Some Notes on the Lugiin Gol, Mushgai Khudag and Bayan Khoshuu Alkaline Complexes, Southern Mongolia ()
1. Introduction
Alkaline province in Southern Mongolia is well known for associated alkaline-carbonatite complexes (e.g. Lugiin Gol, Mushgai Khudag and Bayan Khoshuu) (Figure 1). These complexes and a number of smaller plutons with carbonatite dykes and veins are controlled by E-W faults and formed in continental rift environment. Alkaline and carbonatitic rocks [1-7] outcrop along the northern and south Gobi rift zones (Late Paleozoic to Early-Late Mesozoic aged) and consist mainly of volcanic-plutonic complexes.
We present here a review of the petrological and geochemical features of these alkaline-carbonatite complexes.
2. Geological Background
The alkaline complexes in South Mongolia are controlled by large extensional structures (Figure 1) and are related to occurrences of Late Paleozoic-Early Mesozoic (Lugiin Gol) and Late Mesozoic (Mushgai Khudag and Bayan Khoshuu) ages, respectively ([8], and therein references).
2.1. Lugiin Gol Complex (LGC)
LGC outcrops at the Southeastern side of the Gobi-Tien Shan fold belt, near the boundary with the Sulinkheer suture zone (Figure 1). Gobi-Tien Shan belt is composed mainly of Late Pre-Cambrian limestones, amphibolites and gneisses with Late Paleozoic granitoids and intermediate volcanics. The Sulinkheer zone is characterized by a Paleozoic ophiolitic complex and by Late Paleozoic sediments, in the southern and in the northern areas, respectively. The eastern Lugiin Gol district (108˚20'E) represents a magmatic arc, indicating that remnant oceanic basin (Sulinkheer Sea) existed between North China and a South Gobi microcontinent until Late Permian [9,10].
Notably, the northern area is mainly underlain by black shales, siltstones and sandstones (i.e. Lugiin Gol Formation), intruded by the LGC complex. A silica undersaturated syenitic stock outcrops in an area of about 12 sq.km, showing subcircular outlines with a diameter of 3.5 km. The stock is composed of nepheline-bearing syenite, nepheline syenite and ijolites (Figure 2), surrounded by hornfels [4,11], fenites and skarns. An alkali-granite dyke, 20 m thick, crosscuts the Lugiin Gol complex. Moreover, a stockwork with two main types of dykes and veins, i.e. carbonatites and phonolites (and phonolites with tinguaitic texture) intrude the complex (cf. Figure 2).
Figure 1. Distribution of alkaline complexes in South Mongolia [3]: MKC, Mushgai Khudag; BAK, Bayan Khoshuu; LGC, Lugiin Gol; SKSZ, Sulinkheer suture zone. Grey field in the inset represents the studied area.
Figure 2. Lithological map of the Lugiin Gol complex [4,12]. Only significant occurrences of carbonatitic dykes and veins are shown.
2.2. Mushgai Khudag Complex (MKC)
MKC, along the main Mongolian lineament (Figure 1) consists mainly of stocks and necks of trachytic and syenitic varieties (Figure 3; [13] cut by carbonatitic veins and plugs (F-S-Sr-Ba-REE rich: s. later). Host rocks are represented by Paleozoic sedimentary-volcanic sequences and by Carboniferous granitoids [3]. The K-Ar ages for MKC are between Early Cretaceous (Valanginian) and Late Cretaceous (Cenomanian) times [5].
Genesis of these rocks was interpreted as a result of a mantle plume activity during subduction (Enkhtuvshin, 1995), or, more probably, as rifting related [3].
Figure 3. Simplified geological map of the Mushgai Khudag Complex (Latitude: 44˚24'3"N, Longitude: 104˚3'5"E) after [3].
2.3. Bayan Khoshuu Complex (BAKC)
BAKC consists of Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous trachytes, syenites and monzonites. Late Paleozoic syenites, granites and Silurian volcanic-terrigenous rocks represent host rocks. Syenites and monzonites occur at the core of the complex. Carbonatitic stockworks are noticeable (Figure 4).
