Skip to main content
Log in

Experimental constraints on depths of fractionation of mildly alkalic basalts and associated felsic rocks: Pantelleria, Strait of Sicily

  • Published:
Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

Pantelleria, Italy, is a continental rift volcano consisting of alkalic basalt, trachyte, and pantellerite. At 1 atm along the FMQ buffer, the least-evolved basalt (Mg #= 58.5% norm ne) yields olivine on the liquidus at ∼1,180° C, followed by plagioclase, then by clinopyroxene, and by titanomagnetite and ilmenite at ∼ 1,075°. After ∼70% crystallization, the residual liquid at ∼1,025° is still basaltic and also contains apatite and possibly kaersutite. A less alkalic basalt shows the same order of phase appearance. Glass compositions define an Fe-enrichment trend and a density maximum for anhydrous liquids that coincides with a minimum in Mg#.

During the initial stages of crystallization at 1 atm, liquids remain near the critical plane of silica-undersaturation until, at lower temperatures, Fe-Ti oxide precipitation drives the composition toward silica saturation. Thus the qtz-normative trachytes and pantellerites typically associated with mildly ne-normative basalts in continental rifts could be produced by low-pressure fractional crystallization or by shallow-level partial melting of alkali gabbro. At 8 kbar, clinopyroxene is the liquidus phase at ∼1,170° C, followed by both olivine and plagioclase at ∼1,135°. Because clinopyroxene dominates the crystallizing assemblage and plagioclase is more albitic than at 1 atm, liquids at 8 kbar are driven toward increasingly ne-normative compositions, suggesting that higher-pressure fractionation favors production of phonolitic derivatives.

Natural basaltic samples at Pantelleria are aphyric or contain 1–10% phenocrysts of plag≥ ol≥cpx or ol>cpx, with groundmass Fe-Ti oxides and apatite. The lack of phenocrystic plagioclase in two of the lavas suggests that crystallization at slightly higher PH2O may have destabilized plagioclase relative to the 1-atm results, but there is no preserved evidence for significant fractionation at mantle depths as clinopyroxene is the least abundant phenocryst phase in all samples and contains only small amounts of octahedral Al. The liquid line and phenocryst compositions match more closely the 1-atm experimental results than those at 8 kbar.

Although major-element trends in natural liquids and crytals reflect low-pressure fractionation, minor- and trace-element concentrations preserve evidence of multiple parental liquids. Scatter in variation diagrams exceeds that attributable to crystal accumulation in these phenocryst-poor rocks, and the large range in concentrations of P and Ti at high MgO contents cannot be produced by polybaric fractionation nor by mixing with coexisting felsic magmas. Sr and O isotope ratios rule out significant interaction with crystalline upper crust, Mesozoic shelf sediments, or Tertiary evaporites. Positive correlations of compatible and incompatible elements suggest that the basalts are not simply related to one another by closed-system fractional crystallization of a single parental magma. Increasing Ce/Yb with Ce suggests that these relations are not a product of mixing within a replenished magma chamber, nor of mixing with more felsic members of the suite, which have smaller Ce/Yb ratios. Low-pressure fractional crystallization of ol+cpx+ plag±oxides from slightly different parental magmas produced by varying degrees of melting of garnet-bearing peridotite is a possible scenario.

Small and infrequently replenished magma reservoirs in this continental rift environment may account for the strongly differentiated nature of the Pantellerian basalts. There is no correlation between Mg# and eruptive frequency, in part because concentration of volatiles in residual liquids offsets the effect of Fe-enrichment on melt density, such that strong Fe-enrichment is no hindrance to eruption.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  • Baker BH, Goles GG, Leeman WP, Lindstrom MM (1977) Geochemistry and petrogenesis of a basalt-benmoreite-trachyte suite from the southern part of the Gregory Rift, Kenya. Contrib Mineral Petrol 64:303–332

    Google Scholar 

  • Barberi F, Ferrara G, Santacroce R, Treuil M, Varet J (1975) A transitional basalt-pantellerite sequence of fractional crystallization, the Boina center (Afar Rift, Ethiopia). J Petrol 16:22–65

    Google Scholar 

  • Basaltic Volcanism Study Project (1981) Basaltic volcanism of the terrestrial planets. Pergamon Press, New York, 1286 p

