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Table 2. Accuracy of melt redox compositions.                                 In the field or in most microanalyses, ana-
                                                                                                  lytical spots are chosen by the operator.
             BAS-2                 n = 1 n = 10 n = 50 n = 1 n = 10 n = 50                        Therefore, the distribution of sampling
                                                                                                  points must be strategically selected to
Beam/order   n/a                   0.1 0.1 0.1 950 950 950                                        minimize both the number needed and the
size ratio*                                                                                       sampling bias (Fig. 6). This can be
                                                                                                  accomplished in one of two ways: analyze
SiO2         49.73  (0.35)         100.00   20.00         45.00    50.88    49.95  49.96          a large number of truly randomly selected
Al2O3        15.51  (0.19)            0.00  28.00         13.00    14.56    16.00  16.00          points, or estimate the mineral mode and
TiO2                (0.03)            0.00                                                        apportion analysis locations to represent
FeO           1.55  (0.43)            0.00   0.00          0.00     1.92     2.03   2.03          each one appropriately (i.e., Chayes,
              8.51                          10.00         15.60     8.00     9.00   8.97          1956). The former is generally far easier
                                                                                                  than the latter, with the modal analysis
Fe2O3        1.29 (0.03) 0.00                      0.00   0.00 1.44         2.02 2.00             method presenting the additional potential
MgO                                                                                               issue of assuming a 2D surface mode
             7.10 (0.08) 0.00 32.00                       15.00    9.60     8.00 8.02             characterization represents a 3D rock
                                                                                                  sample. New software for quantitative
CaO          11.48 (0.07) 0.00 10.00                      6.00 10.40 10.01 10.00                  EPMA mapping, which can provide full
                                                                                                  compositional quantification of each
Na2O         2.66 (0.07) 0.00                      0.00      5.40     3.20     2.99 3.02          image pixel (e.g., Carpenter et al., 2013;
Total                                                     100.00   100.00   100.00 100.00         Carpenter, 2016), may reduce sampling
             97.83                 100.00 100.00                                                  bias and better account for geochemical
                                                                                                  heterogeneity.
Fe2O3/FeO 0.152                                    0.000  0.000 0.180       0.224 0.223
                                                                                                    For rocks with distinct foliation, linea-
*Here order means the scale of the composition variation, which for a glass would be the scale    tion, grain preferred orientation, or layer-
                                                                                                  ing, sampling strategy becomes even
of long- or short-range ordering.                                                                 more important; in these samples, an
                                                                                                  accurate bulk rock composition may not
texture (phase heterogeneity) of the target        Target Rock Type                               be meaningful. For example, if a rock is
rock, distribution of textural features                                                           layered, sampling traverses should cross-
within each target, sampling size of the             It is intuitive to understand how a beam     cut bedding planes with a sampling inter-
analytical instrument used, and sampling           that samples the maximum number of             val smaller than the layering interval to
strategy employed (Fig. 6).                        grains in proportions representative of the    ensure proportional representation of
                                                   entire rock will yield optimal results. In     each layer. Alternatively, traverses that
Figure 6. Comparison of the number of analyses     coarser-grained rocks with varying abun-       probe a single layer laterally may be
required for reproducible bulk compositional       dances of minerals in their modes, sam-        extremely useful, especially if multiple
data as a function of the scale of sample to       pling strategy becomes critical; it is very    layers are similarly studied for contrast.
measurement heterogeneity (upper). The same        important that the phase assemblage be
plot is used to indicate where various analytical  sampled proportionately. This may require      Number of Analyses Needed
techniques and common geological samples           plotting out sampling grids prior to analy-
might intersect (lower). STEM-EELS—scanning        sis or point-counting phases on an outcrop       Several sampling strategies can ensure
transmission electron microscopy–electron          to determine the major phenocryst concen-      quality analyses with reproducible results
energy loss spectroscopy; XAS—X-ray absorp-        tration. In truly coarse-grained rocks (i.e.,  (Fig. 6). First, the larger the ratio between
tion spectroscopy; LIBS—laser-induced break-       Fig. 4D), obtaining bulk compositions          grain and beam size, the more analyses
down spectroscopy; EPMA—electron probe             from smaller scale analyses is simply not      are required. For grain sizes << beam
microanalysis.                                     feasible. However, in such samples indi-       size, 6–10 analyses produce a statistically
                                                   vidual mineral compositions may be repre-      meaningful result as long as the phases
                                                   sentatively sampled, although fine-scale       present are sampled proportionally
                                                   zonation might be obscured.                    (Figs. 4A–4C) and measurement accuracy
                                                                                                  is appropriate. When the scale of grain
                                                     Sampling strategy is also critically         size or the extent of ordering is close to
                                                   important when the analytical instrument       or exceeds beam size (Fig. 4D), signifi-
                                                   has a sampling size much smaller than the      cantly more analyses are needed (up to
                                                   crystallinity or long-range ordering of the    1000) to generate reproducible bulk com-
                                                   phase. As modern instrument resolution         positional data. When more than one
                                                   continues to increase, understanding of        phase is present, analysis locations must
                                                   sampling strategy will become even more        be designed to represent all phases in the
                                                   critically important.                          rock proportionately if a true bulk rock
                                                                                                  analysis is desired.
                                                     It is less obvious that relative chemis-
                                                   tries of the individual phases being studied
                                                   are important; if even one phase has dra-
                                                   matically different elemental abundances
                                                   over the other(s), then a larger number of
                                                   analyses will be needed to represent the
                                                   bulk. On the other hand, an ultramafic
                                                   rock composed solely of olivine and pyrox-
                                                   enes might have much less elemental vari-
                                                   ability among phases, and thus require
                                                   fewer analyses to be representative.

                                                   Distribution of Analysis Spots

                                                     Our model assigns sample locations ran-
                                                   domly to prevent systematic sampling bias.

8 GSA Today | July 2017
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