Several primary and hydrothermal mineralizations (FS-Sr-Ba-REE rich; cf. [14]) are present mainly as veins intruding the rocks.
3. Petrographical Outlines
3.1. Silicate Rocks
The petrography is based here above all on the [16] and [17] classifications.
The foid (nepheline) syenites are medium to coarse grained, equigranular to subporphyritic. Major minerals are orthoclase (or ≥80 mole%), nepheline, clinopyroxene (usually with augitic-diopsidic core and aegirine-rich rims). Minor minerals are amphibole (arfvedsonite with Mg# ~0.65), biotite, titanite, fluorite, sodalite, calcite, magnetite and apatite. As typical accessory minerals occur zircon, baddeleyite, elpidite, pyrochlore, burbankite, cancrinite and synchysite.
Foid bearing monzonites (syenites) are porphyritic with euhedral phenocrysts of alkali feldspar and plagioclase set in a matrix of clinopyroxene, amphibole, biotite and nepheline: accessory minerals are magnetite, titanite, apatite and zircon.
Figure 4. Geological map of the bayan khoshuu complex (modified, after [15]).
Porphyritic fineto medium-grained K-feldspar monzonites and syenites are composed of K-feldspar, plagioclase, clinopyroxene (augite to diopside Wo48-37En40-20Fs13-21), alkaline amphibole (Mg arfvedsonite with Mg # = 60 - 70), biotite (Ann0.6-0.76), magnetite, quartz, plagioclase and accessory apatite, titanite and fluorite.
Phonolites with tinguaitic texture (Tinguaites, i.e. “intrusive phonolites”) are usually porphyritic, with phenocrystals of alkali feldspar, nepheline, biotite and aegirine-augite ± sodic amphibole, being titanite and aegirine the most common inclusions. The groundmass is a fine aggregate of nepheline, alkali feldspar, biotite, aegirine, titanite, apatite, magnetite and zircon. Notably, needles of aegirine occur interstitially in a mosaic of alkali feldspar and foids (“tinguaitic texture”; cf. [17]. The associated phonolites are very fine grained, sometimes porphyritic, with the same mineralogical association of the coexisting tinguaites.
The granitic dyke of the Lugiin Gol complex is mainly course, but locally also very coarse, with large phenocrysts of microcline, oligoclase, biotite and quartz set in a groundmass made of the same phases. Accessory minerals are mainly amphibole, titanite, apatite, magnetite and ilmenite.
3.2. Carbonatites
According to Kynicky and Samec [11] and Kynicky et al. [18,19], the carbonatites are mainly sővite and alvikite, consisting essentially of calcite, minor to accessory apatite and fluorite, fluorcarbonates, strontianite, barite, celestine and quartz. The textures of examined carbonatites usually show a recrystallization of magmatic calcite, alteration of apatite, and crystallization of minerals controlled by the intensity of hydrothermal-metasomatic alteration [14,20,21]. It is suggested that there are two types of alteration in the carbonatites: 1) high temperature (above 250˚C, max 400˚C) fluoritization with crystallization of fluorocarbonates (e.g. bastnaesite-(Ce), synchysite-(Ce), Ceand Nd-parisite); 2) low temperature (bellow 150˚C) with crystallization of barite, celestine and quartz (up to the stage IV of [22]).
Notably, carbonatites usually form veins within magmatic rocks, or they are mainly located in brecciated rocks and eruptive breccias. There are rare crater facies at the contact of syenite plutons [3]. On the whole the carbonatitic rocks from the three complexes are similar, but Mushgai Khudag complex shows relatively high concentrations of apatite, and barite-celestine as well fluorocarbonates may be important in the veins from Bayan Khoshuu complex.
