The University foidolite-gabbro pluton is located among the Cambrian carbonate-volcanogenic deposits. Its composition is dominated by moderately-alkaline and alkaline mafic rocks, broken by dikes of ijolite-urtites, nepheline and alkaline syenites. The chemical composition of igneous rocks is characterized by low silica contents (SiO2 = 41–49 wt. %), wide variations of alkalinity (Na2O + K2O = 3–19 wt. %; Na2O / K2O = 1.2–7.2 wt. %), low titanium content (TiO2 = 0.07 1.59 wt. %) and high alumina content (Al2O3 = 15–28 wt. %), which corresponds to the K-Na derivatives of the basic alkaline formation. By the content of rare earth elements, alkaline rocks (104–246 ppm; La/Yb(n) = 5.79–12.73) are more differentiated derivatives than gabbro (94–111 ppm; La/Yb(n) = 6.87‑6.95). All varieties are characterized by low concentrations of most highly charged elements (Nb, Ta, Zr, Hf + Y), which in terms of accumulation are located between the basalts of oceanic islands and basalts of island arcs. The presence of negative Nb–Ta anomaly and the relative enrichment of Rb, Ba, Sr, and U indicate the probable interaction of plume material with previously formed accretionary complexes of subduction zones. The primary isotope 87Sr/86Sr ratio (~ 0.705 – 0.706) and a wide range of εNd (T) from +3.2 to +8.7 in the rocks also indicate a mantle-crustal nature and a complex geodynamic setting of the Paleozoic alkaline magmatism of the Kuznetsk Alatau. The obtained results of Sm‑Nd dating suggest the formation of moderately-alkaline gabbroids in the Early Paleozoic (494–491 ± 36 Ma), with the intrusion of dikes of alkaline rocks of the Middle Paleozoic age (394 ± 16 and 389 ± 37 Ma).
Geological, geochemical and ground magnetic techniques are used to characterize the University alkaline-gabbroid pluton and crosscutting N-S trending alkaline dikes, located northeast of the Kuznetsk Alatau ridge, Siberia. Trace element concentrations and isotopic compositions of the igneous units were determined by XRF, ICP-MS and isotope analysis. The Sm-Nd age of subalkaline (melanogabbro, leucogabbro 494–491 Ma) intrusive phases and crosscutting alkaline dikes (plagioclase ijolite, analcime syenite 392–389 Ma) suggests two stages of activity, likely representing separate events. The subalkaline and alkaline rocks are characterized by low silicic acidity (SiO2 = 41–49 wt %), wide variations in alkalinity (Na2O + K2O = 3–19 wt %; Na2O/K2O = 1.2–7.2 wt %), high alumina content (Al2O3 = 15–28 wt %) and low titanium content (TiO2 = 0.07–1.59 wt %). The new trace element data for subalkaline rocks (∑REE 69–280 ppm; La/Yb 3.7–10.2) of the University pluton and also the crosscutting younger (390 Ma) alkaline dikes (∑REE 10–1567 ppm; La/Yb 0.7–17.8 ppm) both reflect an intermediate position between oceanic island basalts (OIBs) and island arc basalts (IABs). The presence of a negative Nb–Ta anomaly and the relative enrichment in Rb, Ba, Sr, and U indicate a probable interaction of mantle plume material with the lithospheric mantle beneath previously formed accretion complexes of subduction zones. The isotopic signatures of strontium (εSr(T) +3.13–+28.31) and neodymium (εNd(T) +3.2–+8.7) demonstrate the evolution of parental magmas from a plume source from moderately depleted PREMA mantle, whose derivatives underwent selective crustal contamination.
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