“…Excluding the oceanic setting, such as propagating spreading centers at mid-ocean ridges (Clague et al, 1981;Perfit and Fornari, 1983;Sinton et al, 1983) and in back-arc basins (Pearce et al, 1994;Harper, 2003), several studies have demonstrated that high Fe-Ti basic igneous rocks are also generated in continental settings, such as in the Afar Rift of Ethiopia (Barberi et al, 1975) and in the northern and southern sections of the Red Sea Rift (Juteau et al, 1983;Cocherie et al, 1994). Moreover, most of the Fe-Ti-rich compositions are found in plutonic environments and only rare cases are known for erupted rocks (Clague et al, 1981;Perfit and Fornari, 1983;Sinton et al, 1983;Hunter and Sparks, 1987;Pearce et al, 1994;Hooper, 2000;Harper, 2003;Zhang et al, 2012). Some of these intrusions host world class Fe-Ti oxide deposits, such as the Skaergaard Intrusion in East Greenland (e.g., Nielsen, 2004;Jakobsen et al, 2005Jakobsen et al, , 2011, the Sept Iles layered intrusion in Canada (e.g., Namur et al, 2011), the Bushveld Complex in South Africa (e.g., VanTongeren and Mathez, 2012), the Panzhihua intrusive complex in southwestern China (e.g., Zhou et al, 2005Zhou et al, , 2008a and the Damiao complex in North China (e.g., Zhao et al, 2009).…”