4. Petrochemistry
4.1. Classification and Nomenclature
The classification and nomenclature is after the TAS
[17,23,24] cf. Figure 5(a)), and on the basis of QAPF diagram [16]. The silicate rocks of the analyzed complexes are rich in alkalis, with total alkali content (Na2O + K2O) ranging from 10.1 to 16.7 wt% (cf. Tables 1 and 2): on the basis of the Na2O/K2O ratio they are “potassic”; only one phonolitic (tinguaitic) dyke from Lugiin Gol complex plots inside the “highly potassic” field (Figure 5(b)). Agpaitic index ranges from 0.76 to 1.18 pointing to a tendency towards peralkaline rock-types. Silica and MgO contents range from 52.0 to 58.7 and from 3.48 to 0.11 wt%, respectively, indicating that the rocks are evolved (from intermediate to acid, following) [23]. Analogously to similar occurrences, the rocks may derive, via fractional crystallization, by original basanitic magmas [22,25,26].
The analyzed samples (Tables 1 and 2), plotted in the TAS (Figure 5(a)), are: 9 foid syenites, 5 foid bearing monzonites, 1 monzonites, 2 phonolites, 6 phonolites with tinguaitic texture, 7 monzonites and 2 syenites, other than the alkali granite dyke (4 samples) of the Lugiin Gol complex.
Following the Q-A-P-F classification, where the distribution of the Ab molecule between alkali feldspar and plagioclase was obtained according to Le Maitre (1976) on the CIPW norms (Figure 5(c)), the samples are foidsyenites/phonolites and foid bearing syenites/trachytes (Lugiin Gol) and syenites/trachytes (Mushgai Khudag and Bayan Khoshuu).
Figure 5. (a) Total alkali-silica diagram, TAS, modified after Middlemost, 1994. Heavy line separates alkaline and subalkaline fields [27]; (b) Na2O vs K2O diagram; L Lugiin Gol, M Mushgai Khudag, B, Bayan Khoshuu; (c) In the Q-A-P-F diagram [16] the normative values were plotted after the sharing out Ab between alkali feldspar and plagioclase [28].
Representative analyses of Ca-carbonatites are reported in the Tables 1 and 2, along the analyses of FREE rich variants from the Bayan Khoshuu complex.
4.2. Geochemistry
Notably, all the Lugiin Gol samples, granitic dyke excepted, are Ne normative (Ne 2.66 to 28.68 wt%; cf. Table 1), whereas the alkaline rocks from the Mushgai Khudag and Bayan Khoshuu are oversaturated or saturated in silica (Q = 0.0 to 7.6 wt%; cf. Table 2). All the samples display a variable Al2O3 content (14.74 - 17.96 wt%). On the whole, the rocks appear enriched in LILE and depleted in HFS elements such as Nb, Ta, P and Ti. They show a strongly enriched pattern in Pb (Tables 3, 4 and Figure 6). On the other hand, the rocks are enriched in LREE and depleted in HREE (showing flat patterns), with a weak negative Eu anomaly (Tables 3, 4 and Figure 7).
In particular, the carbonatite dykes and veins from the complexes (Figure 7 and Tables 3, 4) show a very high concentration of U, Th, (up to 3843 and 114, ppm, respectively) and REE (REE = 0.6 - 3.3, up to 23.5 wt%; LREE = 6928 up to 224,291 ppm) and a very strong fractionation LREE/HREE (Nd/Lu = 854 - 24,100). It can be stressed that the highest values are typical of the later veins from Bayan Khoshuu complex and “high grade” carbonatites from Lugiin Gol complex, linked to the presence of fluorocarbonate minerals as bastnaesite, synchysite and parisite: this suggests an economic importance for these occurrences, almost for LREE (cf. also [30] and therein references). As matter of fact, from mass balance (Tables 2 and 4) the MK vein contains approximately barite 13 wt%, celestine + strontianite 17 wt% and bastnaesite + synchysite+ parisite (up to 28 wt%). Moreover, an exceptional content of apatite is present in the MK-01 carbonatite (about 13.5 wt%). Considering major and trace elements, REE contents of intrusive rocks from the Mushgai Khudag and Bayan Khoshuu complexes (shown in Tables 2 and 4), it is apparent that these rocks are strongly enriched in Sr, Pb and LILE and depleted in HFSE (Ta, Nb, Hf, Ti, and Y) (Figure 6). They show enriched LREE pattern (Figure 7). Geochemically these rocks are characterized by relatively low HFSE with enrichment in LILE and LREE, depletion in Ta, Nb, Ti and Zr with HFSE troughs on the primordial mantle normalized spiderdiagrams [31], which are commonly observed in island arc basalts and in the Paraná volcanic, the latter linked to extensional (rifting) processes [32]. It suggests that the original (basanitic?) magmas were derived from continental lithospheric, mantle, metasomatized by fluids, variably enriched in CO2 and H2O (and F, LILE and so on: cf. veined mantle of [33,34]. On the whole, all the data, suggest that the Mongolian alkaline complexes from southern Mongolia are related to the lithospheric mantle, where the contribution of asthenospheric components are not appreciable in terms of geochemical signatures (cf. [32], and therein
Table 2. Major element compositions (wt%) for selected intrusive samples from Mushgai Khudag and Bayan Khoshuu complexes. Effusive selected samples are from [5]; Fe2O3-FeO partitioning determined by Ox of [28]. Carbonatite dyke and Fcarbonate veins are from[19] ( unpublished data).
