Jökull


Jökull - 01.12.1982, Side 76

Jökull - 01.12.1982, Side 76
TABLE 2. Major and trace element (ppm) com- position of two gabbros (0 96 & 0 97) and granophyres (0 111 & 0 112) from the Öræfi district. TAFLA 2. Efnagreiningar á fjórum bergsýnum úr Ör- efasveit. 0 96 0 97 0 111 0 112 SÍÖ2 42.74 45.62 67.72 70.08 Tiö2 3.15 1.96 0.38 0.36 ai2o3 13.78 14.96 13.00 13.59 Fe2Ö3 7.24 4.01 3.03 3.26 Feö 8.75 7.06 1.47 1.50 Mnö 0.18 0.16 0.10 0.13 Mgö 6.95 9.35 0.25 0.12 Caö 12.36 13.30 2.59 1.01 Na20 2.25 2.00 5.00 5.94 k2o 0.33 0.31 3.34 3.16 P2O5 0.11 0.10 0.11 0.09 h2o+ 0.99 1.85 0.36 0.28 h2o_ 0.01 0.04 0.01 0.01 co2 0.00 0.17 1.25 0.48 Total 98.84 100.62 98.61 100.01 Rb < 10 < 10 65 56 Sr 322 305 116 97 Y 26 24 100 105 Zr 72 86 900 790 Cu 192 172 21 4 Zn 100 68 106 169 two samples (Table 2) show that the gabbro com- position roughly corresponds to the basalts of the Oræfi area in general. The granophyre is medium to fine-grained. Sod- ic plagioclase was the first phase to crystallise and was succeeded by alkalifeldspar and quartz, which in some places are found in graphic intergrowths (see Prestvik 1979, p. 23). Accessories are olivine (fayalite?), zircon as well as secondary calcite and epidote. Compositionally (Table 2), the rock is rather similar to the Öræfajökull rhyolites. CHEMICAL CHARACTERISTICS AND CLASSIFICATION The major element and norm compositions of representative samples of the Öræfajökull rocks are presented in Table 3. Prestvik (1979) plotted all analysed samples in alkali/silica and AFM dia- grams and stated that the Öræfajökull rock series was subalkaline with a typical tholeiitic trend. A similar conclusion was reached at by Imsland (1978) who plotted the unpublished data of Prestvik in the classification diagrams of Irvine and Baragar (1979). Jakobsson (1979) suggested that the rocks ofÖræfa- jökull belonged to a transitional alkalic series charact- erized by normative hypersthene. The basic rocks of such a series are usually rather high in Fe and Ti, and low in Al. The basalts plot above the division line (Hawaiian division line) in the alkali/silica dia- gram, but more evolved compositions tend to plot below this line. The transitional series is supposed to produce comenditic (i.e. peralkaline)rhyolite as the most evolved rock type (Jakobsson 1979). Furth- ermore, Oskarsson et al. (1982) referred to the rocks of Öræfajökull as examples of a transitional alkalic/ tholeiitic series formed as a result of the “hybrid divergent volcanism” of their dynamic model of rift zone petrogenesis in Iceland. Miyashiro (1978) divided alkalic rocks into two main types: Those belonging to the Kennedy trend and the Coombs trend respectively. The Coombs trend is characterized by a hypersthene-normative alkalic basalt which evolves into hawaiite, mugear- ite, benmoreite, oversaturated trachyte and com- endite by differentiation. The Coombs trend has normative hypersthene and quartz just as a tholei- itic series, and the two series may grade into each other by increasing/decreasing Na,Ö+ K,(') cont- ent. Furthermore, there seems to be no thermal divide between them. In essence, it appears that the transitional series of Jakobsson (1979) and the Coombs trend of alkalic rocks (Miyashiro 1978) are more or less identical in spite of the different names assigned to the intermediate rocks by the two aut- hors. In the literature several systems or dividing lines have been proposcd to discriminate between differ- ent alkaline and subalkaline (here tholeiitic) rocks. As can be seen in Fig. 3 all Öræfajökull rocks plot in the subalkaline field if the dividing line odrvine and Baragar (1971) is used. On the other hand, if one uses the dividing line proposed by Miyashiro (1978), the basic Öræfajökull rocks straddle the line bet- ween the subalkaline and alkaline fields, and many of the rocks in the basaltic andesite/andesite range as well as all the rhyolites plot in the alkaline field. None of the rhyolites, however, are comenditic as required for silicic rocks of the transitional alkalic- 72 JÖKULL 32. ÁR
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