The San Pedro quartz monzonite contains euhedral to anhedral pink megacrysts of microcline with a maximum size of 1.5 cm. The ground mass is blue-gray quartz, additional pink microcline, greenish-gray sodium-rich plagioclase, and minor biotite. In some locations, the microcline megacrysts show mantles of sodic plagioclase typical of rapakivi.[1] The radiometric age is 1730 Mya based on U-Pb dating and the normative composition is given as 31.20% quartz, 21.00% orthoclase, 29.17% albite, 10.71% anorthite, 3.30% hypersthene, 1.58% magnetite, 0.60% ilmenite, and 0.26% apatite.[2]
The pluton crops out in the San Pedro Mountains of northern New Mexico, a region of numerous overlapping plutons emplaced in metasedimentary and metavolcanic beds that may correlate with the Vadito Group.[3]
The pluton grades on the north into tonalite, and the gradation has been interpreted as assimilation and metasomatization of the presumably older tonalite.[1] The southern part of the pluton shows east-northeast shearing[1] of the Nacimiento Creek Shear Zone. This has been interpreted as the boundary of the Yavapai crustal province with the Mazatzal crustal province, but Hf isotope ratios and zircon dates from the southern Sierra Nacimento Mountains suggest the boundary is south of the Sierra Nacimiento.[4]
History of investigation
The quartz monzonite was first described in Woodward et al. as part of their survey of the Precambrian rocks of the northern Nacimiento Mountains of New Mexico in 1977.[1]
Woodward, L.A. (1987). "Geology and mineral resources of the Sierra Nacimiento and vicinity, New Mexico". New Mexico Bureau of Mines and Mineral Resources Memoirs. 42.