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Journal ArticleDOI

A general equation for estimating Fe3+ concentrations in ferromagnesian silicates and oxides from microprobe analyses, using stoichiometric criteria

G. T. R. Droop
- 01 Sep 1987 - 
- Vol. 51, Iss: 361, pp 431-435
TLDR
In this article, a simple general equation is presented for estimating the Fe 3 § concentrations in ferromagnesian oxide and silicate minerals from microprobe analyses, assuming that iron is the only element present with variable valency.
Abstract
A simple general equation is presented for estimating the Fe 3 § concentrations in ferromagnesian oxide and silicate minerals from microprobe analyses. The equation has been derived using stoichiometric criteria assuming that iron is the only element present with variable valency and that oxygen is the only anion. In general, the number of Fe 3 + ions per X oxygens in the mineral formula, F, is given by; F = 2X(1 - T/S) where T is the ideal number of cations per formula unit, and S is the observed cation total per X oxygens calculated assuming all iron to be Fe 2 § Minerals for which this equation is appropriate include pyralspite and ugrandite garnet, aluminate spinel, magnetite, pyroxene, sapphirine and ilmenite. The equation cannot be used for minerals with cation vacancies (e.g. micas, maghemite) unless, as in the case of amphiboles, the number of ions of a subset of elements in the formula can be fixed. Variants of the above equation are presented for some of the numerous published schemes for the recalculation of amphibole formulae. The equation is also inappropriate for minerals showing SP += 4H § substitution (e.g. staurolite, hydrogarnet), minerals containing an unknown proportion of an unanalysed element other than oxygen (e.g. boron-bearing kornerupine) and minerals containing two or more elements with variable valency.

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Citations
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Discovery of granulite-facies metamorphic rocks in the Ji’an area, northeastern Jiao–Liao–Ji Belt, North China Craton: Metamorphic P–T evolution and geological implications

TL;DR: In this article, a clockwise P-T path involving near-isothermal decompression and decompressional cooling that followed the peak granulite-facies metamorphism was revealed.
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Blueschist and eclogite in tectonic melange, Port Macquarie, New South Wales, Australia

TL;DR: The Rocky Beach Metamorphic Melange contains metre-scale phacoids of high-P low-T metamorphic rocks embedded in chlorite-actinolite schist as discussed by the authors.
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Alteration paragenesis and mineral chemistry of the Tjårrojåkka apatite-iron and Cu (-Au) occurrences, Kiruna area, northern Sweden

TL;DR: The Tjarrojakka-Cu mine in northern Sweden as mentioned in this paper is a typical apatite-iron ore of Kiruna-type and the copper occurrence shows the same characteristics as most other epigenetic deposits in Norrbotten.
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Rare earth and high field strength element partitioning between iron-rich clinopyroxenes and felsic liquids

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that the ionic radius of Fe2+ in sixfold coordination is substantially greater than that of Mg2+; hence, in Fe-rich clinopyroxenes, heavy REE are significantly partitioned between eightfold Ca sites and sixfold Fe and Mg sites such that Yb and Lu exist dominantly in 6fold coordination.
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Diopside phenocrysts from nephelinite lavas, Napak Volcano, eastern Uganda; evidence for magma mixing

TL;DR: Samples of olivine nephelinite from Napakvolcano,eastern Uganda, containtwo populations of clinopyroxenephenocrysts, one chromian and the othertitanium-bearing aluminian diopside as mentioned in this paper.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The iron-titanium oxides of salic volcanic rocks and their associated ferromagnesian silicates

TL;DR: In this article, the coexisting microphenocrysts of magnetite and ilmenite together with the ferromagnesian silicates in salic volcanic rocks have been analyzed with the electron microprobe.
Journal ArticleDOI

Omphacite in Californian metamorphic rocks

TL;DR: Omphacite is a common mineral in greenstones, metasediments and related Franciscan rocks of the glaucophane schist facies as discussed by the authors, and it also occurs in late veins cutting amphibolites, glaucaphane schists, eclogites, greenstones and occasionally metagraywackes.
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