Origin of spinel-free dunite veins from northern Oman ophiolite: Possible involvement of a komatiitic melt

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Abstract

Enigmatic dunitic veins and veinlets crosscutting a podiform chromitite ore body discovered in Wadi Rajmi, northern Oman ophiolite, display a peculiar characteristic of being almost or completely spinel-free. Olivines show an evolution trend from the spinel-free dunites (Fo93-94 and 0.4 wt% NiO) to the spinel-bearing dunites (Fo93-94 and 0.2-0.3 wt% NiO). The Cr/(Cr + Al) of chromian spinel grains increases from 0.6 to 0.8, accompanied by a slight increase in Fe3+ ratio, and the Fo content of olivine decreases in the spinel-bearing dunites. A high-Mg magma, initially undersaturated with chromian spinel, precipitated the spinel-free dunites. Once the spinel saturation of the melt was attained by fractionation, the spinel-bearing dunites precipitated. The initial magma was possibly komatiitic in nature, which was produced at an early stage of detachment of the oceanic lithosphere that formed the Oman ophiolite.

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APA

Abbou-Kebir, K., Arai, S., Ahmed, A. H., & Ceuleneer, G. (2011). Origin of spinel-free dunite veins from northern Oman ophiolite: Possible involvement of a komatiitic melt. Journal of Mineralogical and Petrological Sciences, 106(5), 235–245. https://doi.org/10.2465/jmps.110301

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