Origin and evolution of oscillatory zoned garnet from Kasva skarn, northeast Tafresh, Iran
Origin and evolution of oscillatory zoned garnet from Kasva skarn, northeast Tafresh, Iran
The Canadian Mineralogist (January 2018) 56 (1): 15-37
- andradite
- carbonate rocks
- cations
- Cenozoic
- chemical composition
- Eocene
- garnet group
- granite porphyry
- granites
- grossular
- high-field-strength elements
- igneous rocks
- intrusions
- metals
- metamorphic rocks
- metasomatic rocks
- Miocene
- Neogene
- nesosilicates
- Oligocene
- orthosilicates
- Paleogene
- plutonic rocks
- rare earths
- sedimentary rocks
- silicates
- skarn
- substitution
- Tertiary
- trace elements
- volcanic belts
- volcaniclastics
- zoning
- Urumieh-Dokhtar Belt
- Tafresh Iran
- Kasva Deposit
Within the central Urumieh-Dokhtar Magmatic Belt of northern Iran, the Kasva skarn deposit (KSD) formed by metasomatic alteration of Eocene intercalated carbonate and volcaniclastic sediments in response to Oligo-Miocene intrusion by granitoid porphyries. The KSD contains abundant oscillatory-zoned garnet crystals, which are characterized by isotropic cores of nearly pure andradite that are rimmed by anisotropic grossular-andradite (grandite). The Fe-rich andraditic cores are enriched in U and LREE, with positive Eu anomalies, whereas the Al-rich granditic rims are enriched in Ti, Nb, Zr, Hf, and HREE, without Eu anomalies. Variation in optical and chemical features in Fe- and Al-rich garnet are controlled by external factors such as (1) infiltration of compositionally distinct fluids, (2) incorporation of LREE and U at the {X} site in association with substitution of Fe (super 3+) for Al (super 3+) at [Y] within the crystal structure of andraditic garnet, and (3) substitution of Ti and HFSE for Al in granditic garnet.