scholarly journals The Mineralization and Structural Geology of the Porphyry Copper Deposits of Pakistan

2021 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 130-136
Author(s):  
Syed Tallataf Hussain Shah ◽  
Nangyal Ghani Khan ◽  
Muhammad Imran Hafeez Abbasi ◽  
Kamran Tabassum ◽  
Syed Khaizer Wahab Shah

The purpose of this review is to shed light on copper deposits found in different regions of Pakistan. The geological attributes of copper deposits have been considered with their tectonic context. The porphyry copper deposits can be traced in Pakistan from the north through Kohistan Island Arc (KIA) up to the south to Chaghi Magmatic Arc (CMA). These deposits are mainly found in and around the Late Tertiary–Early Tertiary Himalayan Belt, Kohistan magmatic arc, Karakorum Block Foreland fold and thrust belt, Ophiolite Thrust belt, Suture zone and Chaghi Magmatic Arc. These deposits in Pakistan are chiefly established in different episodes of tectonic regimes, including subduction processes, oceanic island arc, continental arc, along with Chaman- OrnachNal Fault system and post-collisional settings.

1983 ◽  
Vol 20 (6) ◽  
pp. 1052-1071 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul E. Damon ◽  
Muhammad Shafiqullah ◽  
Kenneth F. Clark

K–Ar dating demonstrates that all but eight of 41 dated porphyry copper and related ore deposits of Mexico were emplaced during the Laramide episode of maximum plate convergence. One older deposit is related to the Jurassic volcanic arc of western North America, one is pre-Laramide Cretaceous, four are Oligocene in age, and two late Cenozoic deposits are within the modern trans-Mexican–Chiapenecan volcanic arc. Thirty-three of the deposits lie within a long narrow belt that continues into Arizona and New Mexico, and widens from 100 km to over 300 km in the region of maximum extension in the southern Basin and Range Province. Eighty-five percent of the deposits were emplaced during the eastward transgression of the Cordilleran volcanic arc in middle Cretaceous through Eocene time.The occurrence of the porphyry copper deposits of Mexico appears to be independent of the terrane intruded and the copper content of the wall rocks where the wall rocks predate the volcanic arc, which is syngenetic with the porphyry stock. However, strontium is significantly more radiogenic where the host porphyry has intruded terrane having a Precambrian crystalline basement. Most frequently, the porphyry pluton can be observed to have intruded penecontemporaneous volcanic rocks or the batholith itself. The porphyries appear to be apophyses of the batholiths. The relationships suggest that the ore components are contained within the calc-alkaline batholiths and concentrated in the subvolcanic porphyries and wall rocks during transport of hydrothermal fluids to the volcanic orifice.The shape of the Cordilleran copper belt is controlled by magma composition, existence of a protective capping of dominantly volcanic rock, uplift, time, and erosion. As the continental volcanic arc that produced the porphyry copper deposits progressed eastward, the associated magma became more alkalic and copper poor. Thus, enrichment to ore grade became increasingly improbable to the east. Uplift and ample time for erosion prior to the return of the continental volcanic arc reduced the probability of ore preservation to the west. Optimum conditions for preservation were present within the belt where burial of calc-alkalic porphyry plutons under a thick volcanic cover occurred before removal of the ore zone by erosion. The broader width of the porphyry belt to the north is probably the result of both more extensive basin-and-range extension and basin-and-range taphrogeny that exposed some of the porphyries to relatively recent denudation and consequently made them available for economic exploitation.


2020 ◽  
Vol 47 (3) ◽  
pp. 469
Author(s):  
Christian Creixell ◽  
Javier Fuentes ◽  
Hessel Bierma ◽  
Esteban Salazar

