Mafic xenoliths in Proterozoic kimberlites from Eastern Dharwar Craton, India: Mineralogy and P–T regime S.C. Patel a,*, S. Ravi b, Y. Anilkumar a, A. Naik c, S.S. Thakur d, J.K. Pati e, S.S. Nayak b a Department of Earth Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology, Powai, Mumbai, Maharashtra 400 076, India Geological Survey of India, Bandlaguda Complex, Hyderabad 500 068, India c Department of Earth Sciences, Sambalpur University, Burla, Orissa 768 019, India d Wadia Institute of Himalayan Geology, 33 General Mahadev Singh Road, Dehra Dun 248 001, India e Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of Allahabad, Allahabad 211 002, India b a b s t r a c t Keywords: Eclogite Garnet pyroxenite Kimberlite Xenolith Mafic xenoliths of garnet pyroxenite and eclogite from the Wajrakarur, Narayanpet and Raichur kimberlite fields in the Archaean Eastern Dharwar Craton (EDC) of southern India have been studied. The composition of clinopyroxene shows transition from omphacite (3–6 wt% Na2O) in eclogites to Ca pyroxene (<3 wt% Na2O) in garnet pyroxenites. Some of the xenoliths have additional phases such as kyanite, enstatite, chromian spinel or rutile as discrete grains. Clinopyroxene in a rutile eclogite has an XMg value of 0.70, which is unusually low compared to the XMg range of 0.91–0.97 for all other samples. Garnet in the rutile eclogite is also highly iron-rich with an end member composition of Prp26.5Alm52.5Grs14.7Adr5.1TiAdr0.3Sps1.0Uv0.1. Garnets in several xenoliths are Cr-rich with up to 8 mol% knorringite component. Geothermobarometric calculations in Cr-rich xenoliths yield different P–T ranges for eclogites and garnet pyroxenites with average P–T conditions of 36 kbar and 1080 °C, and 27 kbar and 830 °C, respectively. The calculated P–T ranges approximate to a 45 mW m 2 model geotherm, which is on the higher side of the typical range of xenolith/xenocryst geotherms (35–45 mW m 2) for several Archaean cratons in the world. This indicates that the EDC was hotter than many other shield regions of the world in the mid-Proterozoic period when kimberlites intruded the craton. Textural and mineral chemical characteristics of the mafic xenoliths favour a magmatic cumulate process for their origin as opposed to subducted and metamorphosed oceanic crust. 1. Introduction Deep-seated xenoliths in kimberlites are of great interest to geologists for providing direct samplings of material from the upper mantle. Ultramafic rocks (lherzolite, harzburgite, wehrlite, dunite and pyroxenite) are the most common mantle-derived xenoliths, whereas mafic xenoliths (garnet pyroxenite and eclogite) are less common. Garnet pyroxenite and eclogite are essentially biminerallic garnet-clinopyroxene rocks, but their nomenclature is confused because there is often a compositional transition between them. The term ‘eclogite’ is normally used when the clinopyroxene is a Ca–Na pyroxene (omphacite), whereas the rock with Ca pyroxene is called ‘garnet pyroxenite’. The IUGS Subcommission for the nomenclature of metamorphic rocks (SCMR) recently recommended the crystal-chemical classification of clinopyroxene by Morimoto et al. (1988) to be used for defining omphacite (Desmons and Smulikowski, 2004 and upgrades). Following this scheme, Patel et al. (2006) identified eclog- ite xenoliths from three kimberlite pipes of the Wajrakarur Kimberlite Field (WKF) in the Eastern Dharwar Craton of southern India (Fig. 1). In the present contribution we examine the mineralogical characteristics of garnet pyroxenite xenoliths from a number of pipes of WKF, and a few pipes of the adjacent Narayanpet Kimberlite Field (NKF) and Raichur Kimberlite Field (RKF). Some newly found eclogite xenoliths in the pipes are also included in the study. A xenolith geotherm has been derived for the region based on quantitative geothermobarometry. 2. Geology of Dharwar craton The Archaean Dharwar craton is a typical granite-greenstone terrane with a gneissic basement of tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite (TTG) composition known as Peninsular Gneisses (Naqvi and Rogers, 1987). The craton is bounded in the east by the Proterozoic Eastern Ghats Mobile Belt, in the northeast by the Archaean Bastar craton, and is covered in the northwest by the CretaceousTertiary lava flows of the Deccan Traps (Fig. 1) A striking feature of the craton is the N–S to NW–SE trending, 400 km long and 20–30 km wide cluster of plutons known as the Closepet Granite, 337 Fig. 1. Generalised geological map of southern India modified after Drury et al. (1984) and Geological Survey of India (1998) showing kimberlite and lamproite fields in the Eastern Dharwar Craton. BC = Bastar Craton; EDC = Eastern Dharwar Craton; KLF = Krishna lamproite field; NKF = Narayanpet kimberlite field; NLF = Nallamalai lamproite field; TKF = Tungabhadra kimberlite field; WDC = Western Dharwar Craton; WKF = Wajrakarur kimberlite field. dated 2.51 Ga (Friend and Nutman, 1991). Sediments of Meso- to Neoproterozoic intracratonic sedimentary basins such as the Cuddapah basin