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Oldhamite-dominated lithic clasts represent a new igneous
lithology of the aubrite parent body. They contain single
crystals of oldhamite up to 2 cm in size, with inclusions of
ferromagnesian alabandite, troilite, daubreelite,
caswellsilverite, and Fe,Ni metal; they are usually in
intimate contact with a silicate portion consisting of
enstatite, forsterite, and / or plagioclase. Textural
evidence for igneous origin includes apparent primary
igneous grain boundaries between oldhamite and forsterite,
coarse grain size, and the presence of round, droplet-like
Mn-Fe-Mg-Cr-Na sulfide inclusions within oldhamite which
appear to represent an immiscible sulfide liquid. We propose
that the oldhamite-dominated lithology formed during the
melting and fractionation of enstatite chondrite-like
precursor material and represents a locally CaS-rich facies.
During melting, two mutually immiscible sulfide liquids - a
Ca sulfide and a Mg-Fe- Mn-Cr-Na sulfide - formed in the
silicate magma. Upon cooling, the immiscible sulfides
crystallized, forming large oldhamite crystals containing
inclusions of Mg-Fe- Mn-Cr-Na-bearing sulfides; forsterite,
enstatite, and plagioclase crystallized from the surrounding
silicate melt. At subsolidus temperatures, tiny
ferromagnesian alabandite crystals exsolved from oldhamite.
REE abundances in oldhamite are high (about 200 x CI), but
REE patterns are nearly identical within single crystals and
from clast to clast, indicating equilibrium conditions. High
REE abundances have been cited as evidence that oldhamite
grains in aubrites are nebular relics. However, we find it
difficult to imagine that the rather homogeneous REE
patterns of oldhamite in the oldhamite- dominated lithology
of Norton County are not the result of equilibration of the
REEs with a silicate melt during formation of the igneous
aubrites through parent body melting, differentiation,
fractionation, and cooling, where peak temperatures of
around 1450-1500°C must have been reached. We conclude
that oldhamite in the oldhamite- dominated lithology of
Norton County is of igneous origin and that its REE
abundances were established by equilibration with the
aubrite silicate melt.
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