• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Sapphires related to alkali basalts from the Cerová Highlands, Western Carpathians (southern Slovakia): composition and origin
  • Contributor: Uher, Pavel; Giuliani, Gaston; Szakáll, Sándor; Fallick, Anthony; Strunga, Vladimír; Vaculovič, Tomáš; Ozdín, Daniel; Gregáňová, Margaréta
  • imprint: Central Library of the Slovak Academy of Sciences, 2012
  • Published in: Geologica Carpathica
  • Language: Not determined
  • DOI: 10.2478/v10096-012-0005-7
  • ISSN: 1336-8052; 1335-0552
  • Keywords: Geology
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: <jats:title>Sapphires related to alkali basalts from the Cerová Highlands, Western Carpathians (southern Slovakia): composition and origin</jats:title><jats:p>Blue, grey-pink and pink sapphires from the Cerová Highlands, Western Carpathians (southern Slovakia) have been studied using CL, LA-ICP-MS, EMPA, and oxygen isotope methods. The sapphire occurs as (1) clastic heavy mineral in the secondary sandy filling of a Pliocene alkali basaltic maar at Hajnáčka, and (2) crystals in a pyroxenebearing syenite/anorthoclasite xenolith of Pleistocene alkali basalt near Gortva. Critical evaluation of compositional diagrams (Fe, Ti, Cr, Ga, Mg contents, Fe/Ti, Cr/Ga, Ga/Mg ratios) suggests a magmatic origin for clastic blue sapphires with lower Cr and Mg, but higher Fe and Ti concentrations in comparison to the grey-pink and pink varietes, as well as similar compositional trends with blue sapphire from the Gortva magmatic xenolith. Moreover, blue sapphires show similar δ<jats:sup>18</jats:sup>O values: 5.1 ‰ in the Gortva xenolith, 3.8 and 5.85 ‰ in the Hajnáčka placer, closely comparable to mantle to lower crustal magmatic rocks. On the contrary, pink and grey-pink sapphires show higher Cr and Mg, but lower Fe and Ti contents and their composition points to a metamorphic (metasomatic) origin.</jats:p>
  • Access State: Open Access