Geochronology and Geochemistry of the Mamupu Cu‐Au Polymetallic Deposit, Eastern Tibet: Implications for Eocene Cu Metallogenesis in the Yulong Porphyry Copper Belt

Author(s):  
Xiaoxu ZHANG ◽  
Bin LIN ◽  
Juxing TANG ◽  
Liang HE ◽  
Rui SHAO ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Huaying Liang ◽  
Yuqiang Zhang ◽  
Yingwen Xie ◽  
Wu Lin ◽  
Ian H. Campbell ◽  
...  

Minerals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (6) ◽  
pp. 609
Author(s):  
Wenbao Zheng ◽  
Yiyun Wang

Jiama is a super-large porphyry copper–polymetallic deposit located in the Gangdese metallogenic belt of southern Tibet. The deposit consists of a combination of a polymetallic skarn, Cu–Mo mineralization at the contact between the Jiama Porphyry and hornfels, and distal Au mineralization in fault. The current metal reserves are 7.4 Mt Cu, 0.6 Mt Mo, 1.8 Mt Pb–Zn, 6.65 Moz Au, and 360.32 Moz Ag, with a skarn to porphyry–hornfels host-rock ratio of ~3:1. Based on detailed field and laboratory investigations, this paper indicates that: (i) the skarn and porphyry–hornfels orebodies are almost entirely preserved; (ii) the emplacement age of the Cu-bearing plutonic rocks is earlier than the plutons containing elevated Mo assays; (iii) the permeability of the wall rocks gradually decreases in an upward direction; (iv) the fluid temperature during the precipitation of Cu was higher than that of the Mo mineralization; (v) the lithospheric pressure during the precipitation of Cu and Mo was the same; (vi) the laser Raman spectroscopy shows that the fluid carrying the Cu was rich in magnetite, hematite, and anhydrite, and the fluid carrying Mo was rich in pyrite, CO2, and CH4; and (vii) the SR–XRF mapping shows that the concentration of Cu in the mineralizing fluid was high and that of Mo was low when Cu was deposited. Conversely, the concentration of Cu was relatively low and the concentration of Mo was relatively high during deposition of the Mo. This study also shows that the temporal and spatial separation of Cu and Mo in the porphyry copper–polymetallic deposit at Jiama was associated with the emplacement of the Jiama Porphyry. Transportation of mineralized fluid was controlled by the permeability of the wall rocks, and deposition of the metals related to changes along a redox front and pressure releases during hydrothermal brecciation at the roof of the Jiama Porphyry.


2013 ◽  
Vol 746 ◽  
pp. 473-477
Author(s):  
Xiong Zhou ◽  
Yu Zhou ◽  
Yi Zhang

Bangpu molybdenum-copper polymetallic deposit is located in the eastern section of the Gangdese Porphyry Copper Belt of Tibet. It is a typical large porphyry molybdenum copper polymetallic deposit. The isotope study of fluid inclusions H and O in the quartz (calcite) of various mineralization stages shows that, the ore-forming fluid comes mainly from meteoric hydrothermal caused by atmospheric precipitation, which has consistency with ore-forming fluid sources of Gangdese Porphyry Copper Belt. The Mo-Cu phase with low δD value (-140.5 ~ -104.0 ) suggests a large-scale magmatic degassing. The alteration and mineralization have been caused precisely by the degassing, and the obvious O isotope drift occurred being accompanied by alteration-mineralization, so that the fluid has a low δ18O (vary from 5.50 to 9.0 ). The statistical research indicates that, the massive magmatic degassing occurred in Gangdese Porphyry Copper Belt, and was gradually increased from east to west, suggesting the direct impact of the magmatic degassing on the formation of the porphyry copper-gold deposit and molybdenum copper deposit: the stronger the magmatic degassing, the more easily to form the molybdenum-based porphyry deposit, otherwise it will be formed the deposits dominated by Cu and Au.


2007 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 235-258 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hou Zengqian ◽  
Xie Yuling ◽  
Xu Wenyi ◽  
Li Yinqing ◽  
Zhu Xlangkun ◽  
...  

2008 ◽  
Vol 50 (6) ◽  
pp. 583-595 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yao-Hui Jiang ◽  
Shao-Yong Jiang ◽  
Bao-Zhang Dai ◽  
Hong-Fei Ling

2003 ◽  
Vol 98 (1) ◽  
pp. 125-145 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Zengqian ◽  
M. Hongwen ◽  
K. Zaw ◽  
Z. Yuquan ◽  
W. Mingjie ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Maysam Abedi

The presented work examines application of an Augmented Iteratively Re-weighted and Refined Least Squares method (AIRRLS) to construct a 3D magnetic susceptibility property from potential field magnetic anomalies. This algorithm replaces an lp minimization problem by a sequence of weighted linear systems in which the retrieved magnetic susceptibility model is successively converged to an optimum solution, while the regularization parameter is the stopping iteration numbers. To avoid the natural tendency of causative magnetic sources to concentrate at shallow depth, a prior depth weighting function is incorporated in the original formulation of the objective function. The speed of lp minimization problem is increased by inserting a pre-conditioner conjugate gradient method (PCCG) to solve the central system of equation in cases of large scale magnetic field data. It is assumed that there is no remanent magnetization since this study focuses on inversion of a geological structure with low magnetic susceptibility property. The method is applied on a multi-source noise-corrupted synthetic magnetic field data to demonstrate its suitability for 3D inversion, and then is applied to a real data pertaining to a geologically plausible porphyry copper unit.  The real case study located in  Semnan province of  Iran  consists  of  an arc-shaped  porphyry  andesite  covered  by  sedimentary  units  which  may  have  potential  of  mineral  occurrences, especially  porphyry copper. It is demonstrated that such structure extends down at depth, and consequently exploratory drilling is highly recommended for acquiring more pieces of information about its potential for ore-bearing mineralization.


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