scholarly journals CLASSIFICAÇÃO DOS VEIOS QUARTZO-CARBONÁTICOS DE DEPÓSITOS AURÍFEROS NO LINEAMENTO CÓRREGO DO SÍTIO, QF, MG

Author(s):  
Marco Aurélio Sequetto Pereira ◽  
Lydia Maria Lobato ◽  
Carlos Alberto Rosière ◽  
Rosaline C. Figueiredo e Silva

Os depósitos tipo lode-gold orogênicos Cachorro Bravo, Laranjeiras e Carvoaria, associados ao lineamento regional Córrego doSítio (CdS), estão localizados na porção leste do Quadrilátero Ferrífero, sudeste do cráton São Francisco. São hospedados em rochasmetassedimentares turbidíticas arqueanas do greenstone belt Rio das Velhas e controlados por zonas de cisalhamento NE-SW. Diques esoleiras metamáficos pré- a pós-deformacionais ocorrem intimamente associados à mineralização aurífera e constituem excelentes guiasprospectivos em lineamentos regionais como CdS. Cinco sistemas de veios, V1 a V5, são classificados de acordo com a composiçãomineralógica, textura, orientação, distribuição espacial e geometria. Dois tipos de quartzo ocorrem nestes veios, sendo o tipo 1predominantemente fumê, cedo-hidrotermal, e o tipo 2 leitoso, recristalizado. Apenas os veios V1 (fault-fill veins) são relacionados àmineralização aurífera através da paragênese arsenopirita+pirita+pirrotita+berthierita+ ouro livre; se desenvolvem concordantes à foliaçãomilonítica, S1m, e estão deformados. Veios V2 (oblique-extension veins) são associados temporalmente aos V1 e, embora não estejammineralizados nos depósitos estudados, são contemporâneos ao estágio mineralizador. Estes dois sistemas foram formados em regimedúctil-rúptil. Veios V3 (extension e breccia veins) são tardios à mineralização e representam um estágio posterior do fluido em regimedúctil-rúptil a rúptil; podem estar relacionados à mudança do campo de tensão regional e colocação dos diques tardios Db1. Os veios V4(extension veins) possuem reações de substituição mineral que marcam a hidratação do sistema e podem se associar ao relaxamento dasforças compressivas. Já os veios V5 (vein stockworks) ocorrem apenas em diques e soleiras metamáficos Db1 e estudos de inclusões fluidasindicam que esses contêm fluido diferente dos outros sistemas.Palavras Chave: Classificação de veios quartzo-carbonáticos, ouro orogênico, zonas de cisalhamento, diques e soleiras. ABSTRACTQUARTZ-CARBONATE VEIN CLASSIFICATION OF AURIFEROUS DEPOSITS IN CÓRREGO DO SÍTIO LINEAMENT, QF, MG. Theorogenic-type, lode-gold deposits Cachorro Bravo, Laranjeiras and Carvoaria, associated with the Córrego do Sítio (CdS) regional lineamentare located in the eastern portion of the Quadrilátero Ferrífero region, southern São Francisco craton, Brazil. They are hosted in Archeanmetaturbiditic rocks of the Rio das Velhas greenstone belt and controlled by NE-SW shear zones. Pre- to post-deformational dikes/sills areclosely related to gold mineralization and constitute excellent prospective guides in these regional lineaments such as CdS. Five veinsystems have been classified, V1 to V5, in accordance to their mineralogical composition, texture, orientation, spatial distribution andgeometry. Two types of quartz occur in these veins, with type 1 being predominantly smoky, early hydrothermal, and type 2 a milky,recrystallized quartz. Only V1 veins (fault-fill vein) are related to gold and have a paragenesis with arsenopyrite+pyrite+pyrrhotite+berthierite+ free gold; they develop along the mylonitic foliation S1m, and have been deformed. The V2 veins (oblique-extension veins) areassociated temporally with V1 and although non-mineralized, in the studied deposits they are contemporaneous to the gold stage. Thesetwo systems are formed under a ductile-brittle regime. The V3 veins (extension and breccias veins) are post gold and represent a late-stagehydrothermal fluid under ductile-brittle to brittle regime; they may be related to changes in the stress field and to the emplacement oflate-stage Db1 dikes. The V4 veins (extension veins) have mineral replacement reactions that represent hydration of the system associatedwith the relaxation of the compressive field. The V5 veins (stockwork style) are limited to metamafic Db1 dykes/sills and fluid inclusionstudies indicate that they contain a different fluid from the others systems.Keywords: Quartz-carbonate vein classification, orogenic gold, shear zones, dikes/sills

Minerals ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (11) ◽  
pp. 983
Author(s):  
Orivaldo Ferreira Baltazar ◽  
Lydia Maria Lobato

