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The Eagle and East Eagle sulfide ore‐bearing mafic‐ultramafic intrusions in the Midcontinent Rift System, upper Michigan: Geochronology and petrologic evolution
Author(s) -
Ding Xin,
Li Chusi,
Ripley Edward M.,
Rossell Dean,
Kamo Sandra
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
geochemistry, geophysics, geosystems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.928
H-Index - 136
ISSN - 1525-2027
DOI - 10.1029/2009gc002546
Subject(s) - geology , eagle , geochemistry , olivine , ultramafic rock , rift , basalt , volcanic rock , peridotite , mafic , paleontology , volcano , structural basin
The Eagle and East Eagle intrusions are small, subvertical dike‐like mafic‐ultramafic bodies that cut Proterozoic sedimentary strata in the Baraga Basin in northern Michigan. The Eagle intrusion hosts a newly discovered magmatic Ni‐Cu‐PGE deposit. The nearby East Eagle intrusion also contains sulfide mineralization, but the extent of this mineralization has yet to be determined by further drilling. Both intrusions contain olivine‐bearing rocks such as feldspathic peridotite, melatroctolite, and olivine melagabbro. Sulfide accumulations range from disseminated at both Eagle and East Eagle to semimassive and massive at Eagle. U‐Pb baddeleyite dating gives a crystallization age of 1107.2 ± 5.7 Ma for the Eagle intrusion, coeval with eruption of picritic basalts at the base of the volcanic succession in the Midcontinent Rift System (MRS). The Fo contents of olivine cores in the Eagle and East Eagle intrusions vary between 75 and 85 mol %, higher than those of olivine in larger layered intrusions in the MRS such as the Duluth Complex. The FeO/MgO ratios and Al 2 O 3 contents of the parental magmas for the Eagle and East Eagle intrusions inferred from olivine and spinel compositions are similar to those of picritic basalts in the base of the MRS volcanic succession. These petrochemical data suggest that the Eagle and East Eagle intrusions are the intrusive equivalents of high‐MgO basalts that erupted in the early stages of continental magmatism associated with the development of the rift. Variations in mineral compositions and incompatible trace element ratios suggest that at least three major pulses of magmas were involved in the formation of low‐sulfide rocks in the Eagle intrusion. Lower Fo contents of olivine associated with semimassive sulfides as compared to that of olivine in low‐sulfide rocks suggest that the magma associated with the semimassive sulfide was more fractionated than the parental magmas of the low‐sulfide rocks in the Eagle intrusion. Accumulation of suspended olivine crystals and sulfide droplets from ascending magmas as they passed through wide parts of the conduits at Eagle and East Eagle played a critical role in the genesis of olivine‐rich rocks and sulfide ores in the intrusions. The Eagle Ni‐Cu‐PGE deposit typifies the conduit‐style of magmatic sulfide deposition that is associated with continental basaltic magmatism.

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