Cretaceous porphyry copper deposits of northern Chile (28º-29º30’ S) are genetically related with dacitic to dioritic porphyries and they represent a still poorly-explored target for Cu resources. The porphyries correspond to stocks distributed into two separated discontinuous NS trending belts of different age. The location of these porphyries is generally adjacent to orogen-parallel major fault systems that extend along the studied segment and also have a marked temporal relationship with deformation events registered along these structures. A first episode of Cu-bearing porphyry emplacement took place between 116 and 104 Ma (Mina Unión or Frontera, Cachiyuyo, Punta Colorada, Dos Amigos, Tricolor porphyries). These Early Cretaceous dacite to diorite porphyries are spatially associated with the eastern segments of the Atacama Fault System, which records sinistral transpression that started at 121 Ma producing ground uplift, consequent denudation and exhumation of the Early Cretaceous magmatic arc. This resulted in a change from marine to continental deposition with an angular unconformity in the site of the back-arc basin after of eastward migration of the deformation around 112-110 Ma. At the scale of the continental margin, this deformation is correlated with early stage of the Mochica Orogenic event described in Perú. A second episode of Cu-bearing porphyry emplacement occurred between 92 and 87 Ma (Elisa, Johana, Las Campanas and La Verde deposits), which are spatially and temporally associated with the regional-scale Las Cañas-El Torito reverse fault, active between 89 and 84 Ma, during the Peruvian Orogenic Phase. This fault up thrust to the west part of the Chañarcillo Group rocks (Lower Cretaceous) over the younger upper levels of the Cerrillos Formation (Upper Cretaceous). The integrated geological mapping and geochemical data of the Early to Late Cretaceous volcanic rocks indicates that both Early Cretaceous sinistral transpression and Late Cretaceous east-west compression were not significant in promote changes in magma genesis, except for slight changes in trace element ratios (increase in Th/Ta, Nb/Ta and La/Yb) suggesting that the Late Cretaceous deformation event produced only slightly increase in crustal thickness (>40 km), but far from being comparable to major Cenozoic orogenic phases, at least along the magmatic arc to back-arc domains in the study area. Finally, our study give insights about regional geological parameters that can be used as a first order guide for exploration of Cu resources along Cretaceous magmatic belts of northern Chile, where both Early and Late Cretaceous Cu-bearing porphyry intrusions are restricted to a large structural block bounded to the west and east by Cretaceous fault systems.


2020 ◽  
Vol 115 (1) ◽  
pp. 153-175
Author(s):  
Daniel A. Favorito ◽  
Eric Seedorff

Abstract This study integrates new geologic mapping and structural analysis with previous work near Walnut Canyon and Telegraph Canyon to address the style and magnitude of shortening and the relationship between contractional structures and porphyry preservation and localization between the Ray and Resolution porphyry copper deposits. Cenozoic extensional structures were superimposed on earlier contractional structures formed during the Laramide orogeny, which dates from ~80 to 50 Ma. This superposition requires that Cenozoic normal faults be restored prior to analysis of Laramide contractional structures and their relationship to nearby porphyry copper deposits. Five distinct sets of normal faults within the study area progressively tilted the region 65° east. The amount of extension was 10.3 km or 276%. Using key constraints such as offset strata, cutoff angles between faults and various units, and Laramide fault geometries, the study area was structurally reconstructed and verified using 2-D kinematic modeling of reverse fault offset and related folding. Total shortening is 7.2 km or 98%. Laramide reverse faults are interpreted as thick-skinned basement-cored uplifts, because they restore to moderate angles, have related fault-propagation folds, and involve significant crystalline basement rock. The Telegraph Canyon reverse fault has at least 5.3 km of offset, and the Walnut Canyon reverse fault has 3.2 km. The preferred estimate of the total vertical uplift for the fault system is 5.2 km but could be several kilometers greater. The restored strike direction of these faults combined with mid-Cenozoic erosion surfaces throughout the region suggests that this fault system may be responsible for the Laramide uplift of the Tortilla Mountains and Black Hills. In addition, most major porphyry centers appear to have been intruded into the footwall of this large uplift, with local examples including Ray and Resolution, suggesting that topography generated from this uplift may have been critical to preservation of these ore systems. Though definitive crosscutting relationships do not exist in the immediate map area, geologic relationships in a broader area suggest that shortening here began after 74 Ma and, in the Ray area, had ended by ~69 Ma and that porphyry formation postdated reverse faulting by as much as 5 m.y. to as little as <1 m.y.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Santillana Villa ◽  
◽  
M. Valencia Moreno ◽  
L. Ochoa Landín ◽  
R. Del Rio Salas ◽  
...  

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