    Google Scholar 

  • Beccaluva L, Colantoni P, DiGirolamo P, Savelli C (1981) Upper-Miocene submarine volcanism in the Strait of Sicily (Banco Senza Nome). Bull Volcanol 44:573–581

    Google Scholar 

  • Benhamou G, Biggar GM (1978) Atmospheric pressure melting studies of some Ethiopian volcanic rocks. In: MacKenzie WS (ed) Prog in Exper Petrol. Natural Environment Res Council Pub Series D, Vol 11, pp 197–200

  • Bottinga Y, Weill D, Richet P (1982) Density calculations for silicate liquids. I. Revised method for aluminosilicate compositions. Geochim Cosmochim Acta 46:909–919

    Google Scholar 

  • Boyd FR, England JL (1960) Apparatus for phase-equilibrium measurements at pressures up to 50 kilobars and temperatures up to 1,750° C. J Geoph Res 65:741–748

    Google Scholar 

  • Burnham CW (1979) The importance of volatile constituents. In: Yoder HS Jr (ed) The evolution of igneous rocks: fiftieth anniversary perspectives. Princeton Univ Press, Princeton, pp 439–482

    Google Scholar 

  • Campbell IH, Roeder PL, Dixon JM (1978) Plagioclase buoyancy in basaltic liquids as determined with a centrifuge furnace. Contrib Mineral Petrol 67:369–377

    Google Scholar 

  • Carapezza M, Ferra P, Mario Nucci P, Valenz M (1979) Caratteri petrologici e geochimici delle vulcaniti dell Isola “Ferdinandea”. Rend Soc Ital Mineral Petrol 35:277–388

    Google Scholar 

  • Christie DM, Sinton JM (1981) Evolution of abyssal lavas along propagating segments of the Galapagos spreading center. Earth Planet Sci Lett 56:321–335

    Google Scholar 

  • Civetta L, Cornette Y, Crisci G, Gillot PY, Orsi G, Requejos CS (1984) Geology, geochronology and chemical evolution of the island of Pantelleria. Geol Mag 121:541–668

    Google Scholar 

  • Civetta L, Crisci GM, Orsi G, Serri G (1982) Le vulcaniti basiche delle isole di Linosa, Pantelleria (Canale di Siclia) e di Ustica: caratteristiche geochimiche delle loro regioni sorgenti. Proc Rend Soc Ital Mineral Petrol

  • Columbi B, Giese P, Luongo G, Morelli C, Riuscetti M, Scarascia S, Schute K, Strowald J, de Visintini G (1973) Preliminary report on the seismic refraction profile Gargano-Salerno-Palermo-Pantelleria. Boll Geof Teor e Appl 15:225–254

    Google Scholar 

  • Darken LS, Gurry RW (1945) The system iron-oxygen. I. the wustite field and related equilibria. J Amer Chem Soc 67:1398–1412

    Google Scholar 

  • DiPaola GM (1973) The island of Linosa (Sicily Channel). Bull Volcanol 37:149–174

    Google Scholar 

  • Eggler DH (1972) Water-saturated and undersaturated melting relations in a Paricutin andesite and an estimate of water content in the natural magma. Contrib Mineral Petrol 34:261–271

    Google Scholar 

  • Ferrara G, Treuil M (1974) Petrological implications of trace element and Sr isotope distributions in basalt-pantellerite series. Bull Volcanol 38:548–574

    Google Scholar 

  • Green DH, Hibberson WO, Jaques AL (1979) Petrogenesis of mid-ocean ridge basalts. In: McElhinny MW (ed) The earth: its origin, structure, and evolution. Academic Press, London, pp 265–299

    Google Scholar 

  • Huebner JS, Sato M (1970) The oxygen fugacity-temperature relationships of manganese and nickel oxide buffers. Am Mineral 55:934–952

    Google Scholar 

  • LeMaitre PW (1984) A proposal by the IUGS Subcommission on the Systematics of Igneous Rocks for a chemical classification of volcanic rocks based on the total alkali silica (TAS) diagram. Austral J Earth Sci 31:243–255

    Google Scholar 

  • Mahood GA (1984) Pyroclastic rocks and calderas associated with strongly peralkaline magmatism. J Geophys Res 89:8540–8552

