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Wiebe, R. A. (1985) Proterozoic basalt dikes in the Nain anorthosite complex, Labrador. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 22 (8) 1149-1157 doi:10.1139/e85-117

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Reference TypeJournal (article/letter/editorial)
TitleProterozoic basalt dikes in the Nain anorthosite complex, Labrador
JournalCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences
AuthorsWiebe, R. A.Author
Year1985 (August 1)Volume22
Issue8
PublisherCanadian Science Publishing
DOIdoi:10.1139/e85-117Search in ResearchGate
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Mindat Ref. ID478757Long-form Identifiermindat:1:5:478757:4
GUID0
Full ReferenceWiebe, R. A. (1985) Proterozoic basalt dikes in the Nain anorthosite complex, Labrador. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 22 (8) 1149-1157 doi:10.1139/e85-117
Plain TextWiebe, R. A. (1985) Proterozoic basalt dikes in the Nain anorthosite complex, Labrador. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 22 (8) 1149-1157 doi:10.1139/e85-117
In(1985, August) Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences Vol. 22 (8) Canadian Science Publishing
Abstract/Notes Two sets of Proterozoic (between 1290 and 1042 Ma) alkali to transitional basaltic dikes occur sparsely in an area of at least 5000 km2 within the Nain anorthosite complex. Both are compositionally similar in terms of major elements, but the set that trends roughly north–south (HP dikes) contains much higher concentrations of incompatible elements than the more abundant dikes that trend roughly east-northeast–west-southwest (LP dikes). Both types have low normative clinopyroxene relative to olivine—a characteristic shared with widespread troctolitic rocks in the Nain complex. Low Mg numbers and low Ni contents suggest that the magmas producing these dikes have undergone extensive fractional crystallization. The low normative Di content of these dikes suggests that this fractional crystallization occurred at depths equivalent to at least 10 kbar (1000 MPa).High equilibration temperatures for coexisting Fe–Ti oxides in the matrices of these dikes indicate that the dikes cooled rapidly and were emplaced near the surface. The exposed level of the Nain anorthosite complex (emplaced at depths of 8–10 km) indicates that the anorthosites were uplifted and eroded relatively soon after their emplacement, i.e., prior to dike emplacement.


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