Volume 26, Issue No. 1, 2001
Himanshu K. Sachan*
*Wadia Institute of Himalayan Geology, Dehra Dun-248001, India (e-mail: petrology@sancharnet.in).
Keywords: Mineral chemistry, SSZ Ophiolite, Nidar Ophiolite. Ladakh, India.
ABSTRACT
The ultramafic rocks
of Nidar ophiolitic sequence in the eastern part of the Ladakh (NW Himalaya)
have been studied combining petrography and mineral chemistry data. The
ultramafic rocks mainly consist of spinel-harzburgite and spinel-dunite,
that are intruded by spinel-bearing pyroxenites. The modal and chemical
composition of minerals in harzburgite indicates a strongly-depleted nature
consistent with a residual origin after the extraction of basaltic melt
by single or multiple partial melting events. In contrast, dunite was probably
formed as a consequence of interaction between harzburgite and migrating
melt(s), after the partial melting events. This is well corroborated by
the petrographical and chemical evidence, e.g., the growth of secondary
mineral aggregates and the large chromite component in the spinels.
The mineral chemistry suggests that
the melts percolating and interacting with harzburgite were rich in MgO
and NiO and deficient in CaO, Al2O3, and TiO2.
In particular, the low Ti content shown by clinopyroxenes and spinels (which
are cumulus phases in pyroxenites and secondary neoblastic phases in peridotites),
in association with high Cr# (> 60) exhibited by all the spinels, are consistent
with parent melt of boninitic affinity. These melts are typical of island
arc environment. Therefore, this infers that the ultramafic units of Nidar
ophiolite underwent melt percolation in a supra-subduction tectonic environment
related to fore-arc setting.