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O’Brien et al. 1991
O’Brien, H.E., Irving, A.J. and McCallum, I.S. (1991). Eocene potassic magmatism in the Highwood Mountains, Montana: Petrology, geochemistry, and tectonic implications. Journal of Geophysical Research 96: doi: 10.1029/91JB00599. issn: 0148-0227.

Potassic volcanics and intrusives of Eocene age (52¿1 Ma) in the Highwood Mountains of north-central Montana provide evidence for interaction of asthenospheric magmas with Archean mantle lithosphere of the Wyoming Craton. Diverse rock types were produced by shallow level degassing, fractional crystallization and magma mixing within two separate magma series whose parental liquids were latite and olivine minette. Halogen systematics of apatite microphenocrysts and other evidence have established that shallow degassing of the phlogopite-diopside-phyric minettes to yield heteromorphic leucite-salite-phyric mafic phonolites and shonkinites was an important process.

Geochemical and mineralogical data suggest that fractional crystallization of olivine, clinopyroxene, mica and leucite, accompanied by widespread magma mixing, produced a spectrum of more evolved magmas such as leucite phonolites, malignites, alkali syenites, and trachytes along with mica clinopyroxenite cumulates. Sr, Nd, and Pb isotopic compositions and trace element data for the primitive olivine minette magmas are explicable by a multistage model involving three source components. One component is ancient Ba-LREE-enriched, U-Th-HFSE-depleted subcontinental lithospheric mantle, which has been recognized in other alkalic rocks of the region, including those from the Crazy Mountains and Smoky Butte. Glimmerite-veined harzburgite and phlogopite dunite xenoliths (one with -ϵNd of -33 at 52 Ma) found in the most primitive Highwood olivine minette are probably samples of this material. The other two components are asthenospheric mantle with isotopic composition near that of bulk earth (and dominant in Montana aln¿itic diatremes) and a young subduction-related component (probably Eocene, but possibly as old as late Cretaceous), which is required to explain the Rb/Sr-87Sr/86Sr systematics of the Highwood rocks. A consistent model for the petrogenesis of the Highwood parental mafic magmas involves partial melting of asthenospheric mantle wedge triggered by infiltration of melts released from the metasomatized carapace above a low-angle subducted slab of Farallon Plate lithosphere, followed by assimilative interaction of these melts with ancient, phlogopite-rich, metasome veins upon ascent through the Wyoming Craton mantle keel. ¿ American Geophysical Union 1991

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Abstract

Keywords
Mineralogy and Petrology, General or miscellaneous
Journal
Journal of Geophysical Research
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American Geophysical Union
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