Abstract
Regionally metamorphosed, Neoproterozoic stratiform baryte deposits near Aberfeldy in the Grampian Highlands of Scotland, UK, contain barium-poor and barium-rich micas in the host rocks and mineralized strata, respectively. The barium-rich micas include muscovite, biotite, phlogopite, and chromium-bearing muscovite. They occur in schistose metasediments and metabasites, in barium-feldspar rocks, and in small amounts in baryte rock. An extensive study of micas in a range of lithologies using electron-probe micro-analysis found up to 10.86 wt% BaO in muscovite, 5.46 wt% in biotite, and 15.70 wt% in Ba-Cr muscovite, the latter containing up to 9.27 wt% Cr2O3. Compositions are comparable with Ba- and Ba-Cr-micas in other metamorphosed Sedimentary Exhalative deposits and barium-rich metasediments worldwide. In one baryte rock sample, disseminated crystals of an exotic Ba-V-Cr mica contain up to 12.33 wt% BaO and 10.82 wt% V2O3, compositionally similar to Ba-V micas in the Hemlo lode gold deposit, Ontario. Ba2+ incorporation is mainly by coupled substitution with Al3+ for K+ + Si4+ in the tetrahedral site. The extent of phengitic (Tschermakitic) substitution is typical of micas in amphibolite-facies metasediments. Similar Fe:Mg ratios in coexisting muscovite and biotite reflect partitioning of iron into sulphides and metamorphic equilibration, with rare exceptions in fine-grained rocks that exhibit millimetre-scale disequilibrium.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 511 |
Number of pages | 25 |
Journal | Minerals |
Volume | 15 |
Issue number | 5 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 13 May 2025 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2025 by the author.
Keywords
- barian mica
- Ba-Cr mica
- Ba-V mica
- barium feldspar
- metamorphosed SEDEX deposit
- stratiform baryte