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Journal of Petrology 2004 45(6):1209-1235; doi:10.1093/petrology/egh011
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Journal of Petrology 45(6) © Oxford University Press 2004; all rights reserved

The Lower Zone–Critical Zone Transition of the Bushveld Complex: a Quantitative Textural Study

SONJA BOORMAN1, ALAN BOUDREAU1,* and F. J. KRUGER2

1 103 OLD CHEMISTRY BLDG, DUKE UNIVERSITY, DURHAM, NC 27708, USA
2 HUGH ALLSOPP LABORATORIES, WITS, JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA

* Corresponding author. E-mail: boudreau{at}duke.edu

The Lower Zone–Critical Zone boundary of the Bushveld Complex is an intrusion-wide, major stratigraphic transition from ultramafic harzburgite and pyroxenite in the Lower Zone to increasingly plagioclase-rich pyroxenites and norites in the Critical Zone. Quantitative textural and compositional data for 29 samples through this transition show the following: Lower Zone orthopyroxene grains are larger, have higher aspect ratios, are better foliated and have a lower trapped liquid component than those of the Critical Zone. The larger grain size of the Lower Zone results in crystal size distribution plots that are rotated to lower slopes and intercepts relative to those in the Critical Zone. Although all rocks show differing amounts of foliation, mineral lineations are weak to absent. These data are consistent with significant compaction-driven recrystallization in the study section. Numerical modeling of concurrent compaction and crystallization provides a quantitative model of how the Lower Zone–Critical Zone transition may have formed: plagioclase is rare in the Lower Zone because compaction removes interstitial liquid before it reaches plagioclase saturation. However, as the crystal pile grows, plagioclase saturation is reached in the interstitial liquid before compaction is complete in more evolved pyroxenites, producing more abundant but still modest amounts of plagioclase characteristic of the Lower Critical Zone. It is concluded that both the textures and the modal mineralogy are largely controlled by compaction and compaction-driven recrystallization; primary magmatic textures are not preserved.

KEY WORDS: Bushveld Complex; compaction; crystal size distributions; crystal aging; igneous textures


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