unconformably overlie the granite – greenstone terrane. The craton is divided into two sub-provinces – Eastern Dharwar Craton (EDC) and Western Dharwar Craton (WDC) with Chitradurga Boundary Fault located along the eastern margin of the Chitradurga schist belt as the boundary between them (Swami Nath et al., 1976; Drury et al., 1984; Chadwick et al., 2000). Some workers believe that the Closepet Granite, which is located 50 km east of the Chitradurga Boundary Fault represents the boundary between the EDC and WDC (Naqvi and Rogers, 1987; Gupta et al., 2003; Moyen et al., 2003). Although the actual boundary between the two cratonic blocks remains debatable there are notable differences in lithology and metamorphism of the two blocks. The WDC is dominantly occupied by TTG gneisses (3.0– 3.4 Ga) with minor schist belts of Sargur age (3.0–3.3 Ga), major schist belts of Dharwar age (2.9–2.6 Ga) containing predominant platformal sediments, and a few Late Archaean granitoid plutons dated in the range of 2.60–2.65 Ga (Jayananda et al., 2006 and references therein). On the other hand the EDC is characterised by voluminous Late Archaean granitoids (2. 51–2.75 Ga) (the ‘‘Dharwar batholith” of Chadwick et al., 1996, 2000) with minor TTG gneisses and thin volcanics-dominated schist belts of Dharwar age. The schist belts in the craton are metamorphosed to greenschist to amphibolite facies regional metamorphism. The profusion of granitoids in the EDC is responsible for low pressure regional metamorphism (andalusite-sillimanite type) in this block in contrast to the intermediate pressure regional metamorphism (kyanite-sillimanite type) in the WDC. 2.1. Kimberlite fields Kimberlites discovered in southern India till now are restricted to the EDC and are distributed in four fields, viz. WKF, NKF, RKF, and Tungabhadra Kimberlite Field (TKF) (Fig. 1). The WKF contains 28 kimberlite pipes spread over four clusters, namely Wajrakarur 338 (13 pipes; P1–P13), Chigicherla (5 pipes; CC1–CC5), Kalyandurg (6 pipes; KL1–KL6) and Timmasamudram (4 pipes, TK1–TK4) (Nayak and Kudari, 1999; Srinivas Choudary et al., 2007) (Fig. 2). There are 30 pipes in the NKF in four clusters, which are Narayanpet (10 pipes; NK1–NK10), Maddur (11 pipes; MK1–MK11), Bhima (BK1– BK3) and Kotakonda (6 pipes; KK1–KK6) (Rao et al., 1998). The RKF has 6 pipes out of which 3 pipes (SK1–SK3) occur in Siddanpalli cluster, and other three pipes (RK1–RK3) are dispersed (Sridhar et al., 2004). The TKF is the most recently discovered kimberlite field, which has two pipes (MNK1 and MNK2) (Ravi et al., 2007b). Most of the WKF pipes are diamondiferous, but the NKF and RKF pipes have not yet been proved to be diamondiferous (Neelakantam, 2001). Detailed studies on RKF and TKF kimberlites are yet to be attempted. In addition to the four kimberlite fields there are two lamproite fields in the EDC, viz. Krishna Lamproite Field and Nallamalai Lamproite Field. Available radiometric ages for the kimberlites of WKF range from 840 to 1150 Ma, whereas those of NKF range from 1080 to 1400 Ma (Anil Kumar et al., 1993; Chalapathi Rao et al., 1996, 1999). Chalapathi Rao et al. (1999) have suggested that the emplacements of Kotakonda kimberlite in the NKF, and Chelima lamproite in the NLF were contemporaneous (1400 Ma) and that these pipes are older than the WKF kimberlites (1090 Ma). However, the older phlogopite K–Ar and Ar–Ar ages reported by Chala- pathi Rao et al. (1999) are not borne out by the phlogopite Rb–Sr isochron ages of Anil Kumar et al. (2001). Therefore, it can be safely concluded that the kimberlites of EDC erupted episodically close to 1090 Ma. 3. Mafic xenoliths Xenolith samples include hand specimens (several centimeters in size) collected from pits and boreholes, and subrounded mineral aggregates, also termed nodules (2–5 mm across) in heavy mineral concentrates (Ravi et al., 2007a). In most kimberlites of EDC, mafic xenoliths are greatly subordinate in numbers to ultramafic xenoliths (Ganguly and Bhattacharya, 1987; Nehru and Reddy, 1989). However, the KL2 pipe of WKF is unusual as eclogites constitute more than 95% of the xenolith population (Rao et al., 2001). In both garnet pyroxenite and eclogite xenoliths, garnet and clinopyroxene together constitute P80 vol%. Some mafic xenoliths are observed to contain additional phases such as kyanite, enstatite, chromian spinel and rutile as discrete grains which constitute 620 vol% of the rock (Table 1). The mineral abbreviations used in this paper are: adr, andradite; alm, almandine; cpx, clinopyroxene; grs, grossular; grt, garnet; ilm, ilmenite; kn, knorringite; omp, omphacite; prp, pyrope; rt, rutile; sps, spessartine; uv, uvarovite. Fig. 2. Geological sketch map of Wajrakarur kimberlite field modified from Nayak and Kudari (1999). 