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Geochemical Constraints on Petrogenesis of Homrit Waggat Rare Metal Granite, Egypt

Research Authors
Hany H. El Hadek, Mohamed A. Mohamed, Galal H. El Habaak,Wagih W. Bishara, Kamal A. Ali
Research Abstract

The Homrit Waggat granite is a composite granite pluton intruded in metamorphosed
volcano-sedimentary association and the metagabbro-diorite complex to the east and
north and tonalite-granodiorite suite to the south and northeast. Mineralogically and
geochemically the granite phases change from subsolvus peraluminous granodiorite to
hypersolvus metaluminous and highly evolved alkali feldspar granite, passing through
biotite and mylonitized biotite granites. Late to post-magmatic processes are represented
by marginal stockscheider amazonite pegmatite, marginal amazonite albite as well as
greisen zone up to 30 m2. Increasing of SiO2, alkalis, Rb, F, Nb, Ta, Sn, Ga, HREEs and
Y, and decreasing of Fe, Al, Mg, Ca, Mn, Ti, Sr, Ba, Zr, and LREEs from the biotite
granodiorite to hypersolvus alkali feldspar granite reflects magmatic fractionation
processes of Homrit Waggat granite phases. LREEs fractionation patterns as well as
Eu anomalies decrease from granodiorite to the alkali feldspar granite and the latter
displays flat patterns. In the hypersolvus alkali feldspar granite, Ga/Al ratio is
typically of A-type granite, but not their Zr, Y, or Ce enrichments. In addition, the
hypersolvus granite is characterized by low-P2O5 and the LREEs>>HREEs
depletion which reflects the initial undersaturation of accessory mineral assemblage
that resulted from high concentration of volatiles and/or alkali complexes. The
behaviour of REEs and Zr in the mentioned phases is consistent with F- content as
well as accessory minerals in the studied granites. Trace elements pattern in the
spider diagram show significant depletion in Sr, Ba, P and Ti, and enrichment in
Rb, Th and U. The Sr, Ba, P and Ti depletion could be related to fractionation of
plagioclase, apatite and ilmenite. Zircon saturation temperature (Tzr) calculated from
bulk rock composition for Homrit Waggat granites range between 809°C and 765°C.
These values are consistent with low temperature granite which crystallized from a
source melt saturated with zirconium concentrations via partial melting of I- type granite
magma may be granodioritic in composition. The highly evolved alkali feldspar granite
was formed from the initial granodioritic I-type melt via fractional crystallization. F-rich
melt and F-complexing played an important role in the evolution and chemical
characterization of the highly evolved hypersolvus alkali feldspar granite. Four stages of
mineralization were detected in the Homrit Waggat granite. These stages are magmatic,
pegmatitic, metasomatic and veins. Columbite, cassiterite, fluorite as well as
undifferentiated rare earth minerals are detected.

Research Department
Research Journal
International Journal of Geophysics and Geochemistry
Research Publisher
American Association for Science and Technology
Research Rank
1
Research Vol
(4)3
Research Website
http://www.aascit.org/journal/ijgg
Research Year
2016
Research Pages
33-48