Microfacies and Mineral Assemblages of Silver–Base-Metal Ores of the Maiminovskoe Vein Deposit (Sikhote-Alin, Dal’negorsky Ore District)

2018 ◽  
Vol 12 (6) ◽  
pp. 521-538
Author(s):  
V. V. Ratkin ◽  
L. F. Simanenko ◽  
O. A. Eliseeva
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elena-Luisa Iatan

<p>Voia deposit belongs to the Săcărâmb-Cetraș-Cordurea Miocene volcano-tectonic alignment of the South Apuseni Mountains, Romania. This large volcanic complex represents a Sarmatian-Pannonian magmatic-hydrothemal mega-system of around 5 km<sup>2</sup> with an estimated 3–4 Ma time-space evolution, consisting of seven andesitic volcanic structures grouped in a circle, three subvolcanic andesite-quartz porphyry microdiorite and associated porphyry Cu-Au(Mo), pyrite Ca-Mg skarns and epithermal Au-Ag-Pb-Zn-Cu mineralizations.</p><p>The mineral assemblages of alteration and mineralization processes belong to several mineralized zones on a vertical scale, according to sampling evidence and laboratory studies. HS products are found in the upper part of the structure (300-500 m), with dominant advanced and intermediate argillic alterations and sulfide-sulfate gold-poor veins (pyrite, marcasite, base metal sulfides, Fe-Ti oxides, vuggy quartz, alunite, gypsum, anhydrite). Within the 500-1200 m depth, the HS mineral assemblages gradually decrease in favor of IS and LS products. It is characterized by the coexistence of gold-rich LS assemblage (native gold, base metal sulfide, adularia, sericite-illite, chlorite, carbonates ± anhydrite veins), with the IS assemblage (iron oxides, chalcopyrite, pyrite, quartz, anhydrite). These assemblages overprint the HS mineral associations, resulting in a transition zone characterized by gold - pyrite - chalcopyrite - iron oxides - quartz - anhydrite mineral assemblage characteristic for HS and native gold - pyrite - base metal sulfides - carbonates - quartz mineral assemblage corresponding to IS+LS type.</p><p>Gold is present in all of the identified mineralization forms: porphyry-epithermal Cu-Au, epi-mesothermal carbonate veins with gold - base metal sulfides, quartz veins with pyrite - chalcopyrite - magnetite ± hematite ± anhydrite, anhydrite veins with base metal sulfides and sulfosalts, anhydrite veins with pyrite - anhydrite ± quartz, vuggy quartz (silica residue) with gold-poor pyrite veins and impregnations in porphyry systems.</p><p>Drilling core samples revealed that in Voia deposit, gold is concentrated in chalcopyrite (drills no. 7, 19, 37) along with pyrite - magnetite - hematite - quartz assemblage from the late potassic stage. The major amount of gold associated with chalcopyrite tends to be mainly submicroscopic. Pyrite from anhydrite veins of the early potassic stage ± phyllic alteration is relatively poor in gold (drills no. 1-6, 8-14). However, the highest gold contents are present in pentagonal dodecahedron pyrites (drills no. 33, 38, 39) of pyrite-chalcopyrite-magnetite ± hematite-quartz assemblage from late potassic stage ± phyllic alteration. Pyrite associated with magnetite from anhydrite veins tends to be poor in gold (drills no. 8, 11, 15, 28, 29). A carbonate vein containing gold-bearing base metal sulfides that was intercepted at 960,00-960,30m depth by drill no. 17 is one of the richest in gold.</p><p>Native gold occurs as fine inclusions in ore minerals (5-20 μm). Large irregular grains of native gold (>50 μm) appear at mineral boundaries and along the fissures. The gold color is bright yellow and has a measured Au:Ag ratio of 5:1, suggesting that native gold has been formed at a relatively high temperature.</p><p>Acknowledgments: This work was supported by two Romanian Ministry of Research and Innovation grants: PN-III-P4-ID-PCCF-2016-4-0014 and PN-III-P1-1.2-PCCDI-2017-0346/29.</p>


Minerals ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (11) ◽  
pp. 1017
Author(s):  
Sergey V. Khromykh ◽  
Tatiana A. Oitseva ◽  
Pavel D. Kotler ◽  
Boris A. D’yachkov ◽  
Sergey Z. Smirnov ◽  
...  

The paper presents new geological, mineralogical, and isotope geochronological data for rare-metal pegmatites in the Kalba granitic batholith (Eastern Kazakhstan). Mineralization is especially abundant in the Central-Kalba ore district, where pegmatite bodies occur at the top of large granite plutons and at intersections of deep faults. The pegmatites contain several successive mineral assemblages from barren quartz-microcline and quartz-microcline-albite to Li-Cs-Ta-Nb-Be-Sn-bearing cleavelandite-lepidolite-spodumene. Ar-Ar muscovite and lepidolite ages bracket the metallogenic event between 291 and 286 Ma. The pegmatite mineral deposits formed synchronously with the emplacement of the phase 1 Kalba granites during the evolution of hydrous silicate rare-metal magmas that are produced by the differentiation of granite magma at large sources with possible inputs of F and rare metals with fluids.