339 Table 1 Mafic xenoliths in kimberlite pipes of EDC Xenolith type Kimberlite pipe Hand specimens from pits and boreholes Nodules from heavy mineral concentrate Kyanite eclogite KL2 – Enstatite eclogite Rutile eclogite Chromian spinel eclogite Biminerallic eclogite KL2 KL2SL1 (omphacite totally altered), KL2SL5, KL2SL12, KL2MUP, KL2-7 (garnet-free part) – P3 CC4 P3Xe/86 – – CC4N8b KL2 – KL2N9b, KL2N9c P2 P10 MK8 P12 – – – P2N4a, P2N5a P10N7b, P10N7c MK8N1a P12N6b P12 – P12N6c P2 – P2N5b, P2N5c P3 NK3 P3MXe/86, P3Xe11/86 – RK3 – – NK3N2a, NK3N2b RK3N5a, RK3N8b Enstatite garnet pyroxenite Chromian spinelgarnet pyroxenite Biminerallic garnet pyroxenite KL2N9a Pipes KL2, P2, P3, P10, P12, CC4 are in WKF, pipes MK8 and NK3 in NKF, and pipe RK3 in RKF. Hand specimens of eclogite from the KL2 pipe are characterized by honey brown to dark brown garnets of 1–5 mm size, which are distributed in a pale greenish grey to white matrix. The matrix is a hydrous Ca–Al silicate derived by secondary alteration of omphacite. Some samples show mineralogical banding on 1–3 cm scale, with transition from kyanite eclogite to kyanite-free eclogite. The latter is commonly marked by layering from garnet-rich to garnet-poor bands, with conspicuous graded layering in a few samples (Ravi et al., 2007a) (Fig. 3a). In hand specimens of both garnet pyroxenite and eclogite which do not show gross inhomogeneities, the amount of garnet and clinopyroxene is 30–50 vol% each. Despite extensive secondary alteration the original outlines of omphacite grains in the matrix are recognizable in thin sections. The matrix comprises anhedral to interstitial grains of omphacite of 0.5–4 mm size in which subhedral to rounded grains of garnet are set. There is often a patchy distribution of the phases in the rocks. In omphacite-rich portions straight or curved grain boundaries and 120° angles at many triple junctions can bee seen. Garnet commonly shows semi-opaque, kelyphitic alteration rim, which consists of an aggregate of fine-grained phlogopite, K-feldspar and hydrous Cal-Al silicate. In samples where omphacite in the matrix is completely altered, fresh omphacite is occasionally preserved as subhedral to subrounded inclusions in garnet. Microfracturing is very common in all types of xenoliths (Fig. 3b). All the nodules of eclogite and garnet pyroxenite from heavy mineral concentrate of different pipes are medium grained (1–5 mm size) with pink garnet and green omphacite or Ca pyroxene as the principal minerals. Modal proportions of garnet and clinopyroxene in the nodules vary widely, but the nodules are clearly related to other rocks in the mafic xenolith suite. In some of the eclogite xenoliths garnet grains are characterized by microscopic triangular arrays of exsolution needles of rutile Fig. 3. Photograph (a) of hand specimen of biminerallic eclogite from KL2 pipe, and photomicrographs (b–d) of rutile eclogite from P3 pipe of WKF under plane polarized light. (a) Graded layering is defined by decrease (white arrow) in the size of garnet grains (dark grey) in a garnet-rich layer. Omphacite is completely altered to grey to white hydrous Ca–Al silicate. Small divisions in scale are millimeters. (b) Omphacite-garnet assemblage with numerous fractures. (c) Fine exsolution needles of rutile in garnet. (d) Discrete grain of rutile with exsolution lamellae of ilmenite. 340 Table 2 Microprobe analyses of omphacite, Ca pyroxene and enstatite (n = number of points; blank = not analysed) Omphacite Cr-spinel eclogite Biminerallic eclogite Enstatite garnet pyroxenite Cr-spinel garnet pyroxenite Biminerallic garnet pyroxenite P3Xe/86 n=4 CC4N8b MK8N1a P12N6b P12N6c P2N5b P2N5c P3MXe/86 n=6 P3Xe11/86 n=6 NK3N2a NK3N2b RK3N5a RK3N8b P12N6b 51.27 0.10 4.49 3.41 3.03 0.07 14.44 0.02 18.95 3.15 0.05 98.98 54.87 0.10 3.88 3.95 1.80 0.07 14.60 0.05 15.77 3.34 0.01 98.44 53.84 0.12 3.70 2.77 1.69 0.06 14.85 0.04 19.91 2.82 0.00 99.80 54.60 0.14 3.77 2.92 1.86 0.09 15.08 0.08 18.95 2.64 0.00 100.13 54.94 0.15 4.88 0.66 3.40 0.07 15.35 0.08 18.94 2.81 0.02 101.30 54.04 0.04 5.70 0.25 1.59 0.06 14.42 0.09 20.72 2.14 0.08 99.13 53.79 0.00 3.60 1.08 2.80 0.12 15.83 0.06 19.39 2.54 0.00 99.21 54.12 0.10 7.12 0.14 1.00 0.02 14.16 0.12 20.69 2.46 0.01 99.94 53.11 0.20 2.67 0.17 3.21 0.08 16.30 0.07 24.45 0.90 0.00 101.16 54.22 0.13 3.39 0.16 2.28 0.06 15.69 0.13 23.05 0.97 0.00 100.08 53.40 0.17 2.62 2.40 0.00 16.63 52.58 0.12 3.71 0.15 2.60 0.00 16.71 22.82 0.99 0.00 99.03 22.07 1.23 0.00 99.17 55.56 0.02 1.29 0.46 4.66 0.16 35.08 0.04 0.64 0.12 0.00 98.03 55.61 SiO2 0.21 TiO2 8.71 Al2O3 0.40 Cr2O3 FeO 7.35 MnO 0.05 MgO 8.19 NiO 0.03 CaO 13.42 6.20 Na2O 0.00 K2O Total 100.17 Cations per 6 oxygens Si 2.007 Ti 0.006 0.000 AlIV,a 0.371 AlVI Cr 0.011 2+ 0.222 Fe Mn 0.002 Mg 0.441 Ni 0.001 Ca 0.519 Na 0.434 K 0.000 Total 4.014 Mg/(Mg + Fe) a IV AI = 2-Si. Ca pyroxene Enstatite Rutile eclogite 0.67 Enstatite garnet pyroxenite 1.897 0.003 0.103 0.093 0.100 0.094 0.002 0.796 0.001 0.751 0.226 0.002 4.068 1.996 0.003 0.004 0.162 0.114 0.055 0.002 0.792 0.001 0.615 0.236 0.000 3.980 1.953 0.003 0.047 0.111 0.079 0.051 0.002 0.803 0.001 0.774 0.198 0.00 4.022 1.967 0.004 0.033 0.127 0.083 0.056 0.003 0.810 0.002 0.731 0.184 0.000 4.000 1.958 0.004 0.042 0.163 0.019 0.101 0.002 0.815 0.002 0.723 0.194 0.001 4.024 1.956 0.001 0.044 0.199 0.007 0.048 0.002 0.778 