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A fundamental dispute: A discussion of “On some fundamentals of igneous petrology” by Bruce D. Marsh, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (2013) 166: 665–690

  • Rais Latypov
  • , Tony Morse
  • , Brian Robins
  • , Richard Wilson
  • , Grant Cawthorn
  • , Christian Tegner
  • , Marian Holness
  • , Charles Lesher
  • , Steve Barnes
  • , Brian O’Driscoll
  • , Ilya Veksler
  • , Michael Higgins
  • , Allan Wilson
  • , Olivier Namur
  • , Sofya Chistyakova
  • , Richard Naslund
  • , Peter Thy

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

19 Scopus citations

Abstract

Marsh (Contrib Miner Petrol 166:665–690, 2013) again claims that crystal-free basalt magmas are unable to differentiate in crustal magma chambers and regards layered intrusions as primarily due to the repeated emplacement of crystal suspensions. He ignores an earlier critique of his unconventional inferences (Latypov, J Petrol 50:1047–1069, 2009) as well as a wealth of petrographic, geochemical and experimental evidence supporting the dominant role of fractional crystallization in the solidification of layered intrusions. Most tellingly, the cryptic variations preserved in the Skaergaard and many other basaltic layered intrusions would require an exceedingly implausible sequence of phenocrystic magmas but are wholly consistent with in situ fractional crystallization. A major flaw in Marsh’s hypothesis is that it dismisses progressive fractional crystallization within any magma chamber and hence prohibits the formation of crystal slurries with phenocrysts and melts that change systematically in composition in any feeder system. This inherent attribute of the hypothesis excludes the formation of layered intrusions anywhere.

Original languageEnglish
JournalContributions to Mineralogy and Petrology
Volume169
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2015

Keywords

  • Cryptic layering
  • Crystal suspensions
  • Fractional crystallization
  • Igneous differentiation
  • Layered intrusions
  • Phenocrysts

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