Everything about Kimberlite totally explained
Kimberlite is a type of igneous
rock best known for sometimes containing
diamonds. It is named after the town of
Kimberley in
South Africa, where the discovery of an 83.5 carat diamond in 1871 spawned a diamond rush, eventually creating the
Big Hole.
Kimberlite occurs in the Earth's
crust in vertical structures known as kimberlite pipes. Kimberlite pipes are the most important source of mined diamonds today. The general consensus reached on kimberlites is that they're formed deep within the mantle, at between 150 and 450 kilometres depth, from anomalously enriched exotic mantle compositions, and are erupted rapidly and violently, often with considerable
carbon dioxide and other
volatile components. It is this depth of melting and generation which makes kimberlites prone to hosting diamond
xenocrysts.
Kimberlite has in many ways attracted more attention than its relative volume might suggest that it deserves. This is largely because it serves as a carrier of diamonds and garnet
peridotite mantle xenoliths to the Earth's surface. Furthermore, its probable derivation from depths greater than any other
igneous rock type, and the extreme
magma composition that it reflects in terms of low
silica content and high levels of incompatible
trace element enrichment, make an understanding of kimberlite
petrogenesis important. In this regard, the study of kimberlite has the potential to provide valuable information on the composition of the deep mantle, and melting processes occurring at or near the interface between the
cratonic continental
lithosphere and the underlying convecting
asthenospheric mantle.
Morphology and volcanology
Kimberlites occur as carrot shaped, vertical intrusions termed dykes or diatremes. This classic carrot shape is due to a large proportion of both CO
2 and H
2O in the system which produces a deep explosive boiling stage and produces a significant amount of vertical flaring (Bergman, 1987). Kimberlite classification is based on the recognition of differing rock facies. These differing facies are associated with a particular style of magmatic activity, namely crater, diatreme and hypabyssal rocks (Clement and Skinner 1985, and Clement, 1982).
The morphology of kimberlite pipes, and the classical carrot shape, is the result of explosive
diatreme volcanism from very deep
mantle derived sources. These volcanic explosions produce vertical columns of rock that rise from deep magma reservoirs. The morphology of kimberlite pipes is varied but generally includes a sheeted dyke complex of tabular, vertically dipping feeder dykes in the root of the pipe which extends down to the mantle. Within 1.5-2 km of the surface the highly pressured magma explodes upwards and expands to form a conical to cylindrical
diatreme, which erupts to the surface. The surface expression is rarely preserved but is usually similar to a maar volcano. The diameter of a kimberlite pipe at the surface is typically a few hundred meters to a kilometer.
Two
Jurassic kimberlite
dikes exist in
Pennsylvania. One, the Gates-Adah Dike, outcrops on the
Monongahela River on the border of
Fayette and
Greene Counties. The other, the Dixonville-Tanoma Dike in central
Indiana County, doesn't outcrop at the surface and was discovered by miners.
Petrology
Both the location and origin of kimberlitic magmas are areas of contention. Their extreme enrichment and geochemistry has led to a large amount of speculation about their origin, with models placing their source within the sub-continental lithospheric mantle (SCLM) or even as deep as the transition zone. The mechanism of enrichment has also been the topic of interest with models including partial melting, assimilation of subducted sediment or derivation from a primary magma source.
Historically, kimberlites have been subdivided into two distinct varieties termed 'basaltic' and 'micaceous' based primarily on petrographic observations (Wagner, 1914). This was later revised by Smith (1983) who re-named these divisions Group I and Group II based on the isotopic affinities of these rocks using the Nd, Sr and Pb systems. Mitchell (1995) later proposed that these group I and II kimberlites display such distinct differences, that they may not be as closely related as once thought. He showed that Group II kimberlites actually show closer affinities to lamproites than they do to Group I kimberlites. Hence, he reclassified Group II kimberlites as orangeites to prevent confusion.
Group I kimberlites
Group I kimberlites are of CO
2-rich ultramafic potassic igneous rocks dominated by a primary mineral assemblage of forsteritic olivine, magnesian ilmenite, chromian pyrope, almandine-pyrope, chromian diopside (in some cases subcalcic), phlogopite, enstatite and of Ti-poor chromite. Group I kimberlites exhibit a distinctive inequigranular texture cause by macrocrystic (0.5-10 mm) to megacrystic (10-200 mm) phenocrysts of olivine, pyrope, chromian diopside, magnesian ilmenite and phlogopite in a fine to medium grained groundmass.
The groundmass mineralogy, which more closely resembles a true composition of the igneous rock, contains forsteritic
olivine,
pyrope garnet, Cr-
diopside, magnesian
ilmenite and
spinel.
Group II kimberlites
Group-II kimberlites (or
orangeites) are
ultrapotassic,
peralkaline rocks rich in volatiles (dominantly H
2O). The distinctive characteristic of orangeites is
phlogopite macrocrysts and microphenocrysts, together with groundmass micas that vary in composition from phlogopite to "tetraferriphlogopite" (anomalously Fe-rich phlogopite). Resorbed olivine macrocrysts and euhedral primary crystals of groundmass olivine are common but not essential constituents.
Characteristic primary phases in the groundmass include: zoned pyroxenes (cores of diopside rimmed by Ti-aegirine); spinel-group minerals (magnesian
chromite to titaniferous
magnetite); Sr- and REE-rich
perovskite; Sr-rich
apatite; REE-rich phosphates (
monazite, daqingshanite); potassian barian
hollandite group minerals; Nb-bearing
rutile and Mn-bearing
ilmenite.
Kimberlitic indicator minerals
Kimberlites are peculiar igneous rocks because they contain a variety of mineral species with peculiar chemical compositions. These minerals such as potassic richterite, chromian diopside (a
pyroxene), chromium spinels, magnesian ilmenite, and garnets rich in
pyrope plus chromium are generally absent from most other igneous rocks, making them particularly useful as indicators for kimberlites.
These indicator minerals are generally sought in stream sediments in modern
alluvial material. Their presence, when found, may be indicative of the presence of a kimberlite within the erosional watershed which has produced the alluvium.
Geochemistry
The geochemistry of Kimberlites is defined by the following parameters;
- Ultramafic; MgO >12% and generally >15%
- Ultrapotassic; Molar K2O/Al2O3 >3
- Near-primitive Ni (>400 ppm), Cr (>1000 ppm), Co (>150 ppm)
- REE-enrichment
- Moderate to high LILE enrichment; ΣLILE = >1,000 ppm
- High H2O and CO2
Economic importance
Kimberlites are the most important source of primary
diamonds. Many kimberlite pipes also produce rich
alluvial or
eluvial diamond
placer deposits. However, only about 1 in 200 kimberlite pipes contain gem-quality diamonds.
The deposits occurring at
Kimberley,
South Africa were the first recognized and the source of the name. The Kimberley
diamonds were originally found in
weathered kimberlite which was colored yellow by
limonite, and so was called
yellow ground. Deeper workings encountered less altered rock,
serpentinized kimberlite, which miners call
blue ground.
See also
Udachnaya pipe.
Related rock types
Lamproite
Lamprophyre
Nepheline syenite
Ultrapotassic igneous rocks
Kalsititic rocksFurther Information
Get more info on 'Kimberlite'.
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