Skip to main content
Log in

High-Al gabbros in the Laramie Anorthosite Complex, Wyoming: implications for the composition of melts parental to Proterozoic anorthosite

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

Abstract

High-Al gabbro represents one of the latest phases of magmatism in the 1.43 Ga Laramie anorthosite complex (LAC) in southeastern Wyoming. This lithology, which is mineralogically and geochemically the most primitive in the LAC, forms dikes and small intrusions that cross cut monzonitic and anorthositic rocks. High-Al gabbro is characterized by high Al2O3 (15–19 wt%), REE patterns with positive europium anomalies (Eu/Eu*=1.2–3.8), and the lowest initial 87Sr/86Sr (as low as 0.7033) and highest initial ɛNd (up to +2) in the LAC. Their Sr and Nd isotopic characteristics indicate a mantle origin followed by crustal assimilation during ascent. Intermediate plagioclase (An50–60) and mafic silicate (Fo54–63) compositions suggest that they are not primary mantle melts and that they differentiated prior to final emplacement. High-Al gabbros of the LAC are similar compositionally to gabbros from several other Proterozoic anorthosite complexes, including rocks from the Harp Lake complex and the Hettasch intrusion in Labrador and the Adirondack Mountains of New York. These gabbros are considered to be parental to their associated anorthositic rocks, a theory that is supported by recent experimental work. We interpret LAC high-Al gabbros to represent mantle-derived melts produced by the differentiation of a basaltic magma in an upper mantle chamber. Continued evolution of this magma eventually resulted in the formation of plagioclase-rich diapirs which ascended to mid-crustal levels and formed the anorthositic rocks of the LAC. Because these gabbros intrude the anorthositic rocks, they do not represent directly the magma from which anorthosite crystallized and instead are younger samples of magma formed by identical processes.

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

  • Anderson IC, Frost BR, Lindsley DH (1987) Crystallization conditions of the Red Mountain syenite. Eos Trans Am Geophs Union 68:442–443

    Google Scholar 

  • Berg JH (1980) Snowflake troctolite in the Hettasch intrusion, Labrador: evidence for magma-mixing and supercooling in a plutonic environment. Contrib Mineral Petrol 72:339–351

    Google Scholar 

  • Bolsover LR (1986) Petrogenesis of the Sybille iron-titanium oxide deposit, Laramie Anorthosite Complex, Laramie Mountains, Wyoming. MS thesis, State Univ NY, Stony Brook

  • Duchesne JC (1990) Origin and evolution of monzonorites related to anorthosites. Schweiz Mineral Petrogr Mitt 70:189–199

    Google Scholar 

  • Duchesne JC, Wilmart, E, Demaiffc D, Hertogen, J (1989) Monzonorites from Rogaland (southwest Norway): a series of rocks coeval but not comagmatic with anorthosites. Precambrian Res 45:111–128

    Google Scholar 

  • Duebendorfer EM, Houston RS (1987) Proterozoic accretionary tectonics as the southern margin of the Archean Wyoming craton. Geol Soc Am Bull 98:554–568

    Google Scholar 

  • Eberle MMC (1983) Genesis of the magnetite-ilmenite deposit at Iron Mountain, Laramie Anorthosite Complex, Wyoming. MS thesis, Univ Colorado

  • Edwards BR (1993) A field, geochemical, and isotopic investigation of the igneous rocks in the Pole Mountain area of the Sherman batholith, southern Laramie Mountains, Wyoming, USA. MS thesis, Univ Wyoming

  • Emslic RF (1980) Geology and petrology of the Harp Lake Complex, central Labrador: an example of Elsonian magmatism. Geol Sur Can Bull 293

  • Emslie RF (1985) Proterozoic anorthosite massifs. In: Tobi AC, Touret JLR (eds) The Deep Proterozoic Crust in the North Atlantic Provinces (NATO ASI Ser C, 158). Reidel, Dordrecht, pp 39–60

    Google Scholar 

  • Epler NA (1987) Experimental study of Fe-Ti oxide ores from the Sybille pit in the Laramie Anorthosite Complex, Wyoming. MS thesis, State Univ NY, Stony Brook

  • Fram MS, Longhi J (1992) Phase equilibria of dikes associated with Proterozoic anorthosite complexes. Am Mineral 77:605–616

    Google Scholar 

  • Frost BR, Frost CD, Lindsley DH, Scoates JS, Mitchell JN (1993) The Laramie Anorthosite Complex and the Sherman batholith: geology, evolution, and theories for origin. Geol Sur Wyo Mem 5:118–161

    Google Scholar 

  • Fuhrman ML, Frost BR, Lindsley DH (1988) Crystallization conditions of the Sybille monzosyenite, Laramie Anorthosite Complex, Wyoming. J Petrol 29:699–729

    Google Scholar 

  • Geist DJ, Frost CD, Kolker A, Frost BR (1989) A geochemical study of magmatism across a major terrane boundary: Sr and Nd isotopes in Proterozoic granitoids of the southern Laramie Range, Wyoming. J Geol 97:331–342

    Google Scholar 

  • Geist DJ, Frost CD, Kolker A (1990) Sr and Nd isotopic constraints on the origin of the Laramie Anorthosite Complex, Wyoming. Am Mineral 75:13–20

    Google Scholar 

  • Hanson GN (1980) Rare earth elements in petrogenetic studies of igneous systems. Ann Rev Earth Planet Sci 8:371–406

