The economic importance of cumulate rocks is best represented by three classes of mineral deposits found in ultramafic to mafic layered intrusions. • Silicate mineral cumulates • Oxide mineral cumulates • Sulfide melt cumulates
Silicate mineral cumulates Silicate minerals are rarely sufficiently valuable to warrant extraction as ore. However, some
anorthosite intrusions contain such pure
anorthite concentrations that they are mined for
feldspar, for use in
refractories, glassmaking,
semiconductors and other sundry uses (
toothpaste,
cosmetics, etc.).
Oxide mineral cumulates , South Africa Oxide mineral cumulates form in layered intrusions when fractional crystallisation has progressed enough to allow the crystallisation of oxide minerals which are invariably a form of
spinel. This can happen due to fractional enrichment of the melt in
iron,
titanium or
chromium. These conditions are created by the high-temperature fractionation of highly magnesian olivine or pyroxene, which causes a relative iron-enrichment in the residual melt. When the iron content of the melt is sufficiently high,
magnetite or
ilmenite crystallise and, due to their high density, form cumulate rocks.
Chromite is generally formed during pyroxene fractionation at low pressures, where chromium is rejected from the pyroxene crystals. These oxide layers form laterally continuous deposits of rocks containing in excess of 50% oxide minerals. When oxide minerals exceed 90% of the bulk of the interval the rock may be classified according to the oxide mineral, for example
magnetitite,
ilmenitite or
chromitite. Strictly speaking, these would be magnetite orthocumulate, ilmenite orthocumulate and chromite orthocumulates.
Sulfide mineral segregations Sulfide mineral cumulates in layered intrusions are an important source of
nickel,
copper,
platinum group elements and
cobalt. Deposits of a mixed massive or mixed sulfide-silicate 'matrix' of
pentlandite,
chalcopyrite,
pyrrhotite and/or
pyrite are formed, occasionally with
cobaltite and platinum-tellurium sulfides. These deposits are formed by melt immiscibility between sulfide and silicate melts in a sulfur-saturated magma. They are not strictly a cumulate rock, as the sulfide is not precipitated as a solid mineral, but rather as
immiscible sulfide liquid. However, they are formed by the same processes and accumulate due to their high
specific gravity, and can form laterally extensive sulfide 'reefs'. The sulfide minerals generally form an
interstitial matrix to a silicate cumulate. Sulfide mineral segregations can only be formed when a magma attains sulfur saturation. In mafic and ultramafic rocks they form economic nickel, copper and platinum group (PGE) deposits because these elements are
chalcophile and are strongly partitioned into the sulfide melt. In rare cases,
felsic rocks become sulfur saturated and form sulfide segregations. In this case, the typical result is a disseminated form of sulfide mineral, usually a mixture of pyrrhotite, pyrite and chalcopyrite, forming copper mineralisation. It is very rare but not unknown to see cumulate sulfide rocks in granitic intrusions. ==See also==