIC ROCK PHYSICAL/OPTICAL PROPERTIES 〉 COMPOSITION/TEXTURE ; EARTH SCIENCE 〉 SOLID EARTH 〉 ROCKS/MINERALS/CRYSTALS 〉 MINERALS 〉 MINERAL PHYSICAL/OPTICAL PROPERTIES 〉 COMPOSITION/TEXTURE ; EARTH SCIENCE 〉 SOLID EARTH 〉 GEOCHEMISTRY 〉 GEOCHEMICAL PROPERTIES 〉 CHEMICAL CONCENTRATIONS
    Type: Dataset
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 2
    Publication Date: 2023-03-17
    Description: Abstract
    Description: Tourmaline-cemented magmatic-hydrothermal breccias are a major host to sulphide mineralization in the supergiant Río Blanco–Los Bronces (RB–LB) porphyry Cu-Mo district in central Chile. We made an extensive study of the chemical and boron isotopic composition of tourmaline from this district to shed light on the composition and origin of mineralizing fluids and to test the utility of tourmaline as an indicator mineral by comparing compositions from mineralized and barren breccias. Río Blanco-Los Bronces is a world-class porphyry-type Cu-Mo district of late Miocene age hosted in a granodioritic batholith and related porphyry intrusions in central Chile (33°9’ S latitude, 70°17’W longitude). The porphyry intrusions and related orebodies are distributed along a structurally-controlled NW-SE zone. Mineralization comprises quartz-sulfide veins, disseminated sulfide miner-alization in altered porphyry host rocks and disseminated sulfides in hydrothermal breccias. See Toro et al. (2012) for an overview of the geology, geochronology and mineralization in the district. Descriptions of the mineralized tourmaline breccias are given by Frikken et al. (2005) and Skewes et al. (2003). The data set provided here comprises in-situ chemical analyses of tourmaline by electron microprobe (EPMA) as well as in-situ boron-isotope analyses of tourmaline in the same samples by SIMS. Tourmaline was analysed in 12 samples including 8 from mineralized breccia bodies (Sur-Sur: 4, La Americana: 4), and 2 samples each from barren breccia and nearby granite-hosted tourmaline nodules in the Diamante area. We also give results of mass balance calculations testing the hypoth-esis of a magmatic-hydrothermal origin of the boron.
    Description: Methods
    Description: Electron microprobe (EPMA) Most samples were analyzed at the Technical University, Bergakademie in Freiberg while samples RB304 and RB306 were at the German Research Centre for Geosciences (GFZ) in Potsdam. All analyses were done on carbon-coated polished thin sections with wavelength-dispersive spetrometers, see details below. All mineral formulae were calculated by normalizing to 15 cations on the Y, Z, or T sites as implemented in the software WinTcalc (Yavuz et al., 2014). EPMA analyses in Freiberg employed a JEOL JXA-8900R instrument set at 20 kV accelerating voltage, a beam current of 12 nA, and a beam diameter of 5 microns on the sample surface. The counting times on peak were 15 s for Na, 20 s for Al, Si; 30 s for Fe, Mg; 60 s for Ti, K, V, Ca, Mn, Cr; and 90 s for F. Background counting times were half of those on the respective peak. Calibration standards used: wollastonite (Ca, Si), diopside (Mg), hematite (Fe), albite (Na), rutile (Ti), orthoclase (K, Al), fluorite (F), rhodonite (Mn), V-metal (V). The analyses at the GFZ Potsdam were carried out with a JEOL JXA 8230 electron microprobe equipped with a LaB6-cathode. The accelerating voltage was 15 kV, beam current 10 nA and the beam diameter on sample was 5 microns. Counting times on peak were 10 s for Si, K, and Na; 20 s for Al, F, Ti, Ca, Cl, Mg, Fe and Mn; background counting times were half of those on the respective peaks. Fluorine was not analysed in the GFZ session. Calibration employed the following mineral standards: orthoclase (Si, Al, K), rutile (Ti), diopside (Ca, Mg), synthetic albite (Na), hematite (Fe) and rhodonite (Mn). SIMS Boron isotope analyses employed the Cameca 1280-HR instrument at the GFZ Potsdam operated in multicollection mode with Faraday cups. Analyses were made on polished thin sections after cleaning in pure ethanol and gold coating in vacuum. The 16O- primary beam of approx. 