Abstract
Magmatic products of the Karoo Large Igneous Province can be divided
into a volumetrically dominant, compositionally uniform low-Ti
tholeiitic suite, and a subordinate, geographically restricted,
compositionally diverse, incompatible-rich high-Ti suite. High-Ti
picrites contain up to 2400 ppm Sr, 1900 ppm Ba and 550 ppm Zr, which
seems unusual for olivine-enriched mafic rocks. We studied six Karoo
picrites to determine the phase(s) in which Sr resides. Samples consist
of 10–30% olivine phenocrysts in a groundmass of brown glass, augite,
feldspar, ilmenite and apatite. Glass compositions vary, but are
generally evolved, ranging from basaltic trachyandesite to trachyte to
dacite. X-ray intensity maps demonstrate that most of the Sr resides in
the glasses, and to a lesser extent, in feldspars, if present. The
highest Sr (up to 9470 ppm) occurs in glasses adjacent to euhedral
olivines, suggesting that phenocrysts are genetically related to evolved
liquids represented by surrounding groundmasses. Compositional arrays
formed by whole rocks (WRs) and bulk groundmasses represent liquid lines
of descent. Calculated parental melts have much higher KO and
incompatible trace elements (e.g. Sr or Ba >1200 ppm)
relative to low-Ti tholeiites. Fractional crystallization modelling
yields evolved residual liquid compositions corresponding to those of
glasses, and closely follow liquid evolution predicted by mass balance
calculations involving mineral and bulk groundmass compositions. The
unusual parental melt compositions imply derivation by small degrees of
partial melting from SCLM mantle sources enriched in Sr and other
incompatibles, and suggest a possible petrogenetic link between the
high-Ti Karoo magmas and carbonatites and kimberlites.