Immiscible hydrous Fe-Ca-P melt and the origin of iron oxide-apatite ore deposits

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Authors

  • Tong Hou
  • Bernard Charlier
  • François Holtz
  • Ilya Veksler
  • Zhaochong Zhang
  • Rainer Thomas
  • Olivier Namur

Research Organisations

External Research Organisations

  • China University of Geosciences
  • University of Liege
  • Helmholtz Centre Potsdam - German Research Centre for Geosciences (GFZ)
  • Perm State National Research University
  • KU Leuven
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Details

Original languageEnglish
Article number1415
JournalNature Communications
Volume9
Publication statusPublished - 12 Apr 2018

Abstract

The origin of iron oxide-apatite deposits is controversial. Silicate liquid immiscibility and separation of an iron-rich melt has been invoked, but Fe-Ca-P-rich and Si-poor melts similar in composition to the ore have never been observed in natural or synthetic magmatic systems. Here we report experiments on intermediate magmas that develop liquid immiscibility at 100 MPa, 1000-1040 °C, and oxygen fugacity conditions (fO 2) of ∆FMQ = 0.5-3.3 (FMQ = fayalite-magnetite-quartz equilibrium). Some of the immiscible melts are highly enriched in iron and phosphorous ± calcium, and strongly depleted in silicon (<5 wt.% SiO 2). These Si-poor melts are in equilibrium with a rhyolitic conjugate and are produced under oxidized conditions (~FMQ + 3.3), high water activity (aH 2O ≥ 0.7), and in fluorine-bearing systems (1 wt.%). Our results show that increasing aH 2O and fO 2 enlarges the two-liquid field thus allowing the Fe-Ca-P melt to separate easily from host silicic magma and produce iron oxide-apatite ores.

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Cite this

Immiscible hydrous Fe-Ca-P melt and the origin of iron oxide-apatite ore deposits. / Hou, Tong; Charlier, Bernard; Holtz, François et al.
In: Nature Communications, Vol. 9, 1415, 12.04.2018.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Hou T, Charlier B, Holtz F, Veksler I, Zhang Z, Thomas R et al. Immiscible hydrous Fe-Ca-P melt and the origin of iron oxide-apatite ore deposits. Nature Communications. 2018 Apr 12;9:1415. doi: 10.1038/s41467-018-03761-4, 10.15488/3445
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@article{53ea2ddbef6d4b968985043a340b8678,
title = "Immiscible hydrous Fe-Ca-P melt and the origin of iron oxide-apatite ore deposits",
abstract = "The origin of iron oxide-apatite deposits is controversial. Silicate liquid immiscibility and separation of an iron-rich melt has been invoked, but Fe-Ca-P-rich and Si-poor melts similar in composition to the ore have never been observed in natural or synthetic magmatic systems. Here we report experiments on intermediate magmas that develop liquid immiscibility at 100 MPa, 1000-1040 °C, and oxygen fugacity conditions (fO 2) of ∆FMQ = 0.5-3.3 (FMQ = fayalite-magnetite-quartz equilibrium). Some of the immiscible melts are highly enriched in iron and phosphorous ± calcium, and strongly depleted in silicon (<5 wt.% SiO 2). These Si-poor melts are in equilibrium with a rhyolitic conjugate and are produced under oxidized conditions (~FMQ + 3.3), high water activity (aH 2O ≥ 0.7), and in fluorine-bearing systems (1 wt.%). Our results show that increasing aH 2O and fO 2 enlarges the two-liquid field thus allowing the Fe-Ca-P melt to separate easily from host silicic magma and produce iron oxide-apatite ores. ",
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note = "Funding Information: Stefan Linsler, Julian Feige, and Chao Zhang are thanked for their help during experiments, sample preparation, and microprobe analyses. Don Lindsley is thanked for his kind help with the identification of oxide minerals. T.H. acknowledges support by the China Nature Foundation of Sciences (41502052 and 2016YFC0600502), a Marie Curie Individual Fellowship within the Horizon 2020-Research and Innovation Framework Programme (656923), and the {"}Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (2652015054){"}. B.C. is a Research Associate of the Belgian Fund for Scientific Research-FNRS. O.N. was supported by an Emmy Noether grant (DFG NA1171/1-1). This work was partly supported by DFG grant KO1723/20-1 and Chinese 973 program (2012CB416806).",
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AU - Charlier, Bernard

AU - Holtz, François

AU - Veksler, Ilya

AU - Zhang, Zhaochong

AU - Thomas, Rainer

AU - Namur, Olivier

N1 - Funding Information: Stefan Linsler, Julian Feige, and Chao Zhang are thanked for their help during experiments, sample preparation, and microprobe analyses. Don Lindsley is thanked for his kind help with the identification of oxide minerals. T.H. acknowledges support by the China Nature Foundation of Sciences (41502052 and 2016YFC0600502), a Marie Curie Individual Fellowship within the Horizon 2020-Research and Innovation Framework Programme (656923), and the "Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (2652015054)". B.C. is a Research Associate of the Belgian Fund for Scientific Research-FNRS. O.N. was supported by an Emmy Noether grant (DFG NA1171/1-1). This work was partly supported by DFG grant KO1723/20-1 and Chinese 973 program (2012CB416806).

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Y1 - 2018/4/12

N2 - The origin of iron oxide-apatite deposits is controversial. Silicate liquid immiscibility and separation of an iron-rich melt has been invoked, but Fe-Ca-P-rich and Si-poor melts similar in composition to the ore have never been observed in natural or synthetic magmatic systems. Here we report experiments on intermediate magmas that develop liquid immiscibility at 100 MPa, 1000-1040 °C, and oxygen fugacity conditions (fO 2) of ∆FMQ = 0.5-3.3 (FMQ = fayalite-magnetite-quartz equilibrium). Some of the immiscible melts are highly enriched in iron and phosphorous ± calcium, and strongly depleted in silicon (<5 wt.% SiO 2). These Si-poor melts are in equilibrium with a rhyolitic conjugate and are produced under oxidized conditions (~FMQ + 3.3), high water activity (aH 2O ≥ 0.7), and in fluorine-bearing systems (1 wt.%). Our results show that increasing aH 2O and fO 2 enlarges the two-liquid field thus allowing the Fe-Ca-P melt to separate easily from host silicic magma and produce iron oxide-apatite ores.

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