0.003 0.803 0.150 0.004 3.995 1.961 0.000 0.039 0.116 0.031 0.085 0.004 0.860 0.002 0.758 0.180 0.000 4.036 1.936 0.003 0.064 0.236 0.004 0.030 0.001 0.755 0.003 0.793 0.171 0.000 3.996 1.924 0.005 0.076 0.038 0.005 0.097 0.002 0.880 0.002 0.949 0.063 0.000 4.041 1.961 0.004 0.039 0.105 0.005 0.069 0.002 0.846 0.004 0.893 0.068 0.000 3.996 1.955 0.005 0.045 0.068 0.073 0.000 0.908 1.924 0.003 0.076 0.084 0.004 0.080 0.000 0.911 0.895 0.070 0.000 4.019 0.865 0.087 0.000 4.034 1.948 0.001 0.052 0.001 0.013 0.137 0.005 1.833 0.001 0.024 0.008 0.000 4.023 0.89 0.94 0.94 0.94 0.89 0.94 0.91 0.96 0.90 0.92 0.93 0.92 0.93 Table 3 Microprobe analyses of garnet (n = number of points; blank = not analysed) Rutile eclogite Cr-spinel eclogite Biminerallic eclogite Enstatite garnet pyroxenite Cr-spinel garnet pyroxenite Biminerallic garnet pyroxenite P3Xe/86 n = 3 CC4N8b MK8N1a P12N6b P12N6c P2N5b P2N5c P3MXe/ 86 n=4 P3Xe11/ 86 n=6 NK3N2a NK3N2b RK3N5a RK3N8b 42.17 0.12 20.55 5.71 6.11 0.31 21.24 0.02 4.53 0.06 100.82 41.45 0.01 20.73 4.68 8.32 0.56 22.13 0.01 2.94 0.08 100.91 41.71 0.06 21.32 3.54 7.37 0.35 21.01 0.01 4.76 0.05 100.18 41.19 0.08 24.25 0.61 11.04 0.27 19.62 0.04 3.96 0.05 101.11 41.39 0.07 23.91 0.26 6.93 0.30 16.38 0.00 10.40 0.03 99.67 41.00 0.38 21.22 1.76 10.22 0.54 20.21 0.05 4.27 0.07 99.72 41.65 0.04 23.67 0.22 7.78 0.16 16.28 0.00 9.33 0.17 99.30 39.91 0.05 23.96 0.38 13.88 0.45 16.21 0.04 5.81 0.03 100.72 41.10 0.03 24.38 0.24 12.38 0.34 16.37 0.04 6.22 0.01 101.11 39.94 0.04 23.82 40.27 0.03 23.05 12.56 0.20 18.22 11.98 0.36 17.84 4.87 6.03 99.65 99.56 39.34 41.28 SiO2 TiO2 0.08 0.27 16.53 Al2O3 20.65 0.02 8.30 Cr2O3 FeO 24.95 8.04 MnO 0.42 0.38 MgO 6.63 18.00 NiO 0.02 0.00 CaO 7.00 8.37 0.05 0.41 Na2O Total 99.16 101.58 Cations per 12 oxygens Si 3.065 2.997 Ti 0.005 0.015 Al 1.896 1.414 Cr 0.001 0.476 Fe 1.626 0.488 Mn 0.028 0.023 Mg 0.770 1.948 Ni 0.001 0.000 Ca 0.584 0.651 Na 0.008 0.058 Total 7.984 8.070 End member percentage Adr 5.1 4.9 TiAdr 0.3 0.7 Uv 0.1 16.0 Grs 14.7 0.0 Kn 0.0 7.7 Prp 26.5 57.0 Sps 1.0 0.8 Alm 52.5 12.9 2.984 0.006 1.714 0.319 0.362 0.019 2.241 0.001 0.343 0.008 7.997 0.0 0.3 11.3 0.0 4.9 70.7 0.6 12.2 2.947 0.001 1.737 0.263 0.495 0.034 2.346 0.001 0.224 0.011 8.059 2.6 0.0 4.7 0.0 8.2 68.8 1.1 14.5 2.973 0.003 1.791 0.200 0.439 0.021 2.233 0.001 0.364 0.007 8.032 1.6 0.1 9.9 0.3 0.0 73.8 0.7 13.4 2.922 0.004 2.028 0.034 0.655 0.016 2.075 0.002 0.301 0.007 8.044 0.6 0.2 1.7 7.4 0.0 68.4 0.5 21.1 2.972 0.004 2.024 0.015 0.416 0.018 1.754 0.000 0.800 0.004 8.007 0.0 0.2 0.8 25.8 0.0 58.7 0.6 13.9 2.964 0.021 1.808 0.101 0.618 0.033 2.178 0.003 0.331 0.010 8.067 5.2 1.0 4.6 0.0 0.4 71.0 1.1 16.8 3.001 0.002 2.010 0.013 0.469 0.010 1.749 0.000 0.720 0.024 7.998 0.0 0.1 0.7 23.7 0.0 59.3 0.3 15.9 2.900 0.003 2.052 0.022 0.843 0.028 1.756 0.002 0.452 0.004 8.062 1.1 0.1 1.1 12.4 0.0 57.5 0.9 26.8 2.947 0.002 2.060 0.014 0.742 0.021 1.750 0.002 0.478 0.001 8.017 0.0 0.1 0.7 15.2 0.0 58.5 0.7 24.8 2.903 0.002 2.040 2.934 0.002 1.979 0.763 0.012 1.974 0.730 0.022 1.938 0.379 0.471 8.073 8.076 2.7 0.1 0.0 9.6 0.0 64.2 0.4 23.0 4.1 0.1 0.0 11.1 0.0 63.0 0.7 21.0 341 342 Table 4 Microprobe analyses of chromian spinel, rutile and ilmenite (blank = not analysed) SiO2 TiO2 Al2O3 Cr2O3 V2O5 Fe2O3b FeO MnO MgO CaO Total Oxygens Si Ti Al Cr V Fe3+ Fe2+ Mn Mg Ca Total Fe/(Fe + Mg) Cr/(Cr + Al) Cr-spinel eclogite Cr-spinel garnet pyroxenite Rutile eclogite CC4N8b P12N6c P3Xe/86 Cr-spinel Cr-spinel Rutile 0.14 2.66 32.70 29.49 0.11 0.47 14.98 54.05 4.40 15.18 0.31 15.75 0.14 100.77 4 0.004 0.058 1.112 0.673 2.39 15.25 0.26 12.63 0.00 100.14 4 0.003 0.011 0.560 1.357 0.096 0.366 0.008 0.678 0.004 2.999 0.35 0.38 0.057 0.405 0.007 0.598 0.000 2.998 0.40 0.71 0.00 97.69 0.22 0.03 0.57 0.12 0.01 0.01 98.65 2 0.000 0.990 0.003 0.000 0.005 0.001 0.000 0.000 0.999 Ilmenite L1a L2 0.00 51.95 0.61 0.00 0.31 0.00 53.15 2.75 0.02 0.32 43.94 0.00 1.47 42.04 0.05 1.28 98.28 3 0.000 0.988 0.018 0.000 0.005 99.61 3 0.000 0.979 0.079 0.000 0.005 0.929 0.000 0.055 0.861 0.001 0.047 1.995 0.94 1.972 0.95 a L1 and L2 are two different lamellae exsolved from rutile. Fe2O3 in chromian spinel recalculated following the method of Barnes and Roeder (2001). All iron assumed as Fe2O3 in rutile and as FeO in ilmenite. b which are 2–10 lm thick and 10–200 lm long (Fig. 3c). These needles always show inclined extinction. Recent experiments have shown that Ti solubility in garnet depends on P–T conditions. Zhang et al. (2003) reported increasing solubility of TiO2 (0.8– 4.5 wt%) in garnet with increasing P and T in the experimental conditions of 50–150 kbar and 1000–1400 °C. On the other hand Kawasaki and Motoyoshi (2007) observed that TiO2 content of garnet increases with temperature and decreases with pressure in the P–T range of 7–20 kbar and 850–1300 °C. The results of these studies show that rutile exsolution in garnet can be the result of decompression and/or cooling. Discrete grains of rutile in an eclogite xenolith show two sets of oriented ilmenite lamellae which are nearly perpendicular to