Figure 6. Primitive mantle normalized [31] spidergram for the Lugiin Gol, Mushgai Khudag and Bayan Khoshuu complexes.
Table 4. Trace element concentrations (ppm) for selected intrusive samples from Mushgai Khudag and Bayan Khoshuu complexes.
Figure 7. Chondrite normalized [35] REE pattern of the Lugiin Gol, Mushgai Khudag and Bayan Khoshuu complexes.
references).
5. Age of the Complexes
An errorchron calculated following the Rb/Sr systematics on the syenitic rocks from Lugiin Gol complex gives an age of 244.9 ± 22.4 Ma (initial Sr isotope ratio, Sri, = 0.70800; Figure 8(a)), roughly corresponding to “Sensitive High Resolution Ion Microprobe” (SHRIMP) ages (245 - 240 Ma) on the zircons from the same complex [19]. On the other hand, the whole rock-minerals isochron ages where determined for the three complexes by Rb-Sr method: 87Rb/86Sr and 87Sr/86Sr data are reported in Table 5. A Lugiin Gol undersaturated syenite sample shows an age of 222.2 ± 3.2 (2σ) Ma with Sri = 0.70811 ± 0.00009 (foid syenite 82306, Figure 8(b)); the Mushgai Khudag syenite (sample 90703) displays 139.9 ± 5.9 Ma and Sri = 0.70605 ± 0.00008 (Figure 8(d)); Bayan Khoshuu syenite (sample 90710) has an age = 130.6 ± 9.3 Ma with Sri = 0.70594 ± 0.00009 (Figure 8(e)).
Notably the Rb-Sr age from the isochron relative to the foid syenite from Lugiin Gol is too low (222 vs. 245 Ma) with respect to the whole complex: the younger age is probably due to the alteration processes that affected some host rocks after the intrusions of the dyke systems.
On the contrary, the Rb-Sr ages of the Mushgai Khudag and Bayan Khoshuu complexes are similar 1) to those reported by JICA [15] utilizing K-Ar systematic; and 2) to the Sm/Nd calculated ages (138 ± 3 and 134 ± 2, Mushgai Khudag and Bayan Khoshuu, respectively) .
An errorchron for the granitic dyke intruding the Lugiin Gol complex (cf. Table 5) gives an age of 209.9 ± 0.9 Ma (Sri = 0.70765; Figure 8(c)).
Moreover, an errorchron (not shown) relative to the whole rocks from Lugiin Gol foid syenites to foid-bearing syenites + associated phonolitic dykes and carbonatitic dyke, give the same age of the intrusive rocks, i.e. 244.9 ± 22.4 Ma. However this age, in our opinion, cannot be accepted because: 1) it is unlikely that the intruding dykes have the same age of the complex; 2) the Sm-Nd systematic does not show any correlation. An age younger than 222 Ma (probable age of hydrothermal alteration on the foid syenite 82306), or similar to that of the granitic dyke, i.e. 210 Ma, may be believed most probable also for phonolitic and carbonatitic dykes.
