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Rare Earth, Major and Trace Elements in the Kunimiyama Ferromanganese Deposit in the Northern Chichibu Belt, Central Shikoku, Japan
Authors:Yasuhiro Kato    Koichiro Fujinaga  Tatsuo Nozaki    Kentaro Nakamura    Ryuji Ono  Hiroshi Osawa
Institution:Department ofGeosystem Engineering, University of Tokyo, 7–3 -1 Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113–8 656, Japan [e-mail: ];Department of Resources and Environmental Engineering, School of Science and Engineering, Waseda University, Tokyo 169–8555, Japan;Institute for Research on Earth Evolution (IFREE), Japan Agency for Marine - Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC), Yokosuka 237–0061, Japan;Kurashiki City Government, 640 Nishinakashinden, Kurashiki City, Okayama 710–8 565, Japan
Abstract:Abstract. Rare earth, major and trace element geochemistry is reported for the Kunimiyama stratiform ferromanganese deposit in the Northern Chichibu Belt, central Shikoku, Japan. The deposit immediately overlies greenstones of mid-ocean ridge basalt (MORB) origin and underlies red chert. The ferromanganese ores exhibit remarkable enrichments in Fe, Mn, P, V, Co, Ni, Zn, Y and rare earth elements (excepting Ce) relative to continental crustal abundance. These enriched elements/ Fe ratios and Post-Archean Average Australian Shale-normalized REE patterns of the ferromanganese ores are generally analogous to those of modern hydrothermal ferromanganese plume fall-out precipitates deposited on MOR flanks. However in more detail, Mn and Ti enrichments in the ferromanganese ores are more striking than the modern counterpart, suggesting a significant contribution of hydrogenetic component in the Kunimiyama ores. Our results are consistent with the interpretation that the Kunimiyama ores were umber deposits that primarily formed by hydrothermal plume fall-out precipitation in the Panthalassa Ocean during the Early Permian and then accreted onto the proto-Japanese island arc during the Middle Jurassic. The presence of strong negative Ce anomaly in the Kunimiyama ores may indicate that the Early Permian Panthalassa seawater had a more striking negative Ce anomaly due to a more oxidizing oceanic condition than today.
Keywords:geochemistry  ferromanganese deposit  hydrothermal  accretionary complex  mid-ocean ridge (MOR)  Permian
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