scholarly journals Contribution of infrared microscopy to studies of fluid inclusions hosted in some opaque ore minerals: possibilities, limitations, and perspectives

2016 ◽  
Vol 52 (5) ◽  
pp. 663-673 ◽  
Author(s):  
Volker Lüders

1983 ◽  
Vol 47 (345) ◽  
pp. 473-479 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. K. Hallbauer ◽  
K. von Gehlen

AbstractEvidence obtained from morphological and extensive trace element studies, and from the examination of mineral and fluid inclusions in Witwatersrand pyrites, shows three major types of pyrite: (i) detrital pyrite (rounded pyrite crystals transported into the depositional environment); (ii) synsedimentary pyrite (round and rounded aggregates of fine-grained pyrite formed within the depositional environmen); and (iii) authigenic pyrite (newly crystallized and/or recrystallized pyrite formed after deposition). The detrital grains contain mineral inclusions such as biotite, feldspar, apatite, zircon, sphene, and various ore minerals, and fluid inclusions with daughter minerals. Most of the inclusions are incompatible with an origin by sulphidization. Recrystallized authigenic pyrite occurs in large quantities but only in horizons or localities which have been subjected to higher temperatures during the intrusion or extrusion of younger volcanic rocks. Important additional findings are the often substantial amounts of pyrite and small amounts of particles of gold found in Archaean granites (Hallbauer, 1982) as possible source rocks for the Witwatersrand detritus. Large differences in Ag and Hg content between homogeneous single gold grains within a hand specimen indicate a lack of metamorphic homogenization. The influence of metamorphism on the Witwatersrand pyrites can therefore be described as only slight and generally negligible.



1986 ◽  
Vol 23 (10) ◽  
pp. 1519-1550 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Kerrich ◽  
D. F. Strong ◽  
A. J. Andrews ◽  
L. Owsiacki

The Ag–, Co–Ni–sulpharsenide deposits of the Cobalt–Gowganda district are characterized by relatively uniform light-stable-isotope systematics, where δ18O in quartz spans 11.1–16.0‰; in K-feldspar, 10.1–12.3‰; in albite, 8.1–14.4‰; in actinolite, 6.0–7.6‰; in chlorite, 3.2–5.6‰; and δD in chlorite = −42 to −35‰. The temperature of hydrothermal silicate deposition was 150–230 °C, as calculated from Δquartz–chlorite, and triple to quadruple isotopic concordancy is locally preserved amongst quartz, chlorite, actinolite, and K-feldspar or albite. Filling temperature modes at 230 and 330 °C exist for primary inclusions in quartz and carbonates. Ore-forming hydrothermal fluids were isotopically characterized by δ18O = −2.5 to + 5‰, δD = −40 to + 5‰, interpreted to reflect isotopically and chemically evolved formation brines from Huronian aquifers, ultimately derived from marine pore fluids, and Proterozoic meteoric water recharge of the sedimentary basin. The restricted range of δ18Oquartz, Δquartz−chlorite, and δDchlorite from a large population of veins implies that the ore-forming fluids were tapped from a large reservoir, or reservoirs, relatively uniform with respect to temperature, δ18O, and δD.Quartzes in silicate selvages, wall rocks, and carbonate-dominated gangue are isotopically comparable, signifying fluid-dominated conditions and the initial precipitation of carbonates from fluids isotopically similar to those involved in the silicate stage and at comparable temperatures. Vein dolomites (δ18O = 21 to 23.1‰) continued to exchange down to temperatures of 110–140 °C in the presence of fluids where δ18O = 3 ± 2‰, during thermal attenuation of the ore-forming reservoir. Vein calcites (δ18O = 1.7 to 15.7‰) record late incursion of meteoric waters where δ18O = −8 to −22‰ at temperatures of ~50 °C. The population of vein carbonates clusters at δ13C = −3.1 to −5.3‰, and this is probably also close to the carbon-isotope signature of the hydrothermal fluid. The source of carbon is uncertain.Actinolites possess age-corrected 87Sr/86Sr = 0.715 to 0.729, for 2200 Ma, close to estimates for the contemporaneous Huronian ratio (0.7053–0.714) but more radiogenic than contemporaneous Archean volcanics (0.7017–0.7021) or the Nipissing diabase (0.7060–0.7061). On this basis, Sr is interpreted to have been derived principally from the Huronian sedimentary reservoir.Fluid inclusions in quartz and calcite of both mineralized and barren veins in the Cobalt and Gowganda mining camps and environs show five different types type I (L), type II (L + halite), type III (L + V), type IV (L + V + H), and type V (V), with types III and IV being most abundant. A histogram of all mine data shows modes around 100, 230, and 330 °C, with a range from > 560 to < 100 °C. No carbon dioxide was observed in the inclusions, although the dominance of calcite and dolomite in the veins attests to its presence during mineralization. Several samples show evidence of aqueous boiling, allowing a direct pressure determination of about 600 bar (60 MPa). The fluids were highly saline NaCl–CaCl2 brines, with up to 54 wt.% NaCl equivalent and highly variable Na/Ca ratios. Fluid inclusions in samples of barren veins from Lundy Township, outside the areas of known mineralization, do not appear to be significantly different from those of the mineralized veins, indicating that the hydrothermal fluids were active throughout a large area of the Huronian basin; this is corroborated by the disturbance of Pb- and Sr-isotope systems in the Nipissing, Huronian, and Archean.The Nipissing diabase likely served as a heat source to mobilize metals and advect formation brines, which may have derived the metals from either or all of the Huronian sediments or the Archean volcanics Nipissing diabase and sedimentary rocks. We suggest a genetic scheme for the veins involving CO2 effervescence and aqueous boiling inducing pH increase and thereby mediating rapid precipitation of ore minerals coeval with and followed by carbonates. This process explains most of the presently known major and minor characteristics of the vein systems and their host rocks, including the chloritic and sodic metasomatism of the Archean and Huronian rocks, abundant calcite, the compositional and mineralogical variability of the ore minerals, the textural variability of both the carbonates and ore minerals, the paragenetic sequence of alteration and mineralization, the distribution of ore minerals with respect to the diabase and other rocks, the relatively narrow vertical extent of mineralization, variations in ore grade and tonnage, and the distribution of economic deposits on the periphery of the Huronian basin.