At any way, a Mesozoic age is confirmed, i.e. Triassic for Lugiin Gol complex, and Early Cretaceous for Mushgai Khudag and Bayan Khoshuu complexes.
6. Sr-Nd Systematics
All the available isotopic data, initial 87Sr/86Sr (Sri) - 143Nd/144Nd (Ndi) and εSr - εNd notation are reported in Table 6 along with the model age (TDM) relative to the depleted mantle [38]. Lugiin Gol complex (calculated using the previous age results; cf. Figure 8) are in the ranges 0.70772 - 0.70827, 0.51216 - 0.51226 and 49.81 - 57.07, −4.24 - −1.25, respectively (syenitic variants: age 245 Ma); the phonolitic dykes (222 Ma) have Sri 0.70745 - 0.70888 and Ndi 0.51220 - 0.51228, with εSr and εNd varying between 45.54 and 66.36, and between −3.02 and −1.73, respectively. The latter are similar to the carbonatitic dyke (εSr = 64.88 and εNd = −1.53). Notably, all these samples plot in the IV quadrant in the Sri vs. Ndi diagram (Figure 9): according to [39] and therein references) these volcanics were enriched in Rb (fRb > 0) and depleted in Sm (fSm < 0), indicating that a hypothetical basalt source or may has formed by contamination by igneous and metamorphic rocks of the continental crust or, more probably remained isolated for a sufficient time to acquire distinctive isotopic composition of Sr and Nd.
The granitic dyke shows a slight enrichment in Nd (eNd + 0.48 to + 1.27), but with eSr (47.4 - 48.9) inside the same compositional variation of the phonolitic dykes, indicating a coupled enrichment in both Rb and Sm.
The Mushgai Khudag syenites-trachytes have, as average, Sri = 0.70605 ± 0.00001 and Ndi = 0.51244, corresponding to eSr = 24.3 and eNd = −0.33, respectively (cf. Table 6).
Bayan Khoshuu syenites-monzonites show Sri = 0.70594 (eSr = 22.6), similar to the Mushgai Khudag volcanic-plutonic complex, but the Ndi = 0.51224 (eNd = −4.4) indicate a major depletion in Sm in the source (Figure 9).
Figure 8. (a) Errorchron relative to the syenitic rocks (from foid syenites to foid bearing syenites) from Lugiin Gol complex; (b) Isochron for Lugiin Gol foid syenite 82306; (c) Errorchron for the samples from granitic dyke intruding the Lugiin Gol complex (cf. Tables 5 and 6); (d) Isochron for Mushgai Khudag syenite 90703; (e) Isochron for Bayan Khoshuu syenite 907010 ([36,37], unpublished data).
Table 5. 87Rb/86Sr and 87Sr/86Sr ratios for selected samples and minerals from Mongolian complexes (s. Table 6; cf. Figure 8).
Although the rock-types of the examined complexes are strongly evolved, however the almost constant behaviour of the Sm/Nd ratio in the analyzed samples (147Sm/144Nd = 0.0100 ± 0.017) allows to consider the Nd model ages as indicative of the main metasomatic events affecting the lithospheric sources beneath the Mongolian regions. The model ages, calculated in relation to the depleted mantle (TDM; cf. Table 6) for the whole population (33 samples) fit 992 ± 119 Ma, indicating a Neoproterozoic event ended with the Mushgai Khudag complex (797 ± 110 Ma), according to [41]. The latter dates are similar to the youngest Os model ages (1.1 and 0.7 - 0.5 Ga); [42] and may support significant melt extraction from the subcontinental mantle and/or metasomatic events.