each other and uniformly distributed throughout the rutile (Fig. 3d). The lamellae are 0.5–5 lm thick and 20–200 lm long, are most likely the result of a primary exsolution phenomenon (e.g. Rudnick et al., 2000). The limit for solid solution of ilmenite in rutile is 7 wt% at 1050 °C (Basta, 1959). Liu et al. (2004) reported exsolution of ilmenite from rutie in eclogite and attributed it to decompression from a pressure greater than 60–70 kbar. Zhao et al. (1999) highlighted the role of oxygen fugacity in rutile-ilmenite assemblages in the mantle. However, the relative effects of pressure, temperature and oxygen fugacity, and of other constituents, such as Al and V on the solubility of FeTiO3 in TiO2 are unknown. Standards include both natural and synthetic minerals and data reduction was done using the ZAF correction procedure. Mineral chemistry of one sample each of rutile eclogite, Cr-spinel eclogite, biminerallic eclogite, enstatite garnet pyroxenite and Cr-spinel garnet pyroxenite, and several samples of biminerallic garnet pyroxenite from the P3, P12 and CC4 pipes of WKF, MK8 and NK3 pipes of NKF, and RK3 pipe of RKF are given in Tables 2–4. The mineral chemistry of other xenoliths listed in Table 1 such as kyanite-, enstatite- and biminerallic eclogites from KL2, P2 and P10 pipes of WKF can be found in Patel et al. (2006). The primary minerals in the mafic xenoliths do not show discernible zoning within individual grains or significant compositional variation among grains in the same xenolith. 4.1. Clinopyroxene The clinopyroxenes generally have low total iron content (<3.5 wt%) except for the rutile eclogite sample P3Xe/86, in which the value is 7.4 wt% FeO (Table 2). In order to derive a clinopyroxene formula from a chemical analysis, it is desirable to have Fe2+ and Fe3+ values. In microprobe analyses, only total iron is determined from which Fe2+ and Fe3+ values can be calculated from stoichiometry. However, for clinopyroxenes with low total iron content such as those in the present study, the calculation is very sensitive to analytical error, especially of SiO2 due to its major abundance and +4 charge (e.g. Sobolev et al., 1999). It was therefore decided to choose the most iron-rich clinopyroxene as a reference for the calculation of Fe3+/Fetot ratio, and then use this ratio to calculate Fe2+ and Fe3+ contents in clinopyroxenes of all other samples. The most iron-rich clinopyroxene occurs in the rutile eclogite which gives a Fe3+/Fetot ratio of 0.17. This is closely comparable to the published values of Fe3+/Fetot ratio for eclogitic clinopyroxenes based on different analytical methods such as Mössbauer spectroscopy (0.08–0.14, McCammon et al., 1998), Mössbauer milliprobe spectroscopy (0.22–0.23, Sobolev et al., 1999) and micro-XANES analysis (0.25–0.30, Schmid et al., 2003). After calculation of Fe2+ and Fe3+ contents in all clinopyroxenes using this ratio, their chemistry is plotted in a triangular diagram with components Ca–Mg–Fe Q (Wo, En, Fs) Biminerallic eclogite Kyanite eclogite N = 25 Quad Enstatite eclogite 80 80 omphacite aegirine-augite Rutile eclogite Chromian spinel eclogite Biminerallic garnet pyroxenite Chromian spinelgarnet pyroxenite Enstatite-garnet pyroxenite 20 20 aegirine jadeite 4. Mineral chemistry NaAlSi2O6 (Jd) Chemical compositions of minerals were determined by JEOLJXA-8600M electron microprobes (EMP) at the Indian Institute of Technology, Roorkee, and the Geological Survey of India, Hyderabad. The operating parameters were: acceleration voltage of 15 kV, probe currents of 20–50 nA, and beam diameter of 2 lm. 50 3+ NaFe Si2O6 (Ae) Fig. 4. Clinopyroxene compositions plotted on end-member triangular diagram of Morimoto et al. (1988). 12 Omphacite compositions are from Patel et al. (2006) for KL2, P2 and P10 pipes of WKF; 3 omphacite compositions and 10 quadrilateral pyroxene compositions are from this study. Q = quadrilateral pyroxene; Wo = wollastonite; En = enstatite; Fs = ferrosilite; Jd = jadeite; Ae = aegirine. 343 are relatively the most magnesian, and garnets of kyanite eclogite are reltively the most calcic in composition. CaO Biminerallic eclogite 4.3. Chromian spinel, rutile and ilmenite Mg O Kyanite eclogite 30% Enstatite eclogite Rutile eclogite Mg O Chromian spinel eclogite Chromian spinel in an eclogite has XFe (=Fe2+/Mg + Fe2+) value of 0.35, and XCr (=Cr/Cr + Al) value of 0.38 (Table 4). In a garnet pyroxenite chromian spinel has XFe = 0.38 and XCr = 0.71. Discrete rutile grains in rutile eclogite, and ilmenite lamellae exsolved from them are somewhat aluminous and V-rich. Al2O3 content of rutile is 0.2 wt%, whereas that in ilmenite ranges from 0.6 to 2.8 wt%. V2O5 contents are 0.6 wt% and 0.3 wt% in rutile and ilmenite, respectively. MgO content of ilmenite is up to 1.5 wt%. 