    Google Scholar 

  • Mahood GA, Hildreth W (1983) Nested calderas and trapdoor uplift at Pantelleria, Strait of Sicily. Geology 11:722–726

    Google Scholar 

  • Mao HK, Bell PM (1971) Behavior of thermocouples in the single-stage piston-cylinder apparatus. Carnegie Inst Washington Yearb 69:207–216

    Google Scholar 

  • Newton RC, Sharp WE (1975) Stability of forsterite + CO2 and its bearing on the role of CO2 in the mantle. Earth Planet Sci Lett 26:239–244

    Google Scholar 

  • O'Hara MJ, Matthews RE (1981) Geochemical evolution in an advancing, periodically replenished, periodically tapped, continuously fractionated magma chamber. J Geol Soc London 138:237–277

    Google Scholar 

  • Presnall DC, Brenner NL, O'Donnell TH (1973) Drift of Pt/Pt10Rh and W3Re/W25Re thermocouples in single stage piston cylinder apparatus. Amer Mineral 58:771–777

    Google Scholar 

  • Roedder PL, Emslie RF (1970) Olivine-liquid equilibria. Contrib Mineral Petrol 29:275–289

    Google Scholar 

  • Sack RO, Carmichael ISE (1984) Fe2=Mg2 and TiAl2=MgSi2 exchange reactions between clinopyroxenes and silicate melts. Contrib Mineral Petrol 85:103–115

    Google Scholar 

  • Sack RO, Carmichael ISE, Rivers M, Ghiorso MS (1980) Ferric-ferrous equilibria in natural silicate liquids at 1 bar. Contrib Mineral Petrol 75:369–376

    Google Scholar 

  • Schairer JF, Yoder HS Jr (1960) The nature of residual liquids from crystallization, with data on the system nepheline-diopside-silica. Am J Sci 258-A:273–283

    Google Scholar 

  • Sparks RSJ, Meyer P, Sigurdsson H (1980) Density variation amongst mid-ocean ridge basalts: implications for magma mixing and the scarcity of primitive lavas. Earth Planet Sci Lett 46:419–430

    Google Scholar 

  • Stolper E, Walker D (1980) Melt density and the average composition of basalt. Contrib Mineral Petrol 74:7–12

    Google Scholar 

  • Takahashi E, Kushiro I (1983) Melting of dry peridotite at high pressures and basalt magma genesis. Am Mineral 68:859–879

    Google Scholar 

  • Thompson RN, Kushiro I (1972) The oxygen fugacity within graphite capsules in piston-cylinder apparatus at high pressures. Carnegie Inst Washington Yearb 71:615–616

    Google Scholar 

  • Tilley CE, Yoder Jr HS, Schairer JFS (1965) Melting relations of volcanic tholeiite and alkalic rock series. Carnegie Inst Washington Yearb 64:69–83

    Google Scholar 

  • Tilley CE, Yoder Jr HS, Schairer JFS (1967) Melting relations of volcanic rock series. Carnegie Inst Washington Yearb 65:260–269

    Google Scholar 

  • Troll G, Gilbert MC (1974) Stability of fluorine tremolite. Trans Am Geophys Union 55:481

    Google Scholar 

  • Villari L (1974) The island of Pantelleria. Bull Volcanol 38:680–724

    Google Scholar 

  • Watson EB (1980) Apatite and phosphorus in mantle source regions: an experimental study of apatite/melt equilibria at pressures to 25 kbar. Earth Planet Sci Lett 51:322–335

    Google Scholar 

  • Williams RJ, Mullins O (1976) A system using solid ceramic oxygen electrolyte cells to measure oxygen fugacities in gas-mixing systems. NASA Tech Mem X-58167, 34 p

  • Yoder HS Jr, Tilley CE (1962) Origin of basaltic magmas: an experimental study of natural and synthetic rock systems. J Petrol 3:342–532

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Mahood, G.A., Baker, D.R. Experimental constraints on depths of fractionation of mildly alkalic basalts and associated felsic rocks: Pantelleria, Strait of Sicily. Contr. Mineral. and Petrol. 93, 251–264 (1986). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00371327

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00371327

Keywords

Navigation