Ultrapotassic melasyenites (similar to shonkinites), monzonites to monzogabbros and cumulitic phlogopite clinopyroxenites of the Chotělice Intrusive Complex in E Bohemia are rocks petrographically and geochemically different from abundant ultrapotassic plutonites (namely durbachites) of the Moldanubian Zone. Chotělice melasyenites are weakly nepheline-normative, more oxidized, higher in CaO and Sr and lacking any Eu-anomaly in contrast with nature of hypersthene-normative, CaO and Sr poor durbachitic rocks typically displaying a negative Eu-anomaly.
These compositional differences are interpreted in terms of distinct compositional characteristics and tectonic histories of lithospheric mantle sources of Variscan ultrapotassic magmas beneath at least a part of the Bohemicum and the Moldanubian Zone of the Bohemian Massif.