Mineralogia ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 71-94
Author(s):  
Alexander Smirnov ◽  
Jaroslav Pršek ◽  
Martin Chovan

Mineralogy and Geochemistry of the Nižná Boca Sb-Au Hydrothermal Ore Deposit (Western Carpathians, Slovakia)Samples from hydrothermal Sb-Au mineralization in the area SE of Nižná Boca village in the N&iAzke Tatry Mountains were investigated using a variety of geochemical and mineralogical methods. Ore minerals typically occur in N-S striking quartz-carbonate veins hosted by an I-type biotite granodiorite to tonalite of Variscan Age (the Ďumbier Type). Paragenetic associations in the deposit are comparable to other mineralizations of the same type in the Ďumbierske Nízke Tatry Mountains. A quartz-arsenopyrite, pyrite stage of mineralization is the oldest with a calculated temperature of formation of about 445°C. It is followed by a quartz-carbonate-stibnite, zinkenite stage and, in turn, a quartz-carbonate-sphalerite-galena, boulangerite-gold stage. The gold typically contains between 9-18 wt.% Ag regardless of mineral association. No evidence for further generations of gold was found although it is possible that some gold was remobilized from the structure of the auriferous arsenopyrite. The Au and Ag content of the bulk ore ranges from 0.53 g.t-1to 20.2 g.t-1and from 0.9 g.t-1to 31.2 g.t-1, respectively. A tetrahedrite-chalcopyrite stage is followed by a barite-hematite stage - the youngest assemblage in the deposit. Fluid inclusions from the first mineralization stage are usually less than 3 μm in size and contain less than 3.6 wt.% CO2; salinity, density and homogenization temperature range from 2.7-16.3 wt.% NaCl(eq), 0.85-1.03 g.cm-1and 128-280°C, respectively.



2020 ◽  
Vol 36 (7) ◽  
pp. 2232-2248
Author(s):  
WANG XinYu ◽  
◽  
ZHU XinYou ◽  
ZHU ZhengKun ◽  
ZANG WenShuan ◽  
...  


2018 ◽  
Vol 113 (8) ◽  
pp. 1861-1883 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Casanova ◽  
K. Kouzmanov ◽  
A. Audétat ◽  
M. Wälle ◽  
N. Ubrig ◽  
...  


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tong Ha Lee ◽  
Jung Hun Seo ◽  
Bong Chul Yoo ◽  
Bum Han Lee ◽  
Seung Hee Han ◽  
...  