2012 ◽  
Vol 54 (7) ◽  
pp. 580-588
Author(s):  
A. S. Vakh ◽  
O. V. Avchenko ◽  
A. A. Karabtsov ◽  
V. A. Stepanov

2012 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Asmariyadi Asmariyadi ◽  
R. Langkoke ◽  
A. Maulana ◽  
I. Nur ◽  
W. AstamAn

Minerals ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (12) ◽  
pp. 572 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Števko ◽  
Jiří Sejkora ◽  
Zdeněk Dolníček ◽  
Pavel Škácha

Selenium-rich Au–Ag mineralization has been discovered in the Kremnica ore district, central Slovakia. The mineralization is hosted by a single quartz–dolomite vein hosted by Neogene propyllitized andesites of the Kremnica stratovolcano. Ore mineralogy and crystal chemistry of individual ore minerals have been studied here. The early base-metal ore mineralization composed of pyrite, sphalerite, and chalcopyrite lacks selenium, whereas the superimposed Au–Ag paragenesis is Se-enriched. The Au–Ag alloys, uytenbogaardtite, minerals of the galena–clausthalite series, acanthite–naumannite series, diaphorite, miargyrite, pyrargyrite–proustite, polybasite group, minerals of the tetrahedrite group and andorite branch (andorite IV, andorite VI, Ag-excess fizélyite), freieslebenite, and rare Pb–Sb sulphosalts (scaiinite, robinsonite, plagionite) have been identified here. Besides selenides, the most Se-enriched phases are miargyrite, proustite–pyrargyrite, and polybasite–pearceite, whose Se contents are among the highest reported worldwide. In addition, one new phase has been found, corresponding to a Se-analogue of pearceite containing 2.08–3.54 apfu Se. The style of mineralization, paragenetic situation, and chemical trends observed in individual minerals are comparable to those of Au–Ag low-sulphidation epithermal Au–Ag mineralizations of the Kremnica and neighboring Štiavnica and Hodruša-Hámre ore districts. However, the pronounced enrichment in selenium is a specific feature of the studied vein only.


2020 ◽  
Vol 115 (5) ◽  
pp. 1021-1054 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tarryn Kim Cawood ◽  
Abraham Rozendaal

Abstract The polymetamorphosed Swartberg Cu-Pb-Zn-Ag deposit in the Namaqua Metamorphic Province of South Africa is a major metal producer in the region, yet its genesis remains poorly understood. The deposit comprises several stratiform to stratabound units, namely the Lower Orebody and Dark Quartzite, the overlying Barite Unit, and the Upper Orebody, all of which are folded by an F2 isoclinal syncline and refolded by an open F3 synform. A discordant Garnet Quartzite unit surrounds the Upper Orebody in the F2 hinge, where it overprints the Lower Orebody and Barite Unit. The Lower Orebody comprises sulfidic, pelitic lenses with fine-grained pyrite, sphalerite, galena, and lesser pyrrhotite, hosted by sulfide-poor but magnetite- and barite-bearing siliceous rock. The overlying Barite Unit is poorly mineralized and grades from massive magnetite-barite close to the F2 hinge to distal laminated baritic schist and quartzite. The Dark Quartzite is the stratigraphic equivalent of the Lower Orebody and Barite Unit but comprises siliceous quartzite and schist, with lenses of conglomerate and minor Fe-Mn-Zn phases. The Upper Orebody displays rapid zonations from massive magnetite-rich iron formation in the F2 hinge, rich in coarse galena, pyrrhotite, and chalcopyrite, to sulfide-poor, magnetite-bearing schist and quartzite. The Garnet Quartzite is dominated by quartz and almandine garnet and mineralized with pyrite and chalcopyrite. Geochemical discriminant plots show that the Lower Orebody has a significant detrital component, whereas the Upper Orebody and Barite Unit are strongly zoned, with the greatest chemogenic component close to the F2 hinge. This corresponds to a deposit-scale metal zonation from the Cu-rich F2 hinge to more Pb- and then Zn-dominated areas. Mineral assemblages and paleoredox proxies suggest generally oxic conditions, with a more reduced signature close to the hinge and in the sulfidic Lower Orebody lenses. The Lower Orebody is interpreted as a mixed chemogenic-pelitic unit, with sulfides deposited on or near the seafloor during stage 1 hydrothermal activity. The sulfidic lenses formed from fine mud and clay deposited in quiet seafloor depressions, in which warm, dense, reducing, Pb-Zn-Ba–rich stage 1 brines accumulated, while the siliceous portions formed from higher-energy clastic sediments on aerated seafloor highs. The Barite Unit forms a baritic cap to the Lower Orebody, while the Dark Quartzite is their shallower-water equivalent. Thereafter, clastic sediment with lesser hydrothermal input was deposited during stage 2a exhalations, forming the poorly mineralized portions of the Upper Orebody. During stage 2b hydrothermal activity, hot Cu-Fe–rich fluids invaded part of the Upper Orebody, creating the highly chemogenic protolith to the well-mineralized, magnetite-rich portion. Associated hydrothermal alteration in a discordant subseafloor feeder zone created the Garnet Quartzite protolith. The F2 hinge thus corresponds closely to the original vent zone. Swartberg therefore resembles a deformed and metamorphosed Selwyn-type sedimentary exhalative deposit, with both proximal- (Upper Orebody, Garnet Quartzite) and distal-style (Lower Orebody) mineralization. The close association of these styles suggests that differences in the mineralizing fluids and depositional environment, rather than proximity to a vent, determine the deposit style.


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