GEOCHEMICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF VOLCANIC ROCKS FROM TANGBALE OPHIOLITE IN THE WESTERN JUNGGAR OF XINJIANG
|Updated:2021-02-05
|
GEOCHEMICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF VOLCANIC ROCKS FROM TANGBALE OPHIOLITE IN THE WESTERN JUNGGAR OF XINJIANG
Nuclear Science and TechniquesVol. 3, Issue 4, (1992)
Affiliations:
1.Institute of High Energy Physics, Academia Sinica, Beijing 100080, China
Author bio:
Funds:
DOI:
CLC:
Scan for full text
Ruiying Yang. GEOCHEMICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF VOLCANIC ROCKS FROM TANGBALE OPHIOLITE IN THE WESTERN JUNGGAR OF XINJIANG. [J]. Nuclear Science and Techniques 3(4):275-281(1992)
DOI:
Ruiying Yang. GEOCHEMICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF VOLCANIC ROCKS FROM TANGBALE OPHIOLITE IN THE WESTERN JUNGGAR OF XINJIANG. [J]. Nuclear Science and Techniques 3(4):275-281(1992)DOI:
GEOCHEMICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF VOLCANIC ROCKS FROM TANGBALE OPHIOLITE IN THE WESTERN JUNGGAR OF XINJIANG
An INAA technique was applied to determine simultaneously abundances of rare-earth, transitional metal, large-ion lithophile and high field strength elements in volcanic rocks from Tangbale ophiolite belt. The detailed study on trace element geochemistry shows that the volcanic rocks were erupted in the back-arc basin. The volcanic rocks of early and middle stages of the expanding period of the basin have low REE and other incompatible element contents. At early and late stages of closing period of the basin, alkalic basalts, basaltic andesites and andesites were erupted in which light REE and other incompatible elements were enriched.
Application of nuclear analytical techniques to trace elements in Cenozoic basalt and their mantle xenoliths from Aershan area in Inner Mongolia, China
Elemental analysis of rain- and fresh water by neutron activation analysis
Investigation of trace elements in Guangxi ancient pottery by INAA
INAA OF SOME ANCIENT COINS FROM POST GUPTA PERIOD AND MUGHAL SALTANAT
DETERMINATION OF TRACE ELEMENTS IN SUBCELLULAR FRACTION OF HUMAN LIVER BY INAA
Related Author
No data
Related Institution
Key Laboratory for Hydrocarbon Accumulation Mechanism, Ministry of Education, University of Petroleum
Institute of Geology and Geophysics, CAS
Institute of High Energy Physics, CAS
Laboratory of Analytical Chemistry. University of Amsterdam