Are Cenozoic topaz rhyolites the erupted equivalents of Proterozoic
rapakivi granites? Examples from the western
United States and Finland
Eric H. Christiansen
a,
⁎
, Ilmari Haapala
b
, Garret L. Hart
c
a
Department of Geological Sciences, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah 84602, USA
b
Department of Geology, P.O. Box 64, FIN-00014, University of Helsinki, Finland
c
School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Washington State University, Pullman, WA 99164-2812, USA
Received 6 December 2005; accepted 25 January 2007
Available online 2 February 2007
Abstract
Eruptions of topaz rhyolites are a distinctive part of the late Cenozoic magmatic history of western North America. As many as
30 different eruptive centers have been identified in the western United States that range in age from 50 to 0.06 Ma. These rhyolite
lavas are characteristically enriched in fluorine (0.2 to 2 wt.% in glass) and lithophile trace elements, such as Be, Li, Rb, Cs, Ga, Y,
Nb, and Ta. REE patterns are typically flat with large negative Eu anomalies; negative Nb–Ta anomalies are small or nonexistent;
and F/Cl ratios in glasses are high (N 3). These features, together with high Fe/Mg ratios and usually low f O
2
, set them apart from
subduction-related (I-type) silicic rocks. The rhyolites are metaluminous to only slightly peraluminous, lack indicator minerals of
strongly peraluminous magmas, and have low P and B contents; these features set them apart from S-type silicic magmas. Instead,
topaz rhyolites have the major and trace element, mineralogic, and isotopic characteristics of aluminous A-type or within-plate
granites. Topaz rhyolites were formed during regional extension, lithospheric thinning, and high heat flow.
Topaz rhyolites of the western United States crystallized under subsolvus conditions, and have quartz, sanidine, and Na-
plagioclase as the principal phenocrysts. Fluorite is a common magmatic accessory, but magmatic topaz occurs only in a few
complexes; both are mineralogical indicators of F-enrichment. Many also crystallized at relatively low f O
2
(near QFM) and
contain mafic silicate minerals with high Fe/(Fe + Mg) ratios. Some crystallized at higher oxygen fugacities and are dominated by
magnetite and have titanite as an accessory mineral. Post-eruption vapor-phase minerals include topaz, garnet, red Fe–Mn-rich
beryl, bixbyite, pseudobrookite, and hematite. They are genetically related to deposits of Be, Mo, F, U, and Sn. Topaz rhyolites
erupted contemporaneously with a variety of other igneous rocks, but most typically they form bimodal associations with basalt or
basaltic andesite and are unrelated to large collapse calderas.
In their composition and mineralogy, topaz rhyolites are similar to the evolved members of rapakivi granite complexes,
especially those of Proterozoic age in southern Finland. This suggests similarity in origin and lessons learned from these rocks may
help us better understand the origins of their more ancient counterparts. For example, all topaz rhyolites in western North America
seem to be intrinsically related to extension following a regional period of subduction-related volcanism. Cratonized Precambrian
crust is found beneath almost all of them as well. Trace element models, Sr–Nd isotopic data, and geologic associations indicate
that topaz rhyolites probably form by fractional crystallization of silicic magma which originated by small degrees of melting of
hybridized continental crust containing a significant juvenile mantle component not derived from a subduction zone (i.e., intrusions
of within-plate mafic magma). The Sr and Nd isotopic compositions of the topaz rhyolites lie between the fields of
contemporaneous mafic magmas and older calc-alkaline dacites and rhyolites. Intraplate mafic magmas and their derivatives appear
Lithos 97 (2007) 219 – 246
www.elsevier.com/locate/lithos
⁎
Corresponding author. Fax: +1 801 422 0267.
E-mail address: eric_christiansen@byu.edu (E.H. Christiansen).
0024-4937/$ - see front matter © 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
doi:10.1016/j.lithos.2007.01.010