Authors
Anatoly N Zaitsev, C Terry Williams, Teresa E Jeffries, Stanislav Strekopytov, Jacques Moutte, Olga V Ivashchenkova, John Spratt, Sergey V Petrov, Frances Wall, Reimar Seltmann, Alexey P Borozdin
Publication date
2015/1/1
Source
Ore Geology Reviews
Volume
64
Pages
477-498
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
The Devonian (ca. 385–360 Ma) Kola Alkaline Province includes 22 plutonic ultrabasic–alkaline complexes, some of which also contain carbonatites and rarely phoscorites. The latter are composite silicate–oxide–phosphate–carbonate rocks, occurring in close space-time genetic relations with various carbonatites. Several carbonatites types are recognized at Kola, including abundant calcite carbonatites (early- and late-stage), with subordinate amounts of late-stage dolomite carbonatites, and rarely magnesite, siderite and rhodochrosite carbonatites. In phoscorites and early-stage carbonatites the rare earth elements (REE) are distributed among the major minerals including calcite (up to 490 ppm), apatite (up to 4400 ppm in Kovdor and 3.5 wt.% REE2O3 in Khibina), and dolomite (up to 77 ppm), as well as accessory pyrochlore (up to 9.1 wt.% REE2O3) and zirconolite (up to 17.8 wt.% REE2O3). Late-stage …
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