The Quadrilátero Ferrífero region is located in the extreme southeast of the Brasiliano São Francisco craton, Minas Gerais state, Brazil. It is composed of (i) Archean TTG granite-gneaissic terranes; (ii) the Archean Rio das Velhas greenstone belt; (iii) the Proterozoic metasedimentary and metavolcano-sedimentary covers. The Rio das Velhas rocks were deposited in the synformal NW–SE-directed Nova Lima basin. The Archean deformation converted the Nova Lima basin into an ample synclinorium with an eastern inverted flank. Archean orogenic gold mineralization within the Rio das Velhas greenstone belt rocks is controlled by NNW–SSE-directed, Archean regional shear zones subparallel to the strata of the Nova Lima synclinorium borders. Transamazonian and Brasiliano orogenies are superposed onto the Archean structures that control gold mineralization. In the eastern domain, Brasiliano fold-and-fault belts prevail, whereas in the western domain Archean and Transamazonian structures abound. The present study focus mainly is the western domain where the Cuiabá, Morro Velho, Raposos, Lamego and Faria deposits are located. Gold orebodies plunge to the E–NE and are tectonically controlled by the Archean D1–D2 deformation. The D3 Transamazonian compression—Which had a SE–NW vector sub-parallel to the regional mineralized Archean foliation/bedding—Buckled these structures, resulting in commonly open, synformal and antiformal regional folds. These are well documented near the gold deposits, with NE–SW axial traces and fold axes plunging to E–NE. Such folds are normal to inverted, NW-verging, with an axial planar foliation dipping moderately to the SE. The Transamazonian compression has only been responsible for the reorientation of the mineralized Archean gold ores, due to coaxial refolding characterized by an opposite tectonic transport. It has therefore not caused any other significant changes. Thrust shear zones, sub-parallel to the strong Transamazonian foliation, have given rise to localized metric segmentation and to the dislocation of gold orebodies. Throughout the region, along the towns of Nova Lima to Sabará, structures pertaining to the Brasiliano Araçuaí orogeny are represented only by gentle folding and by a discrete, non-pervasive crenulation cleavage. Thrust-shear zones and small-scale normal faults have caused, at most, metric dislocations along N–S-oriented planes.


2000 ◽  
Vol 37 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 135-164 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Kerrich ◽  
John Ludden

Models for fluid flow and hydrothermal alteration for the Abitibi greenstone belt are reviewed in the light of Lithoprobe results in the region. In the Abitibi greenstone belt, eruption of volcanic sequences over 2750-2700 Ma was accompanied by pervasive low-temperature hydrothermal alteration at high water/rock ratios, giving systematic 18O-enrichment. Archean ambient ocean water bottom temperatures were likely ca. 30°C, and δ18O ~0 ± 1‰. Chert-iron formations precipitated from low temperature hydrothermal discharge. Base metal massive sulphide deposits formed at or near the seafloor from focussed discharge of high-temperature (~300-400°C) fluids in convective cells sited above subvolcanic intrusions. The ore fluids were evolved seawater that had undergone compositional and isotopic evolution by high-temperature, low water/rock exchange with the volcanic pile to NaCl (3-7 wt.%) or CaCl2-NaCl (up to 30 wt.%) brines of δ18O = 0-8‰. These volcanic associated hydrothermal deposits are associated with greenstone belt asemblages in the northern Abitibi subprovince that were emplaced as a series of thrust slices over the Opatica plutonic belt. In the southern Abitibi subprovince the hydrothermal deposits were associated with a series of rift basins (Noranda, Val d'Or, etc.), formed on top of accreted oceanic assemblages comprising primitive arcs and plateaus, or in protoarcs, and associated with oblique convergence. Contemporaneous erosion of emergent arcs and the older cratonic provenance terrane of the Pontiac subprovince by orographic rainfall, and submarine weathering, fed first-cycle vol cano genic sediments to depositional basins in the Abitibi, but siliciclastic sediments of mixed old 3 Ga continent and 2.7 Ga arc provenance in the Pontiac subprovince. Abitibi subprovince turbidites were more weathered and 18O-enriched than Pontiac subprovince equivalents. Subduction-accretion assembly of the Opatica-Abitibi and Pontiac terranes involved allochthonous thrusting of the Abitibi subprovince over the Pontiac subprovince. There were several pulses of granitoid magmatism during accretionary assembly over 2695 to 2674 Ma. Syn- to late-tectonic tonalites were generated by melting of hot young hydrous ocean crust in a shallow-dipping intraoceanic subduction zone. The intrusions exsolved small quantities of magmatic fluids that formed Cu-Zn showings. Late-tectonic shoshonites formed at [Formula: see text]80 km in subarc mantle wedge by slab dehydration-wedge melting. This late-stage of arc development involved transfer of significant quantities of gas-rich alkaline magmas 80+ km through the lithosphere along the accretionary terrane bounding structures, and produced small phosphorus and barite deposits. Synmagmatic metamorphism was of the high-temperature low-pressure type, and occurred in several pulses; water/rock ratios were generally low distal from structures. Tens of thousands of cubic kilometres of fluids generated by dehydration reactions at the base of the subduction-accretion complex, during thermal relaxation following collision and the main granitoid pulses, advected up terrane boundary structures and locally generated lode gold deposits. At the highest structural levels these fluids mixed with Archean meteoric water where δ18O < 0. A second metamorphism (M2) occurred over 2645 to 2611 Ma leading to melting of Pontiac sediments and formation of S-type granites. Deposits of Mo, Th, and P were precipitated from magmatic fluids of δ18O 8-9‰. M2 variably reset radiogenic and stable isotope systems in nonrobust minerals of vol canogenic massive sulphide and lode gold deposits. Hypersaline CaCl2 formation brines evolved in Paleoproterozoic glaciogenic sediments; these penetrated into the Archean basement where they redistributed gold and are pervasively present as low-temperature secondary brine inclusions. The Matachewan (2.5 Ga) and Hearst dyke swarms drove higher temperature advection of the brines, and Ag-Co-Ni sulpharsenide deposits formed by thermal evolution of the brines driven by the Nipissing diabase dyke swarm at ~2219 Ma. Local resetting of 40Ar/39Ar spectra between 2550 and 2200 Ma was the product of tectonic pumping of fluids along reactivated Archean structures, possibly due to coupling of the 200 km thick mantle lithosphere to Archean crust. Seismic evidence for late overprinting of the lower crust and growth of 2450 Ma zircon rims in lower crustal assemblages were associated with this event. There was also fluid activity at 1950 to 1850 Ma due to the Hudsonian orogen induced Kapuskasing event. Hypersaline CaCl2-rich brines formed in the Paleozoic sedimentary cover (~500 Ma), penetrated deep (>5 km) into the Archean basement, and comprise vast reservoirs of hypersaline brines deep in the Shield. The brines precipitated prehnite-laumontite veins that record hundreds of increments of dilation. Subglacial 18O-depleted fluids penetrated to shallow ([Formula: see text]1 km) depths in the Quaternary; they form mixing lines with the hypersaline end member. Extremely D-depleted (-400 to -100‰) CH4 and H discharge in mining districts of the Shield. The depleted H may form by radiolysis of H2O and (or) by a Fischer-Tropsch type process. The hypersaline brine end-member was shifted to the left of the meteoric water line by exchange with D-depleted H.