55% Biminerallic garnet pyroxenite Chromian spinelgarnet pyroxenite Enstatite-garnet pyroxenite C B A FeO+MnO 5. Geothermobarometry MgO Fig. 5. Garnet compositions on the CaO–(FeO + MnO)–MgO diagram of Coleman et al. (1965). pyroxene, jadeite and aegirine (Fig. 4). Clinopyroxene compositions for eclogites of KL2, P2 and P10 pipes of WKF are taken from Patel et al. (2006) and plotted in this figure for comparison. Clinopyroxene falling in the omphacite field is classified as omphacite, whereas that falling in the Quad field is Ca pyroxene. It can be seen that there is a compositional transition from omphacite (in eclogite) to Ca pyroxene (in garnet pyroxenite). Jadeite component in omphacite is up to 45 mol% which is very unusual for deep-seated xenoliths world-wide (Sobolev et al., 1999). The XMg (=Mg/Mg + Fe2+) value of all clinopyroxenes except one falls in the range of 0.91–0.96. The exception is the iron-rich omphacite in the rutile eclogite which has an XMg value of 0.70. TiO2 content in all clinopyroxenes is <0.2 wt%. MnO and K2O contents are invariably low (60.1 wt%). Cr2O3 content is mostly below 1 wt%; but several clinopyroxenes have 3–4 wt% Cr2O3, which is less than that in associated garnet. 4.2. Garnet Garnets in the xenoliths of garnet pyroxenite and eclogite have wide variations in Ca, Fe and Mg (Table 3). They contain only small concentrations of Mn (0.2–0.6 wt% MnO) and Ti (0.01–0.4 wt% TiO2), and are virtually devoid of Ni (<0.05 wt% NiO). Na2O content is mostly below 0.1 wt%, although in one analysis it is as high as 0.41 wt%. Cr2O3 content in most garnets is below 1 wt%, although in a few samples it is high (1.8–8.3 wt%). End member calculations following the method of Sobolev et al. (1973) for Cr-rich garnets give the following values (in mol%) for all samples except rutile eclogite: pyrope (57–74), almandine (12–27), grossular (0–26), spessartine (61), andradite (0–5), Ti-andradite (61), uvarovite (0–16) and knorringite (0–8). The garnet of rutile eclogite is highly iron-rich with end member composition of Prp26.5Alm52.5Grs14.7 Adr5.1TiAdr0.3Sps1.0Uv0.1. The chemistry of all garnets is summarised in the CaO– (FeO + MnO)–MgO ternary plot after Coleman et al. (1965) along with the data points for eclogites of KL2, P2 and P10 pipes of WKF from Patel et al. (2006) (Fig. 5). Garnets of all samples except rutile eclogite of P3 pipe and kyanite eclogites of KL2 pipe fall in the Group A field. Garnet of rutile eclogite belongs to Group C, whereas garnets of kyanite eclogite fall in the fields of Group B and C. Garnets of enstatite eclogite and enstatite garnet pyroxenite Geobarometry of eclogites and garnet pyroxenetites has been a problem world-wide because of the high thermodynamic variance of the assemblages. Nimis and Taylor (2000) formulated a Cr-inclinopyroxene barometer which is applicable to clinopyroxenes with Cr2O3 contents between 0.5 and 5 wt% and with sufficient calcium to form CaCr-Tschermak’s (CaCrVIAlIVSiO6) component. These compositional criteria are satisfied by only a few samples of eclogite and garnet pyroxenite. P–T conditions for these samples have been deduced from the intersection of the Cr-in-clinopyroxene geobarometer with the garnet-clinopyroxene Fe–Mg exchange geothermometer. The application of Fe3+ corrections in the temperature calculations in geothermobarometry has long been a subject of controversy. As demonstrated by Canil and O’Neill (1996), Sobolev et al. (1999) and Proyer et al. (2004), the errors introduced by estimating the Fe3+ content of clinopyroxenes from EMP analyses are large and often unacceptable for geothermobarometry. Sobolev et al. (1999) studied the effects of various Fe3+/Fetot values for clinopyroxene and garnet on calculated temperatures, and found that for clinopyroxene, T decreases with increasing Fe3+/Fetot whereas for garnet, T increases with increasing Fe3+/Fetot. They concluded that due to this compensation effects between garnet and clinopyroxene the Fe3+ corrections in EMP analyses do not greatly affect temperature estimates in eclogites. Therefore, in the present study temperatures have been calculated assuming Fe2+ = Fetot for both clinopyroxene and garnet. There are several calibrations of the garnet-clinopyroxene geothermometer and the most widely used ones for eclogites and garnet pyroxenites are those by Ellis and Green (1979), Powell (1985), Krogh (1988) and Krogh Ravna (2000). For the xenoliths under study the calibrations of Krogh (1988) and Krogh Ravna (2000) yield similar temperatures. The temperatures obtained from the calibrations of Ellis and Green (1979) and Powell (1985) are also similar, but significantly higher than those from Krogh (1988) and Krogh Ravna (2000) for most of the xenoliths (Table 5). For a given calibration, eclogites record higher P–T conditions than garnet pyroxenites. The Cr-spinel eclgoite sample CC4N8b yields anomalously high temperatures by all the four calibrations of the garnet-clinopyroxene geothermometer and most likely are an artefact due to the high Cr and Ca contents of garnet in this samples. Enstatite is present in two samples, one of which is a garnet pyroxenite (sample P12N6b) and the other is an eclogite (sample KL2N9a). The presence of enstatite allows calculation of pressure from the Al-in-orthopyroxene (coexisting with garnet) geobarometer. Brey