Anne
M. Hofmeister and George
R. Rossman
Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences, 170-25,
California Institute of Technology,
Pasadena, California 91125, U.S.A.
Ferrous and ferric iron contencentrations in feldspars with low total iron content (<0.32 wt% total Fe) were determined from optical and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra to better than ± 15 percent of the amount present. Optical spectra indicate that Fe2+ occupies two distorted M-sites in plagioclases of intermediate structural state. The linear dependence of the Fe2+/Fe total ration on An content demonstrates that Fe2+ substitutes for Ca (not Na) so that the number of Ca-sites is a principal factor in iron partitioning in plagioclase. EPR powder spectra show that the number of sites for Fe3+ depends on structural state rather than on plagioclase chemistry. The observed linear correspondence of EPR double-itegrated intensities with optical peak areas shows that all Fe3+ is tetrahedrally coordinated in both plkagioclase and isordered potassijum feldspar. Microcline perthites show, in addition to tetrahedral Fe3+, a signal due to axially coordinated ferric iron, which we associate with formation of hematite inclusions.