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Origin of unusual HREE-Mo-rich carbonatites in the Qinling orogen, China TEXT SIZE: A A A
Carbonatites, usually occurring within intra-continental rift-related settings, have strong light rare earth element (LREE) enrichment; they rarely contain economic heavy REE (HREE). Here, we report the identification of Late Triassic HREE-Mo-rich carbonatites in the northernmost Qinling orogen. The rocks contain abundant primary HREE minerals and molybdenite. Calcite-hosted fluid inclusions, inferred to represent a magmatic-derived aqueous fluid phase, contain significant concentrations of Mo (similar to 17 ppm), reinforcing the inference that these carbonatitic magmas had high Mo concentrations. By contrast, Late Triassic carbonatites in southernmost Qinling have economic LREE concentrations, but are depleted in HREE and Mo. Both of these carbonatite types have low delta Mg-26 values (-1.89 to-1.07%), similar to sedimentary carbonates, suggesting a recycled sediment contribution for REE enrichment in their mantle sources. We propose that the carbonatites in the Qinling orogen were formed, at least in part, by the melting of a subducted carbonate-bearing slab, and that 10 Ma younger carbonatite magmas in the northernmost Qinling metasomatized the thickened eclogitic lower crust to produce high levels of HREE and Mo.

Publication name

 SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 6 10.1038/srep37377 NOV 18 2016

Author(s)

 Song, Wenlei; Xu, Cheng; Smith, Martin P.; Kynicky, Jindrich; Huang, Kangjun; Wei, Chunwan; Zhou, Li; Shu, Qihai

Corresponding author 

 XU Cheng 
 xucheng1999@pku.edu.cn
 Peking Univ, Sch Earth & Space Sci, Lab Orogen Belts & Crustal Evolut, Beijing 100871, Peoples R China.

Author(s) from IGCAS   ZHOU Li
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