and Kohler (1990) gave a calibration of this geobarometer along with a calibration of the two-pyroxene geothermometer. P–T values obtained from the simultaneous solution of the Al-inorthopyroxene geobarometer and either two-pyroxene geothermmeter or garnet-clinopyroxene geothermometer for the two sam- 344 Table 5 Results of geothermobarometry for the mafic xenoliths from the kimberlite pipes of EDC. Mineral analyses used for sample KL2N9a, P10N7b and P10N7c are taken from Patel et al. (2006) and those for other samples is from this study Sample no. Remark T (EG) P (NT) T (Powell) P (NT) T (Krogh) P (NT) T (KR) P (NT) T (BK) P (NT) T (BK) P (BK) T (EG) P (BK) T (Powell) P (BK) T (Krogh) P (BK) T (KR) P (BK) P12N6b Enstatite garnet pyroxenite 830 22.1 682 14.3 635 12.0 Biminerallic garnet pyroxenite P12N6c Cr-spinel garnet pyroxenite MK8N1a Biminerallic eclogite P10N7c Biminerallic eclogite P10N7b Biminerallic eclogite CC4N8b Cr-spinel eclogite 741 27.1 895 33.1 869 23.3 885 29.6 1041 35.5 1094 33.4 1140 40.1 1265 38.7 858 23.6 P2N5b 730 26.8 889 32.9 899 24.5 915 30.4 1036 35.3 1085 33.2 1128 39.7 1323 40.4 681 14.3 Biminerallic garnet pyroxenite 859 30.5 976 36.4 995 28.5 981 32.3 1093 37.0 1141 34.8 1157 40.7 1269 38.8 696 25.9 P3MXe/86 885 31.3 998 37.3 1015 29.4 1001 32.8 1108 37.4 1153 35.2 1169 41.1 1272 38.9 KL2N9a Enstatite eclogite (Garnet host and exsolved ortho- and clinopyroxenes) Enstatite eclogite (Omphacite host and exsolved garnet and clinopyroxene) 833 27.8 867 36.4 1208 47.1 971 41.9 1192 46.2 943 40.4 1058 39.1 790 32.5 1225 48.1 845 35.3 KL2N9a T in °C and P in kbar. P (NT) = Cr-in-cpx geobarometer of Nimis and Taylor (2000); P (BK) = Al-in-opx geobarometer of Brey and Kohler (1990). T (BK) = two-pyroxene geothermometer of Brey and Kohler (1990); other temperatures are from garnet-clinopyroxene geothermometer of Ellis and Green, 1979 (EG), Powell (1985), Krogh (1988), and Krogh Ravna, 2000 (KR). ples are given in Table 5. The enstatite garnet pyroxenite satisfies the criteria for Cr-in-clinopyroxene geobarometry in addition to its suitability for the Al-in-orthopyroxene geobarometry. A comparison of pressures calculated from the two geobarometers in this rock shows that the pressure yielded by the Al-in-orthopyroxene geobarometer is invariably much less than that by the Cr-in-clinopyroxene geobarometer. Considering all the geothermobarometric calculations it is seen that the equilibration pressures and temperatures of the xenoliths fall mostly in the ranges of 20–48 kbar and 700–1225 °C, respectively. 6. Xenolith geotherm Continental geotherm for a given region is conventionally estimated on the basis of a number of parameters including surface T (˚C) 600 800 1000 1200 1600 1400 P (NT) - T (BK) 10 0.85 Tm 0.90 Tm P (NT) - T (Krogh) P (NT) - T (KR) P (NT) - T (EG) 20 P (NT) - T (Powell) P (BK) - T (BK) 2 60 mW/m P (Kbar) 30 P (BK) - T (Krogh) P (BK) - T (KR) 40 Graph ite Diamo nd P (BK) - T (EG) 2 50 mW/m P (BK) - T (Powell) 50 60 45 mW/m2 70 2 30 mW/m 2 40 mW/m 80 Fig. 6. Empirical geotherm (thick solid line) for mafic xenoliths. Conductive model geotherms (dashed lines) for different surface heat flow values, and mantle solidii (Tm) are from Pollack and Chapman (1977). Abbreviations are as in Table 5. heat flow, radiogenic heat source distribution, variation of thermal conductivity and mode of heat transfer within the lithosphere. Generally several assumptions regarding these parameters are made while calculating model geotherms which introduce significant error. However, independent estimates of pressures and temperatures obtained from mantle xenoliths allow the construction of empirical temperature–depth curves (O’Reilly and Griffin, 2006 and references therein), which can be compared with model geotherms. Pollack and Chapman (1977) computed model conductive geotherms in the lithosphere for surface heat flow values in the range of 30–150 mW m 2 which are shown in Fig. 6. All the calculated P– T values from the xenoliths of eclogite and garnet pyroxenite in the kimberlites of EDC are plotted in this figure. The P–T values are scattered, but most of them fall between the 40 and 50 mW m 2 model geotherms, and some fall above the 50 mW m 2 model geotherm. An important constraint on geotherm is provided by the diamondiferous nature of most of the studied kimberlite pipes. It implies that the geotherm must intersect the graphite-diamond transition curve below the mantle solidus. This condition is satisfied in Fig. 6 if the geotherm is 645 mW m 2. With this constraint the P–T ranges obtained from the mafic xenoliths approximate to a 45 mW m 2 model geotherm. The P–T conditions of the xenoliths show that they have equilibrated outside of the diamond stability field. But since the kimberlites are diamondiferous it is obvious that the transporting magmas must have originated at greater depths than recorded by the xenoliths. P–T values for the sample CC4N8b fall above the 0.85Tm mantle solidus because of the anomalously high temperature yielded by this sample. Ganguly and Bhattacharya (1987) and Nehru and Reddy (1989) calculated mantle geotherms using garnet-clinopyroxene Fe–Mg exchange geothermometer of Råheim and Green (1974), and Al-in orthopyroxene geoarometer of Lane and Ganguly (1980) and Perkins et al. (1981) on ultramafic xenoliths from the P3 pipe of WKF. These geotherms are linear in nature, and a comparison with model geotherms shows that they fall between 42 and 50 mW m 2 model geotherms. Thus the xenolith geotherm of 45 mW m 2 derived in the present study is broadly consistent with the findings of Ganguly and Bhattacharya (1987) and Nehru and Reddy (1989). 