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The Mineralogy and Petrology of Mount Suswa, Kenya
Authors:NASH  W P; CARMICHAEL  I S E; JOHNSON  R W
Institution:Department of Geology and Geophysics, University of California Berkely, California 94720
Abstract:Mount Suswa, a Quaternary volcano in the Rift Valley of Kenya,is composed of sodalite-trachytes, sodalite-phonolites, andphonolites, the majority of which are mildly peralkaline. Thelavas are predominantly feldspathic with phenocrysts of alkalifeldspar and, less commonly, slightly sodic augite and fayaliticolivine. The groundmass typically contains alkali feldspar,augite, titanomagnetite, and may in addition contain sodalite,nepheline, alkali amphibole, aenigmatite, and glass. The lavasof four stratigraphically distinct episodes can be distinguishedon the basis of mineralogy and chemical composition. These lavasare the products of at least three parental magmas, none ofwhich appears to be a derivative of the other. Each ‘magmatype’ represents an independent episode of magma generation,emplacement, and eruption. The order of eruption in the finalepisode corresponds to increasing peralkalinity and undersaturationwith respect to silica, and indicates that these lavas weregenerated via the tapping of a differentiating magma, with thefirst lavas being the least differentiated. Utilizing coexistingfeldspar, residual glass, and bulk rock compositions, the derivationof peralkaline phonolitic residual liquids from a trachyticparent is shown to be a process controlled by feldspar fractionation.
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