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Petrology of Ortsog-Uul peridotite-gabbro massif in Western Mongolia. / Shapovalova, M.; Tolstykh, N.; Shelepaev, R. et al.

In: IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science, Vol. 110, No. 1, 012020, 03.01.2018.

Research output: Contribution to journalConference articlepeer-review

Harvard

Shapovalova, M, Tolstykh, N, Shelepaev, R & Cherdantseva, M 2018, 'Petrology of Ortsog-Uul peridotite-gabbro massif in Western Mongolia', IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science, vol. 110, no. 1, 012020. https://doi.org/10.1088/1755-1315/110/1/012020

APA

Shapovalova, M., Tolstykh, N., Shelepaev, R., & Cherdantseva, M. (2018). Petrology of Ortsog-Uul peridotite-gabbro massif in Western Mongolia. IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science, 110(1), [012020]. https://doi.org/10.1088/1755-1315/110/1/012020

Vancouver

Shapovalova M, Tolstykh N, Shelepaev R, Cherdantseva M. Petrology of Ortsog-Uul peridotite-gabbro massif in Western Mongolia. IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science. 2018 Jan 3;110(1):012020. doi: 10.1088/1755-1315/110/1/012020

Author

Shapovalova, M. ; Tolstykh, N. ; Shelepaev, R. et al. / Petrology of Ortsog-Uul peridotite-gabbro massif in Western Mongolia. In: IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science. 2018 ; Vol. 110, No. 1.

BibTeX

@article{00f0b2294b314622a6771a8b693f961f,
title = "Petrology of Ortsog-Uul peridotite-gabbro massif in Western Mongolia",
abstract = "The Ortsog-Uul mafic-ultramafic massif of Western Mongolia is located in a tectonic block with overturned bedding. The massif hosts two intrusions: a rhythmically-layered peridotite-gabbro association (Intrusion 1) and massive Bt-bearing amphibole-olivine gabbro (Intrusion 2). Intrusions 1 and 2 have different petrology features. Early Intrusion 1 (278±2.5Ma) is characterized by lower concentrations of alkalis, titanium and phosphorus than late Intrusion 2 (272±2Ma). The chondrite-normalized REE and primitive mantle-normalized rare elements patterns of Ortsog-Uul intrusions have similar curves of elements distribution. However, Intrusion 2 is characterized higher contents of REE and rare elements. High concentrations of incompatible elements are indicative of strong fractionation process. It has been suggested that Intrusions 1 and 2 derived from compositionally different parental melts. Model calculations (COMAGMAT-3.57) show that parental melts of two intrusions were close to high-Mg picrobasaltic magmas. The concentration of MgO in melt is 16.21 (Intrusion 1) and 16.17 (Intrusion 2). Isotopic data of Ortsog-Uul magmatic rocks exhibit different values of ϵNd (positive and negative) for Intrusion 1 and 2, respectively.",
keywords = "MANTLE, EVOLUTION, BASALTS",
author = "M. Shapovalova and N. Tolstykh and R. Shelepaev and M. Cherdantseva",
year = "2018",
month = jan,
day = "3",
doi = "10.1088/1755-1315/110/1/012020",
language = "English",
volume = "110",
journal = "IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science",
issn = "1755-1307",
publisher = "IOP Publishing Ltd.",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Petrology of Ortsog-Uul peridotite-gabbro massif in Western Mongolia

AU - Shapovalova, M.

AU - Tolstykh, N.

AU - Shelepaev, R.

AU - Cherdantseva, M.

PY - 2018/1/3

Y1 - 2018/1/3

N2 - The Ortsog-Uul mafic-ultramafic massif of Western Mongolia is located in a tectonic block with overturned bedding. The massif hosts two intrusions: a rhythmically-layered peridotite-gabbro association (Intrusion 1) and massive Bt-bearing amphibole-olivine gabbro (Intrusion 2). Intrusions 1 and 2 have different petrology features. Early Intrusion 1 (278±2.5Ma) is characterized by lower concentrations of alkalis, titanium and phosphorus than late Intrusion 2 (272±2Ma). The chondrite-normalized REE and primitive mantle-normalized rare elements patterns of Ortsog-Uul intrusions have similar curves of elements distribution. However, Intrusion 2 is characterized higher contents of REE and rare elements. High concentrations of incompatible elements are indicative of strong fractionation process. It has been suggested that Intrusions 1 and 2 derived from compositionally different parental melts. Model calculations (COMAGMAT-3.57) show that parental melts of two intrusions were close to high-Mg picrobasaltic magmas. The concentration of MgO in melt is 16.21 (Intrusion 1) and 16.17 (Intrusion 2). Isotopic data of Ortsog-Uul magmatic rocks exhibit different values of ϵNd (positive and negative) for Intrusion 1 and 2, respectively.

AB - The Ortsog-Uul mafic-ultramafic massif of Western Mongolia is located in a tectonic block with overturned bedding. The massif hosts two intrusions: a rhythmically-layered peridotite-gabbro association (Intrusion 1) and massive Bt-bearing amphibole-olivine gabbro (Intrusion 2). Intrusions 1 and 2 have different petrology features. Early Intrusion 1 (278±2.5Ma) is characterized by lower concentrations of alkalis, titanium and phosphorus than late Intrusion 2 (272±2Ma). The chondrite-normalized REE and primitive mantle-normalized rare elements patterns of Ortsog-Uul intrusions have similar curves of elements distribution. However, Intrusion 2 is characterized higher contents of REE and rare elements. High concentrations of incompatible elements are indicative of strong fractionation process. It has been suggested that Intrusions 1 and 2 derived from compositionally different parental melts. Model calculations (COMAGMAT-3.57) show that parental melts of two intrusions were close to high-Mg picrobasaltic magmas. The concentration of MgO in melt is 16.21 (Intrusion 1) and 16.17 (Intrusion 2). Isotopic data of Ortsog-Uul magmatic rocks exhibit different values of ϵNd (positive and negative) for Intrusion 1 and 2, respectively.

KW - MANTLE

KW - EVOLUTION

KW - BASALTS

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85040734152&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1088/1755-1315/110/1/012020

DO - 10.1088/1755-1315/110/1/012020

M3 - Conference article

AN - SCOPUS:85040734152

VL - 110

JO - IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science

JF - IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science

SN - 1755-1307

IS - 1

M1 - 012020

ER -

ID: 12081151