Modeling the merensky reef, bushveld complex, republic of South Africa
The Merensky pegmatoid (normal reef) in the western Bushveld Complex is commonly characterized as a pyroxene-rich pegmatoidal unit with a base that is enriched in chromite and platinum-group element-bearing sulfides overlying a leuconorite footwall. Models for its formation have ranged from those that view it as entirely a magmatic cumulate succession to those that have suggested that it is a zone of volatile-induced remelting. The consequences of the latter interpretation are investigated using the numerical modeling program IRIDIUM, which links diffusive and advective mass and heat transport with a phase equilibration routine based on the MELTS program. The initial system consists of a simple stratigraphic succession of a partially molten leuconorite overlain by a partially molten pyroxenite, both initially at 1,190°C and 2 kbar. 2 wt% of a volatile fluid composed of 75 mol% H
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- Energy
- 4019 Resources engineering and extractive metallurgy
- 3705 Geology
- 3703 Geochemistry
- 0499 Other Earth Sciences
- 0403 Geology
- 0402 Geochemistry
Citation
Published In
DOI
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Energy
- 4019 Resources engineering and extractive metallurgy
- 3705 Geology
- 3703 Geochemistry
- 0499 Other Earth Sciences
- 0403 Geology
- 0402 Geochemistry