5nA current and 13 kV energy was focused to about 5 microns on the sample surface. Secondary ions were extracted with a 10 kV potential and no offset voltage. Each analysis was preceded by a 90 s sputtering followed by 20 cycles of 10B (4 s integration time) and 11B (2 s integration) per cycle. The mass resolution M/ΔM of 2000 was more than enough to separate 11B and 10B1H masses. Instrumental mass fractionation and analytical quality were determined by repeated analyses of reference materials dravite (Harvard #108796) and schorl (Harvard #112566) described by Dyar et al. (2001) during each analytical session (see Table 3). The internal precision of each analysis (1 standard deviation / mean of 20 cycles) was typically around 0.1‰. Repeatability on the individual reference tourmalines was between 0.1 and 0.2%, and the combined 1 s.d. variability of all analyses from both reference materials was 〈0.8‰. This variability includes any matrix effect resulting from different chemical composition of the tourmalines and is taken as an estimate for the overall uncertainty. After correction for instrument mass fractionation, the 11B/10B ratios were converted to δ11B values relative to NIST SRM 951 (11B/10B = 4.04362 according to Catanzaro et al., 1970).
    Description: Other
    Description: Acknowledgements: The study was supported by the Chilean Commission for Scientific and Technological Research (CONICYT) and the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD). We thank Thomas Seifert and Lothar Ratschbacher for support in Freiberg including expenses for field visits, sample preparation and analyses. The EPMA analyses were conducted with the help of Bernhard Schulz and Joachim Krause in Freiberg and Oona Appelt in Potsdam. The SIMS analyses in Potsdam were done with the expert help of Frederic Couffignal.
    Keywords: tourmaline ; porphyry copper ; Andes ; chemical element 〉 element of group III 〉 boron ; In Situ/Laboratory Instruments 〉 Probes 〉 ELECTRON MICROPROBES ; In Situ/Laboratory Instruments 〉 Spectrometers/Radiometers 〉 SIMS
    Type: Dataset , Dataset
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 3
    Publication Date: 2023-06-12
    Description: Abstract
    Description: The crystalline aquifer in Ghana’s Pra Basin provides water for over 4 million people as many rivers are polluted by artisanal mining. The aim of the data collection was to understand the origin, quality and chemical evolution of surface water and ground water in order to improve the sustainable management of the resource. Here, we present data on major ions, trace metals, stable oxygen (δ18O) and hydrogen (δ2H) isotope ratios of surface water and ground water and mineralogical composition of rock outcrops from the Pra Basin in Ghana. The field campaign took place in March 2020 (water sampling) and August 2021 (outcrop sampling). A total of 34 surface water and 56 ground water samples were collected from rivers, public boreholes (depth 〉30 m) and hand-dug wells (depth 〈 10 m), respectively. The water samples were analysed for cations and trace metals using the Inductively Coupled Plasma Optical Emission Spectrometry (ICP-OES). The anions were analysed using the Ion Chromatography (IC). For the stable oxygen (δ18O) and hydrogen (δ2H) isotope ratios, a Picarro L-2140i Ringdown Spectrometer was used. The bulk elemental composition of the rock samples was analysed by X-ray fluorescence (XRF). The mineralogic composition was determined by X-ray diffraction (XRD) while the Zeiss Axiophot petrographic microscope was used for the petrographic thin section analysis. The data generated from all measurements are provided in a .zip folder consisting of four subfolders. Each folder contains Excel files discussed in the file inventory section.