7. Concluding Remarks
Alkaline complexes from southern Mongolia are controlled by E-W lineament. Mushgai Khudag (MKC) and Bayan Khoshuu (BAK) complexes are along the Main Mongolian lineament and Early Cretaceous aged (139 and 120 Ma, respectively). Notably carbonatitic stock
Table 6. Sr-Nd systematic relative to the examined complexes. Sr and Nd isotope ratios of whole rock samples and minerals and Rb, Sr, Sm and Nd contents of minerals were measured using a MAT 262 thermal ionization mass spectrometer equipped with five collectors. Initial 87Sr/86Sr and 143Nd/144Nd data were calculated as follows: Lugiin Gol, 245, 222, 210 Ma, syenitic facies, phonolitic-carbonatitic dykes, granitic dyke, respectively; Mushgai Khudag, 140 Ma; Bayan Khoshuu, 131 Ma. The values were determinated according to [40]. TDM values: calculation of Nd model dates relative to a depleted reservoir (i.e. 143Nd/144Nd = 0.513114 and 147Sm/144Nd = 0.222, after [39]).
Figure 9. Time integrated (87Sr/86Sr)i vs (143Nd/144Nd)i for the Lugiin Gol, Mushgai Khudag and Bayan Khoshuu complexes. For the mantle components (DMM, HIMU, EMI and EMII) and Mantle Array (MA), s. [38,43-46]. Data sources for mantle xenoliths, Tariat and Dariganga areas: [42,47-49].
works are present in the two complexes. On the other hand, the Lugiin Gol (LGC) complex outcrops at the central-eastern Gobi-Tien Shan fold belt and it is Triassic in age (244 - 210 Ma). MKC and BAK consist mainly of slightly oversaturated syenites (monzonites) and trachytes, while in the LGC the rock-types are mainly foid-syenites and foid-bearing syenites and the complex is cut by a stockwork made of phonolitic and carbonatitic veins and dykes.
All the alkaline rocks are potassic, rarely highly potassic, and mainly intermediate silica-types, alkali granitic dyke excepted, and then they are believed derivative from a basic magma, probably a basanitic liquid, analogously to other world-wide occurrences and on the basis also of the trace element behavior ([50] and therein references); [32-34]; clinopyroxene and calcic plagioclase are evolving by fractional crystallization of olivine during ascent to the present position.
Stockworks of LREE rich carbonatites, carbonatefluorite, fluorite, and carbonate-fluorite-celestine-barite REE ore bearing rocks are associated with the complexes and point to an economic interest of the region.
On the whole, geochemical characteristics of alkaline complexes in South Mongolia were interpreted as formed within-plate tectonic environment and associated with extensional rift tectonics [3].
All the samples plot in the IV quadrant in the Sri vs. Ndi diagram showed enrichment in Rb (fRb > 0) and depletion in Sm (fSm < 0), indicating that a hypothetical basalt probably remained isolated for a sufficient time to gain distinctive isotopic composition of Sr and Nd.
Finally, on the basis of almost constant behaviour of the Sm/Nd ratio in the analyzed samples (147Sm/144Nd = 0.0100 ± 0.017), the Nd model ages can represent the main metasomatic events affecting the lithospheric sources beneath the Mongolian regions (veined lithospheric mantle). TDM (Table 6) for the whole population (33 samples) fit 992 ± 119 Ma, indicating a Neoproterozoic event ended with the Mushgai Khudag complex (797 ± 110 Ma). The latter dates are similar to the youngest Os model ages (1.1 and 0.7 - 0.5 Ga) [42], and may support significant melt extraction from the subcontinental mantle or metasomatic events, suggesting also involvement of the Central Asian Orogenic belt and development of significant juvenile crustal growth.
8. Acknowledgements
We acknowledge Professor Yoshihiro Sawada for his support in XRF analyses, Professor Masahide Akasaka for providing and helping in EPMA and XRD analyses, Professor Jun-ichi Kimura for supporting in ICP-MS analyses, and also to Mrs. Akasaka for her help in preparing samples for isotope analyses. We also acknowledge A. R. Chakhmouradian, Cheng Xu, Hana Cihlarova, P. Gadas and R. Skoda for the acquisition of analytical data and support. Thank Mr. Kh. Enkhtuvshin and D. Batbold, Yo. Majigsuren for their help in field work.
Finally, we acknowledge for the financial support on Monbusho (Japanese Ministry of Education and Culture) and CEITEC CZ.1.05/1.1.002.0068, Czech Republic.
P.C.C. dedicates this paper to the memory of Enzo Michele Piccirillo.
NOTES