Journal of African Earth Sciences, Vol. 33, No. 2, pp. 391-416, 2001
© 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd
All rights reserved. Printed in Great Britain
0899-5362/01 $- see front matter
Origin of tourmaline in the metamorphosed
Sikait pelitic belt, south Eastern Desert, Egypt
H.Z. HARRAZ and M.F. EL-SHARKAWY*
Department of Geology, Faculty of Sciences, Tanta University, Tanta, Egypt
ABSTRACT--A Neoproterozoic metapelitic schist belt at the Sikait area of the south Eastern
Desert is a favourable environment for Iocalisation of tourmaline mineralisation in the Pan-
African Belt in Egypt. Local concentrations of tourmaline in the Sikait area are closely associated
with stratiform metapelitic schists. They are confined to the Nugrus shear zone, along which
various leucocratic rocks (leucogranite, pegmatite, aplite) are syntectonically emplaced with
various stages of hydrothermal quartz veins.
Tourmaline occurs either as disseminated isolated clusters of crystals or as discontinuous
tourmalinite bands within the metapelitic rocks, pegmatites and quartz veins. Four types of
tourmaline-rich rocks were distinguished: (i) fine-grained tourmaline-rich rocks, which are
associated with the biotite schist along contacts with gneissose granites (TR1); (ii)
tourmaline-rich rocks, associated with the metapelitic and amphibolitic closely to Nugrus
thrust zones (TR2); (iii) tourmaline-rich rocks, associated with the pelitic hornfels at the
contact between metapelitic schist and leucogranite (TR3); and (iv) tourmaline-rich rocks and
quartz veins, associated with chlorite-graphite schist in contact aureoles with leucogranite
and pegmatite veins (TR4).
Microprobe analyses revealed that tourmalines are AI saturated for the given Fe/Mg
alkali-deficient group tourmaline with minor X-site vacancy and substitution of Ca for Na.
Tourmalines belong to the schorl-dravite solid solution series and have a wide compositional
range, from nearly end member dravite for TR3 tourmalines to schorl for TR4 tourmalines;
TR 1 and TR2 tourmalines have intermediate compositions. The Fe/(Fe + Mg) varies between
0.02 and 0.89. Variation in composition of AI-rich tourmalines is essentially caused by
variations in Mg, Fe, Na, Ca and Ti.
The whole rock chemical analyses of tourmaline-rich rocks closely resemble the trends observed
for metapelitic schist and leucocratic rock and reflect mixing between phyllosilicate-rich and
quartz-rich end members, which indicates that tourmaline-rich rocks do not contain a significant
detrital component. Chondrite-normalised patterns of rare earth elements (REE) in tourmaline-rich
rocks and quartz-rich tourmalines are similar to those of the surrounding unaltered metapelitic
schists and leucocratic rocks, respectively. Minor depletions of LREE and local negative Ce
anomalies characterise the chondrite-normalised REE pattern of TR1 tourmaline-rich rocks,
suggesting its formation in the presence of seawater-derived fluids. However, TR4 types are
characterised by low content ~REE, such as that of leucocratic rocks. Thus, the geochemical
data imply relative immobility of AI, Ti, Cr and HREE during hydrothermal alteration and later
metamorphism.
The different tourmaline varieties and their respective compositions are interpreted in terms of
multistage evolution. Formation of the TR1 tourmaline-rich rocks probably was the net result
of several processes, including direct precipitation from B-rich hydrothermal fluids or colloids,
early diagenetic reactions of biotite-pelitic sediments with these fluids and subsequent
recrystallisation during late regional deformation and metamorphism to give TR2 tourmaline-rich
*Corresponding author
m983521 O@hotmail.com
Journal of African Earth Sciences 391