    Keywords: Birimian Supergroup ; Cape Coast granitoid ; Major ions ; Trace metals ; Stable isotopes ; X-ray fluorescence ; X-ray diffraction ; Petrographic thin section ; EARTH SCIENCE 〉 SOLID EARTH 〉 GEOCHEMISTRY 〉 GEOCHEMICAL PROCESSES 〉 MINERAL DISSOLUTION
    Type: Dataset , Dataset
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 4
    Publication Date: 2023-02-12
    Description: This dataset includes results from amphibole geothermobarometry of explosive silicic eruptions from Ilopango caldera in El Salvador (TBJ, TB2, TB3, and TB4). Amphibole compositions were analyzed employing a JEOL JXA 8200 wavelength dispersive microprobe at the GEOMAR - Helmholtz-Centre for Ocean Research Kiel.
    Keywords: Aluminium oxide; Calcium oxide; Central America; Chlorine; Chromium(III) oxide; Depth, continental, geothermobarometry; Depth, oceanic, geothermobarometry; E012; E014; Eruption; Event label; Fluorine; Fugacity of oxygen, logarithm; Fugacity of oxygen, logarithm, uncertainty; Fugacity of oxygen, relative; Geochemistry; geochronology; GLASS; Iron oxide, FeO; Magnesium oxide; Manganese oxide; Melt water content; Melt water content, uncertainty; Potassium oxide; Pressure, calculated; Pressure, calculated, uncertainty; ROCK; Rock sample; Sample code/label; Sample ID; Silicon dioxide; Sodium oxide; TB_E029; TB_E032; TB_E042; TB_E17-4; Temperature, calculated; Temperature, calculated, uncertainty; Titanium dioxide; Total; zircon
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 1956 data points
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 5
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: Three tourmaline reference materials sourced from the Harvard Mineralogical and Geological Museum (schorl 112566, dravite 108796 and elbaite 98144), which are already widely used for the calibration of in situ boron isotope measurements, are characterised here for their oxygen and lithium isotope compositions. Homogeneity tests by secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) showed that at sub‐nanogram test portion masses, their 18O/16O and 7Li/6Li isotope ratios are constant within ± 0.27‰ and ± 2.2‰ (1s), respectively. The lithium mass fractions of the three materials vary over three orders of magnitude. SIMS homogeneity tests showed variations in 7Li/28Si between 8% and 14% (1s), which provides a measure of the heterogeneity of the Li contents in these three materials. Here, we provide recommended values for δ18O, Δ’17O and δ7Li for the three Harvard tourmaline reference materials based on results from bulk mineral analyses from multiple, independent laboratories using laser‐ and stepwise fluorination gas mass spectrometry (for O), and solution multi‐collector inductively coupled plasma‐mass spectroscopy (for Li). These bulk data also allow us to assess the degree of inter‐laboratory bias that might be present in such data sets. This work also re‐evaluates the major element chemical composition of the materials by electron probe microanalysis and investigates these presence of a chemical matrix effect on SIMS instrumental mass fractionation with regard to δ18O determinations, which was found to be 〈 1.6‰ between these three materials. The final table presented here provides a summary of the isotope ratio values that we have determined for these three materials. Depending on their starting mass, either 128 or 512 splits have been produced of each material, assuring their availability for many years into the future.
    Description: Key Points: Three widely available tourmaline reference materials are characterized for δ7Li, δ17O and δ18O, while new EPMA and SIMS measurements refine their major element compositions. SIMS data document homogeneity for these isotope ratios. SIMS matrix effect causes bias of 1.9‰ between elbaite and schorl, whereas silicate glass shows even more severe bias.
    Description: U.S. National Science Foundation
    Description: Natural Environment Research Council http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100000270
    Description: US Department of Energy http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100000015
    Keywords: 551.9 ; tourmaline ; lithium isotopes ; oxygen isotopes ; reference materials ; SIMS ; matrix effect
    Type: article
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
Close ⊗
This website uses cookies and the analysis tool Matomo. More information can be found here...