Paper No. 6
Presentation Time: 1:30 PM-5:30 PM
A MINERALOGICAL STUDY OF THE CONSOLIDATED TUNGSTEN MINE SKARN, TULARE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Contact metamorphism of the metasedimentary Kings sequence was driven by the 163 Mya intrusion of a quartz monzonite pluton, interpreted as a plutonic root of the Middle Jurassic volcanic arc developed along the westernmost margin of the Sierra Nevada orogenic belt. The Consolidated Tungsten Mine is one of a series ore-bearing skarns found throughout the Sierra Nevada and was classified by Newberry (1980) as being a reduced skarn with retrograde overprint. Petrographic analyses and SEM data confirm that the calcsilicate mineral assemblages are dominated by variable but abundant garnet, epidote, pyroxene, wollastonite, tremolite, calcite, plagioclase, and quartz; lesser but widespread scheelite, fluorapatite, zircon, sphene, ilmenite, rutile, and graphite; and the sulfides pyrite, pyrrhotite and sphalerite. Of particular interest are unusual enrichments in barium (stabilizing the Ba-feldspar, hyalophane), cerium (stabilizing a Ce-monazite and an unidentified Ce-silicate), and titanium (stabilizing iron-free Ti-andradite garnet). Thermobarometry of the regional metamorphic assemblages suggests relatively low pressure and temperature conditions (e.g., andalusite and cordierite) within the Lake Kaweah pendant at a distance from the aureole. Further analytical work will be aimed at constraining the contact metamorphic conditions as well as identifying possible trace element sources.