    Google Scholar 

  • Karlstrom KE, Houston RS (1984) The Cheyenne Belt: analysis of a Proterozoic suture in southern Wyoming. Precambrian Res 25:415–446

    Google Scholar 

  • Kolker A, Lindsley DH (1989) Geochemical evolution of the Maloin Ranch pluton, Laramic Anorthosite Complex, Wyoming: petrology and mixing relations. Am Mineral 74:307–324

    Google Scholar 

  • Kolker A, Hanson GN, Lindsley DH (1990) Geochemical evolution of the Maloin Ranch pluton, Laramie Anorthosite Complex, Wyoming: trace elements and petrogenetic models. Am Mineral 75:572–588

    Google Scholar 

  • Kolker A, Frost CD, Hanson GN, Geist DJ (1991) Nd, Sr and Pb isotopes in the Maloin Ranch pluton, Wyoming: implications for the origin of evolved rocks at anorthosite margins. Geochim cosmochim Acta 55:2285–2297

    Google Scholar 

  • Longhi J (1991) Comparative liquidus equilibria of hypersthene-normative basalts at low pressure. Am Mineral 76:785–800

    Google Scholar 

  • Longhi J, Ashwal LD (1985) Two-stage models for lunar and terrestrial anorthosites: petrogenesis without a magma ocean. Proc 15th Lunar Planet Sci Conf, Part 2, J Geophys Res 90:C571-C584

    Google Scholar 

  • Longhi J, Fram MS, Vander Auwera J, Montieth JN (1993) Pressure effects, kinetics, and rheology of anorthositic and related magmas. Am Mineral 78:1016–1030

    Google Scholar 

  • McLelland J, Ashwal L, Moore L (1994) Composition and petrogenesis of oxide-, apatite-rich gabbronorites associated with Proterozoic anorthosite massifs: examples from the Adirondack Mountains, New York. Contrib Mineral Petrol 116: 225–238

    Google Scholar 

  • Mitchell JN (1993) Petrology and geochemistry of dioritic and gabbroic rocks in the Laramie Anorthosite Complex, Wyoming: implications for the evolution of Proterozoic anorthosite. PhD thesis, Univ Wyoming

  • Morse SA (1969) Layered intrusions and anorthosite genesis. NY State Mus Sci Serv Mem 18:175–187

    Google Scholar 

  • Morse SA (1981) Kiglapait geochemistry IV: the major elements. Geochim Cosmochim Acta 45:461–479

    Google Scholar 

  • Morse SA (1982a) A partisan review of Proterozoic anorthosites. Am Mineral 67:1087–1100

    Google Scholar 

  • Morse SA (1982b) Kiglapait geochemistry V: strontium. Geochim Cosmochim Acta 46:223–234

    Google Scholar 

  • Morse SA (1991) Basaltic magma from the crust is not a free option. Eos Trans Am Geophys Union 72:161

    Google Scholar 

  • Morse SA, Nolan KM (1985) Kiglapait geochemistry VII: yttrium and the rare earth elements. Geochim Cosmochim Acta 49:1621–1644

    Google Scholar 

  • Olson K (1992) The petrology and geochemstry of mafic igneous rocks in the anorthosite-bearing Adirondack Highlands, New York, J Petrol 33:471–502

    Google Scholar 

  • Olson K, Morse SA (1990) Regional Al-Fe mafic magmas associated with anorthosite-bearing terranes. Nature 344:760–762

    Google Scholar 

  • Owens BE, Rockow MW, Dymek RF (1993) Jotunites from the Grenville Province, Quebec: petrological characteristics and implications for massif anorthosite petrogenesis. Lithos 30:57–80

    Google Scholar 

  • Patel SC (1992) Rb-Sr isotope systematics and Barrovian metamorphism, Laramie Range, Wyoming. PhD thesis, Univ Wyoming

  • Reed JC, Bickford ME, Premo WR, Aleinikoff JN, Pallister JS (1987) Evolution of the early Proterozoic Colorado Province: constraints from U-Pb geochronology. Geology 15:861–865

    Google Scholar 

  • Scoates JS (1994) Magmatic evolution of anorthositic and monzonitic rocks in the mid-Proterozoic Laramie anorthosite complex, Wyoming, USA. PhD thesis, Univ Wyoming

  • Scoates JS, Chamberlain KR (1993) The duration of anorthositic magmatism in the 1.43 Ga Laramie Anorthosite Complex, Wyoming. Geol Soc Am Abstr Prog 25:A446

  • Streckeisen A (1976) To each plutonic rock its proper name. Earth-Sci Rev 12:1–33

    Google Scholar 

  • Taylor SR, Campbell IH, McCulloch MT, McLennan SM (1984) A lower crustal origin for massif-type anorthosites. Nature 311:372–374

    Google Scholar 

  • Wicbe RA (1978) Anorthosite and associated plutons, southern Nain complex, Labrador. Can J Earth Sci 15:1326–1340

    Google Scholar 

  • Wiebe RA (1990a) Evidence for unusually feldspathic liquids in the Nain complex, Labrador. Am Mineral 75:1–12

    Google Scholar 

  • Wiebe RA (1990b) Dioritic rocks in the Nain complex, Labrador. Schweiz. Mineral Petrogr Mitt 70:199–208

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Mitchell, J.N., Scoates, J.S. & Frost, C.D. High-Al gabbros in the Laramie Anorthosite Complex, Wyoming: implications for the composition of melts parental to Proterozoic anorthosite. Contr. Mineral. and Petrol. 119, 166–180 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00307279

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00307279

Keywords

Navigation