The Canadian Mineralogist
Volume 34, pages 559-576 (1996)
CRYPTIC TRACE-ELEMENT ALTERATION OF ANORTHOSITE, STILLWATER COMPLEX, MONTANA
GERALD K. CZAMANSKE
U.S. Geological Survey, M.S. 984, 345 Middlefield Road, Menlo Park, California 94025, U.S.A.
PATRICIA J. LOFERSKI
U.S. Geological Survey, M.S. 954, Reston, Virginia 22092, U.S.A.
Abstract
Evidence of cryptic alteration and correlations among K, Ba, and LREE concentrations indicate that a post-cumulus, low-density aqueous fluid phase
significantly modified the trace-element contents of samples from Anorthosite zones I and II of the Stillwater Complex, Montana. Concentrations of
Ba, Ca, Co, Cr, Cu, Fe, Hf, K, Li, Mg, Mn, Na, Ni, Sc, Sr, Th, Zn, and the rare-earth elements (REE) were measured in whole rocks and plagioclase
separates from five traverses across the two main plagioclase cumulate (anorthosite) zones and the contiguous cumulates of the Stillwater Complex in
an attempt to better understand the origin and solidification of the anorthosites. However, nearly the entire observed compositional range for many
trace elements can be duplicated at a single locality by discriminating between samples rich in oikocrystic pyroxene and those which are composed
almost entirely of plagioclase and show anhedral-granular texture. Plagioclase separates with high trace-element contents were obtained from the
pyroxene-poor samples, for which maps of K concentration show plagioclase grains to contain numerous fractures hosting a fine-grained, K-rich
phase, presumed to be sericite. Secondary processes in layered intrusions have the potential to cause cryptic disturbance, and the utmost care
must be taken to ensure that samples provide information about primary processes. Although plagioclase from Anorthosite zones I and II shows
significant compositional variation, there are no systematic changes in the major- or trace-element compositions of plagioclase over as much as
630 m of anorthosite thickness or 18 km of strike length. Plagioclase in the two major anorthosite zones shows little distinction in trace-element
concentrations from plagioclase in the cumulates immediately below, between, and above these zones.