2015 ◽  
Vol 45 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jorge Geraldo Roncato Júnior ◽  
Lydia Maria Lobato ◽  
Luiz Claudio Lima ◽  
Cecília Germano Porto ◽  
Rosaline Cristina Figueiredo e Silva

A study of geology and rocks paragenesis has been conducted at the Córrego do Sítio auriferous lineament, containing the Cachorro Bravo, Laranjeiras and Carvoaria metaturbidite-hosted lode-gold deposits located in the Quadrilátero Ferrífero Region, Minas Gerais, Brazil. These representative deposits are described to illustrate the essentially similar general character of all the deposits of lineament as well as the wide compositional and mineralogical differences in the ore of the different deposits, where, for the Cachorro Bravo deposit, a geological mapping included two underground mine galleries. The Córrego do Sítio unit is a metamorphosed turbidite in an alternating sequence of metagraywackes and phyllites, with parallel to discordant metamafic dikes and sills. The ore zone is predominantly hosted at the stratigraphic break between metasedimentary and metamafic rocks. Four deformation events affected the mine sequence. Mineralized veins and veinlets are considered to have formed within a brittle-ductile shear-zone environment and occurred in multiple episodes. Different vein types are recognized, but the most important volumetrically is a S1-concordant type characterized by smoky and milky quartz-carbonate-sulfide ± sulfosalts veins. Veins are dominated by quartz, but locally they are characterized by carbonate and a large variety of sulfide and sulfosalt minerals. Pyrite is the commonest associated sulfide mineral, followed by arsenopyrite and pyrrhotite. An extensive mineralogical study of polished sections has confirmed different generations of sulfide minerals. The sulfides and sulfosalt minerals are interrelated in the veins and disseminated on wall rocks. The data are consistent with a genetic models related to other Archean lode-gold deposits.


1987 ◽  
Vol 24 (8) ◽  
pp. 1643-1651 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Neil Phillips ◽  
David I. Groves ◽  
Isobel J. Brown

The Golden Mile at Kalgoorlie represents a giant Archean hydrothermal gold system localized by ductile shear zones and hosted mainly by a differentiated tholeiitic sill. Chlorite, carbonate, and pyrite alteration zones cover the whole mineralized area (1 km × 3 km), and calculations suggest that for the Golden Mile (production around 1200 t Au), the amounts of components added to these alteration zones are 340 Mt CO2, 20 Mt K, and 5 Mt S. If one adopts a metamorphic-replacement model for gold mineralization in which all ore components derive from devolatilization of greenstones at amphibolite facies or above, these data suggest that a source area involving a 5 km thick greenstone slab of area 8 km × 8 km could produce the necessary CO2, K, S, H2O, and Au. This is considered a reasonable volume of greenstone belt, and under such a model the minimum spacing of large gold deposits would be approximately 20 km along strike.Neither special Au-enriched source rocks nor unreasonably large volumes of greenstone belt are required to produce a giant gold deposit. Instead, the most critical parameters are suitable structural environments providing focussing of fluids and multiple channelways through specific Fe-rich, low-tensile-strength host rocks to ensure efficient depositional mechanisms.


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