Author:
Liu Xuan,Richard Antonin,Pironon Jacques,Yang Kuifeng
Abstract
AbstractPorphyry ore deposits are a major source of base and precious metals. Likewise, they bear important fingerprints for understanding magmatic / hydrothermal processes in the convergent margin. For many decades, the sources of non-magmatic fluid and its role in sulfide mineralization in the porphyry hydrothermal systems have been equivocal. The Tongchang porphyry deposit, which is a single intrusive system with a well-established fluid history, is investigated to reconstruct its hydrothermal process that contributed to the ore formation. In-situ oxygen and strontium isotopes in hydrothermal quartz and anhydrite revealed a coexistence of magmatic and non-magmatic fluid reservoirs. The granodiorite—derived magmatic fluid and external groundwater were spatially separated by a hydrologically impermeable shell formed by retrograde mineral deposition (mainly quartz). The location of the impermeable shell coincided with a brittle-ductile transition (BDT) interface established in the host phyllite in response to latent heating by the cooling magmas. It is inferred that the ductile phyllite beneath the impermeable shell may have entrained some amounts of groundwater and remnant metamorphic fluid. The early fluid stage was dominated by the magmatic fluids, forming disseminated chalcopyrite and barren quartz veins in the potassic-altered ductile granodiorite at high temperatures (> 500 °C). The next stage (early-intermediate) was also driven by the circulation of the magmatic fluids, but in a largely brittle zone formed in-between the impermeable shell and the retreated BDT interface (similar to the so-called “carapace” in the orthomagmatic models). In this stage the formation of pyrite and chalcopyrite veins together with chloritic alteration at temperatures of 400–350 °C occurred. The late-intermediate stage was marked by incursion of the trapped non-magmatic fluids due to rupturing of the enlarged carapace. Mixing of the non-magmatic fluids and the magmatic fluids led to deposition of a major phase of vein-type Cu sulfide at temperatures of 350–300 °C. The late fluid stage was characterized by breaching of the impermeable shell in response to volumetric contraction of the fluid system, leading to excessive infiltration of groundwater and ore remobilization. Based on the Tongchang model, six generic fluid models are proposed for porphyry ore deposits that differ in availability of non-magmatic components as well as intrusive histories. The models can account for variabilities in ore and alteration styles found in porphyry ore deposits globally.
Funder
Extra & Co project
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Traceability of Primary Mineral Resources and Recovery and Recycling of Secondary Mineral Resources
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference55 articles.
1. Heinrich, C.A. & Candela, P.A. Fluids and ore Formation in the Earth’s Crust. In Treaties in Geochemistry 2nd edn (ed., Holland, H.D. & Turekian, K.K.), Vol 3, 1–28 (2014).
2. Henley, R. W. & McNabb, A. Magmatic vapor plumes and ground-water interaction in porphyry copper emplacement. Econ Geol. 73, 1–20 (1978).
3. Fournier, R. O. Hydrothermal processes related to movement of fluid from plastic into brittle rock in the magmatic-epithermal environment. Econ. Geol. 94, 1193–1211 (1999).
4. Weis, P., Driesner, T. & Heinrich, C. A. Porphyry-copper ore shells form at stable pressure–temperature fronts within dynamic fluid plumes. Science 338, 1613–1616 (2012).
5. Seedorff, E., Dilles, J.H., Proffett, J.M. & Einaudi, M.T. Porphyry deposits: Characteristics and origin of hypogene features. Econ. Geol. 100th anniversary volume, 251–298 (2005).