Haman, Gunbuk, and Daejang deposits are neighboring vein-type hydrothermal Cu deposits located in the SE part of the Korean Peninsula. These three deposits are formed by magmatic-hydrothermal activity associated with a series of Cretaceous granodioritic intrusions of the Jindong Granitoids, which have created a series of veins and alterations in a hornfelsed shale formation. The copper deposits have common veining and alteration features: 1) a pervasive chlorite-epidote alteration, cut by 2) Cu-Pb-Zn-bearing quartz veins with a tourmaline-biotite alteration, and 3) the latest barren calcite veins. Chalcopyrite, pyrite, and pyrrhotite are common ore minerals in the three deposits. Whereas magnetite is a dominant mineral in the Haman and Gunbuk deposits, no magnetite is present, but sphalerite and galena are abundant in the Daejang deposit. Ore-bearing quartz veins have three types of fluid inclusions: 1) liquid-rich, 2) vapor-rich, and 3) brine inclusions. Hydrothermal temperatures obtained from the brine inclusion assemblages are about 340–600, 250–500, and 320–460°C in the Haman, Gunbuk, and Daejang deposits, respectively. The maximum temperatures (from 460 to 600°C) recorded in the fluid inclusions of the three deposits are higher than those of the Cu ore precipitating temperature of typical porphyry-like deposits (from 300 to 400°C). Raman spectroscopy of vapor inclusions showed the presence of CO2 and CH4 in the three deposits, which indicates relatively reduced hydrothermal conditions as compared with typical porphyry deposits. The Rb/Sr ratios and Cs concentrations of brine inclusions suggest that the Daejang deposit was formed by a later and more fractionated magma than the Haman and Gunbuk deposits, and the Daejang deposit has lower Fe/Mn ratios in brine inclusions than the Haman and Gunbuk deposits, which indicates contrasting redox conditions in hydrothermal fluids possibly caused by an interaction with a hosting shale formation. In brines, concentrations of base metals do not change significantly with temperature, which suggests that significant ore mineralization precipitation is unlikely below current exposure levels, especially at the Haman deposit. Ore and alteration mineral petrography and fluid inclusions suggest that the Haman deposit was formed near the top of the deep intrusion center, whereas the Gunbuk deposit was formed at a shallower intrusion periphery. The Daejang deposit was formed later at a shallow depth by relatively fractionated magma.





Minerals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (11) ◽  
pp. 1266
Author(s):  
Zahid Hussain ◽  
Chunhui Tao ◽  
Chun-Feng Li ◽  
Shili Liao ◽  
Masroor Alam ◽  
...  

The Kargah Cu-Pb polymetallic deposit is a newly discovered ore deposit from the Gilgit-Baltistan region, located in the Kohistan Island Arc, northern Pakistan. However, this area is poorly researched on the ore genesis, and its origin and the evolution of its magmatic-hydrothermal system remain unclear. Three stages of mineralization were identified, including quartz-pyrite, quartz-sulfide, and carbonate representing early, middle, and late stages, respectively. The major ore minerals are pyrite, chalcopyrite, galena, and zincian tetrahedrite with minor native silver, and native gold mainly distributed in pyrite. Here, we present a systematic study on ore geology, hydrothermal alterations, trace element composition of pyrite, fluid inclusions, and isotopes (S and Pb) characteristics to gain insights into the nature of the ore-forming fluids, types of unknown deposits, and hydrothermal fluid evolution. The high Co/Ni ratio (1.3–16.4) and Co content (average 1201 ppm), the low Mo/Ni ratio (0.43–0.94) and Mo contents (average 108 ppm) of both Py-I and Py-II suggest a mafic source for the mineralization. The Au-Ni plots, Co-As-Ni correlation, and the δ34S values range from −2.8 to 6.4‰ (average of 3.4‰) indicating the affiliation of the mineralization with a mantle-derived magmatic-hydrothermal provenance. The Pb isotope data showing the narrow variations in 206Pb/204Pb, 207Pb/204Pb and 208Pb/204Pb values suggest a single lead source from crustal-derived materials. The microthermometry data suggest that the dominant mechanisms are fluid boiling and mixing for mineral precipitation at temperatures ranging between 155 and 555 °C, and represent an intrusion-related magmatic-hydrothermal environment for the Kargah Cu-Pb polymetallic deposit.



2013 ◽  
Vol 734-737 ◽  
pp. 135-138
Author(s):  
Guang Shu Yang ◽  
Yong Feng Yan ◽  
Peng Yu Feng

Fluid inclusions, carbon and oxygen isotopic compositions were discussed to understanding the ore-forming fluid system of Anqing Cu-Fe deposit. Homogeneous temperatures of fluid inclusions ranged from 124°C to 570°C, δ13CPDBvalues of the gangue minerals ranged from-3.3 to-0.9, and δ18O values ranged from 9.4 to 10.7, respectively. The results reveal that the primary ore-forming fluid was magmatic hydrothermal fluid characterized by high temperature, the boiling and mixing of fluids occurred in the main mineralization stage, the magmatic water was dominant in the ore-forming process, the physicochemical condition changes of the fluid system led to the formation of skarn and the deposition of the ore minerals. The ore-forming materials were mainly derived from magma, partly provided by sedimentary strata.



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