Idiomorphic oikocrysts of clinopyroxene produced by a peritectic reaction within a solidification front of the Bushveld Complex

2021 
Orthopyroxenite cumulates throughout the Critical Zone of the Bushveld Complex commonly contain prominent euhedral crystals of bottle-green augite, typically around 1 cm in size and surrounded by “haloes” of nearly pure plagioclase. On close examination, the augite grains can be seen to be oikocrysts, containing extensively resorbed chadacrysts of orthopyroxene, indicating an effective peritectic reaction relationship between the two pyroxenes. A detailed textural study of one such layer from the UG3 Unit in the Eastern Bushveld reveals some distinctive grain-scale features, including the presence of extensively 3D-interconnected chains of thousands of cumulus chromite grains that surround the orthopyroxene grains and extend through the augite oikocrysts. The high degree of interconnectivity is remarkable in view of the relatively low (5 vol.%) modal proportion of chromite in the sample. Other noteworthy features include zoning of the oikocrysts towards higher incompatible element contents in the rims and the presence of the plagioclase haloes around the augite oikocrysts. These haloes are essentially narrow zones devoid of orthopyroxene inclusions developed within large plagioclase oikocrysts that overgrow all the other phases. We propose a mechanism whereby the plagioclase oikocrysts grow early in communication with the main magma body within an initial crystal mush of orthopyroxene and chain-textured chromite. The clinopyroxene oikocrysts grew in the remaining pore space in such a way that dissolution of orthopyroxene occurred within a narrow few-mm wide chemical boundary layer ahead of the advancing oikocryst margin. The relative rates of crystallisation and dissolution were controlled by limited chemical diffusion through the boundary layer such that orthopyroxene grains more than a few grain diameters away showed no reaction at all. The plagioclase haloes developed as a result of continuing growth of the plagioclase oikocrysts to overtake the growing pyroxene oikocrysts, locking in the orthopyroxene-depleted boundary layer, and preserving euhedral cumulus morphologies away from the pyroxene oikocrysts. This texture represents a circumstance whereby oikocrysts in the same rock develop at different overlapping stages: plagioclase oikocrysts forming early in diffusive connection with the magma column, and clinopyroxene forming peritectic poikilitic textures within residual liquid pockets chemically isolated from the overlying magma body.
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