Volume 91, Issue 3 pp. 882-897
Original Articles
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Discovery and Significance of Diamonds and Moissanites in Chromitite within the Skenderbeu Massif of the Mirdita Zone Ophiolite, West Albania

Weiwei WU

Weiwei WU

CARMA, State Key Laboratory for Continental Tectonics and Dynamics, Institute of Geology, Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences, Beijing 100037 China

School of Earth Sciences, China University of Geosciences (Wuhan), Wuhan 430074 China

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Jingsui YANG

Corresponding Author

Jingsui YANG

CARMA, State Key Laboratory for Continental Tectonics and Dynamics, Institute of Geology, Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences, Beijing 100037 China

School of Earth Sciences, China University of Geosciences (Wuhan), Wuhan 430074 China

Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
Changqian MA

Changqian MA

School of Earth Sciences, China University of Geosciences (Wuhan), Wuhan 430074 China

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Ibrahim MILUSHI

Ibrahim MILUSHI

Department of Geoscience & Geoenvironment, Energy, Water & Environment, Polytechnic University of Tirana, Tirana 1000 Albania

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Dongyang LIAN

Dongyang LIAN

CARMA, State Key Laboratory for Continental Tectonics and Dynamics, Institute of Geology, Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences, Beijing 100037 China

School of Earth Sciences, China University of Geosciences (Wuhan), Wuhan 430074 China

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Yazhou TIAN

Yazhou TIAN

College of Resources and Environmental Engineering, Guizhou University, Guiyang 550025 China

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First published: 05 July 2017
Citations: 19

About the first author:

WU Weiwei, Male, born in 1989 in Shiyan city, Hubei Province, PhD candidate, student of Academy of Geological Sciences and China University of Geosciences, Wuhan. His research interests focus on ophiolite and chromitite.

Email: [email protected]; phone: 15072469354.

Abstract

In recent years diamonds and other unusual minerals (carbides, nitrides, metal alloys and native elements) have been recovered from mantle peridotites and chromitites (both high–Cr chromitites and high–Al chromitites) from a number of ophiolites of different ages and tectonic settings. Here we report a similar assemblage of minerals from the Skenderbeu massif of the Mirdita zone ophiolite, west Albania. So far, more than 20 grains of microdiamonds and 30 grains of moissanites (SiC) have been separated from the podiform chromitite. The diamonds are mostly light yellow, transparent, euhedral crystals, 200–300 μm across, with a range of morphologies; some are octahedral and cuboctahedron and others are elongate and irregular. Secondary electron images show that some grains have well–developed striations. All the diamond grains have been analyzed and yielded typical Raman spectra with a shift at ∼1325 cm−1. The moissanite grains recovered from the Skenderbeu chromitites are mainly light blue to dark blue, but some are yellow to light yellow. All the analyzed grains have typical Raman spectra with shifts at 766 cm−1, 787 cm−1, and 967 cm−1. The energy spectrums of the moissanites confirm that the grains are composed entirely of silicon and carbon. This investigation expands the occurrence of diamonds and moissanites to Mesozoic ophiolites in the Neo–Tethys. Our new findings suggest that diamonds and moissanites are present, and probably ubiquitous in the oceanic mantle and can provide new perspectives and avenues for research on the origin of ophiolites and podiform chromitites.

 

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