The Evolution of a Porphyry Cu-Au Deposit, Based on LA-ICP-MS Analysis of Fluid Inclusions: Bajo de la Alumbrera, Argentina

2002 ◽  
Vol 97 (8) ◽  
pp. 1889-1920 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Ulrich ◽  
D. Gunther ◽  
C. A. Heinrich
2019 ◽  
Vol 104 (8) ◽  
pp. 1092-1116 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jun-Yi Pan ◽  
Pei Ni ◽  
Ru-Cheng Wang

Abstract Granite-related wolframite-quartz veins are the world's most important tungsten mineralization and production resource. Recent progress in revealing their hydrothermal processes has been greatly facilitated by the use of infrared microscopy and laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) analysis of both quartz- and wolframite-hosted fluid inclusions. However, owing to the paucity of detailed petrography, previous fluid inclusion studies on coexisting wolframite and quartz are associated with a certain degree of ambiguity. To better understand the fluid processes forming these two minerals, free-grown crystals of intergrown wolframite and quartz from the giant Yaogangxian W deposit in South China were studied using integrated in situ analytical methods including cathodoluminescence (CL) imaging, infrared microthermometry, Raman microspectroscopy, and fluid inclusion LA-ICP-MS analysis. Detailed crystal-scale petrography with critical help from CL imaging shows repetition of quartz, wolframite, and muscovite in the depositional sequence, which comprises a paragenesis far more complex than previous comparable studies. The reconstruction of fluid history in coexisting wolframite and quartz recognizes at least four successive fluid inclusion generations, two of which were entrapped concurrently with wolframite deposition. Fluctuations of fluid temperature and salinity during precipitation of coexisting wolframite and quartz are reflected by our microthermometry results, according to which wolframite-hosted fluid inclusions do not display higher homogenization temperature or salinity than those in quartz. However, LA-ICP-MS analysis shows that both primary fluid inclusions in wolframite and quartz-hosted fluid inclusions associated intimately with wolframite deposition are characterized by strong enrichment in Sr and depletion in B and As compared to quartz-hosted fluid inclusions that are not associated with wolframite deposition. The chemical similarity between the two fluid inclusion generations associated with wolframite deposition implies episodic tungsten mineralization derived from fluids exhibiting distinct chemical signatures. Multiple chemical criteria including incompatible elements and Br/Cl ratios of fluid inclusions in both minerals suggest a magmatic-sourced fluid with the possible addition of sedimentary and meteoric water. Combined with microthermometry and Raman results, fluid chemical evolution in terms of B, As, S, Sr, W, Mn, Fe, and carbonic volatiles collectively imply fluid phase separation and mixing with sedimentary fluid may have played important roles in wolframite deposition, whereas fluid cooling and addition of Fe and Mn do not appear to be the major driving factor. This study also shows that fluid inclusions in both wolframite and coexisting quartz may contain a substantial amount of carbonic volatiles (CO2 ± CH4) and H3BO3. Ignoring the occurrence of these components can result in significant overestimation of apparent salinity and miscalculation of LA-ICP-MS elemental concentrations. We suggest that these effects should be considered critically to avoid misinterpretation of fluid inclusion data, especially for granite-related tungsten-tin deposits.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiao-Yu Zhao ◽  
Hong Zhong ◽  
Rui-Zhong Hu ◽  
Wei Mao ◽  
Zhong-Jie Bai ◽  
...  

Abstract The Luoboling Cu-Mo deposit, with 1.4 million tons (Mt) Cu and 0.11 Mt Mo, is the largest porphyry deposit in the Zijinshan district of southeast China. Mineralization at Luoboling is divided into premineralization, synmineralization, and late-mineralization stages. Consistent Cs/(Na + K) ratios in fluid inclusions suggest that the mineralizing fluids originated from a common source—the Luoboling granodiorite porphyry. The absence of initial supercritical fluid inclusions and abundant coexisting vapor and brine fluid inclusions imply that the fluids exsolved at low-pressure two-phase conditions, with temperatures of 250° to 600°C and salinities of 30 to 60 wt % NaCl equiv (brines) and <10 wt % NaCl equiv (vapors). The deposit formed at ~120 to 800 bar, corresponding to the depths of ~1.2 to 3.2 km (assuming a transition from lithostatic to hydrostatic load). Metals such as Mo (up to 77 ppm), Pb (up to 8,800 ppm), Zn (up to 13,000 ppm), and Ag (up to 130 ppm) migrated mainly in brines. Although vapor inclusions have high concentrations of Cu (up to 20,000 ppm), hypersaline fluid was the major medium for Cu transport and precipitation. The successive precipitation of Mo and Cu occurred when fluids cooled to ~500°C and ~350° to 450°C, respectively. The late-stage quartz-pyrite veins with phyllic alteration were formed by Cu-rich magmatic hydrothermal fluids. The Zijinshan epithermal Cu-Au deposit and the Luoboling porphyry Cu-Mo deposit originated from independent hydrothermal systems. Nonetheless, the increasing trends of Pb, Zn, and Ag concentrations in different stage inclusions from Luoboling imply potential for distal Pb-Zn-Ag mineralization.


2011 ◽  
Vol 108 (3) ◽  
pp. 163-175 ◽  
Author(s):  
Boriana G. Kotzeva ◽  
Marcel Guillong ◽  
Elitsa Stefanova ◽  
Nikolay B. Piperov

Author(s):  
Oscar LAURENT ◽  
Marcel Guillong ◽  
Christoph A. Heinrich ◽  
Kenneth Neubauer ◽  
Chady Stephan

For the past 20 years, LA-ICP-MS has been the method of choice to quantify element concentrations in fluid inclusions hosted in geological samples. However, the ablation of fluid inclusions typically...


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document