Geoscience Frontiers (Jul 2021)

Characterization of amphiboles from the Kola super-deep borehole, Russia by Raman and infrared spectroscopy

  • Bhaskar J. Saikia,
  • G. Parthasarathy,
  • Felix F. Gorbatsevich,
  • Rashmi R. Borah

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 4
p. 101134

Abstract

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We present here for the first time, the Raman and infrared spectroscopic investigation of amphiboles from the World's deepest borehole, the Kola super-deep borehole, at the depth of 11.66 km. The Kola Super-deep borehole (SG-3) (henceforth referred as KSDB) is located in the northwest of the Kola Peninsula in the northern frame of the Pechenga structure, Russia. It was drilled in the north-eastern part of the Baltic Shield (69о5’N, 30о44’E) and reached a depth of 12.262 km. It has been drilled in the northern limb of the Pechenga geosyncline composed of rhythmically inter-bedded volcanogenic and tuffaceous-sedimentary strata extending to the NW at 300°–310° and dipping to SW at angles of 30°–50°. The SG-3 geological section is represented by two complexes – Proterozoic and Archaean. Amphibolite facies is dominant in the depth region from 6000 m to 12,000 m to the deepest.The Raman spectra of the sample reveal abundant presence of plagioclase and amphiboles. The most distinct Raman peak in this study indicates the tremolite-ferro-actinolite rich enrichment of the borehole samples at this depth corroborating earlier conventional petrographic studies.

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