345 It is well known that xenolith geotherms are strongly dependent on the geothermobarometers used (Grutter and Moore, 2003). Nevertheless empirically constructed xenolith geotherms provide reliable constraints on geothermal models since they are independent of the uncertainties of model geotherms (Cull et al., 1991). 7. Discussion 7.1. Implication of xenolith geotherm on heat flow Gupta et al. (1991) reported mean heat flow values of 40 ± 3.4 mW m 2 for the EDC and 31 ± 4.1 mW m 2 for the WDC. Such heat flow variations in cratonic regions reflect variations in radiogenic heat produced in the crustal column and heat conducted into the crust from the underlying mantle. Senthil Kumar and Reddy (2004) measured K, U and Th abundance through in situ gamma-ray spectrometry at numerous sites covering all major rock formations of both EDC and WDC. From the crustal heat contribution models they concluded that mantle heat flow of the EDC is higher (17–24 mW m 2) relative to the WDC (7– 10 mW m 2). The xenolith geotherm of 45 mW m 2 obtained in the present study for the EDC is towards the higher side of the typical range of xenolith/xenocryst geotherms (35–45 mW m 2) for several Archaean cratons in the world (Finnerty and Boyd, 1987; O’Reilly and Griffin, 2006). This leads us to believe that the EDC was hotter than many other shield regions of the world in the mid-Proterozoic period when kimberlites intruded the craton. This can be attributed, following the present-day heat flow model of Senthil Kumar and Reddy (2004), to high mantle heat flow beneath the EDC in the mid-Proterozoic time. 7.2. Lithospheric thickness The finding of formerly supersilicic garnet in an enstatite eclogite xenolith from the KL2 pipe of WKF led Patel et al. (2006) to suggest that the minimum peak pressure for the rock is 50 kbar since supersilicic garnet is experimentally stable at pressures in excess of 50 kbar (Ringwood and Major, 1971). This pressure translates to a minimum lithospheric thickness of 150 km beneath the EDC during the mid-Proterozoic period. This value is in agreement with the result of several workers who have estimated lithospheric thickness beneath the Dharwar craton using different methods (Pandey and Agrawal, 1999 and references therein). Estimates based on heat flow values include lithospheric thickness of 148 km (Pandey and Agrawal, 1999) and P200 km (Gupta et al., 1991) for the Dharwar craton as a whole. From magnetotelluric studies Gokarn et al. (1998) estimated a lithospheric thickness of 180 km for the craton. Based on geobarometric calculations in ultramafic xenoliths from the P3 pipe of WKF, Ganguly and Bhattacharya (1987) concluded that the lithosphere was at least 185 km thick below the EDC during the mid-Proterozoic period. 7.3. Origin of mafic xenoliths Mantle eclogites and garnet pyroxenites found in different parts of the world represent a rather heterogeneous group of rocks because the wide range of possible solid solution in the garnet and clinopyroxene structures can accommodate a variety of bulk compositions. Therefore, it is not reasonable to postulate a single origin for all mafic xenoltihs. Two contrasting petrogeneses have been postulated for the origin of mantle eclogites (review by Godard, 2001). They represent either (1) high pressure magmatic cumulates which occur as magma chambers or dykes within upper man- tle (e.g. Schmickler et al., 2004) or (2) subducted and metamorphosed oceanic crust (e.g. Barth et al., 2001). This question is still debated nowadays. Both types of eclogites may occur in the same kimberlite. Textural and mineral chemical characteristics favour a magmatic cumulate origin for the mafic xenoliths in the Dharwar kimberlites. Graded layering observed in hand specimens (Fig. 3a), and microtextural features such as garnet necklace and garnet-kyanite cluster (Patel et al., 2006) must have resulted from gravitative accumulation of early-formed crystals of garnet. The composition of clinopyroxene shows transition from omphacite in eclogites to Ca pyroxene in garnet pyroxenites (Fig. 4). Such transition demonstrates the cogenetic relationship of eclogites and garnet pyroxenites, and favours a high pressure igneous origin of these rocks. However, since eclogite xenoliths record higher pressure than garnet pyroxenite xenoliths (Table 5) the former must have been derived from a greater depth than the latter. Acknowledgements The Dy. 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