Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Hydrothermal fluid signatures of the Yulong porphyry Cu-Mo deposit: Clues from the composition and U-Pb dating of W-bearing rutile
View through CrossRef
AbstractHydrothermal rutile (TiO2) is a widely distributed accessory mineral in hydrothermal veins or alteration assemblages of porphyry deposits and provides important information for further understanding hydrothermal fluid signatures. This study determines the geochemical composition and U-Pb dates of hydrothermal rutile from the Yulong porphyry Cu-Mo deposit in east Tibet, China. Three types of TiO2 polymorphs have been identified based on their Raman spectroscopic, textural, and chemical characteristics. (1) Brookite and anatase pseudomorphs after titanite in a fine-grained matrix, indicating low-temperature hydrothermal fluids destabilizing primary Ti-bearing minerals during argillic alteration (type-I). (2) Elongated and prismatic rutile present in hydrothermal veins or in clusters in accompanying alteration envelope characterized by weak zoning (type-II). And (3) rutile intergrown with sulfides in hydrothermal veins, characterized by well-developed patchy and sector zoning (type-III). In contrast to the type-I and type-II TiO2 polymorphs, tungsten is enriched in backscattered bright patches and sector zones in type-III rutile, which is due to the substitution of W6+ in the Ti4+ octahedral site. The mechanism of the enrichment of tungsten is effectively driven by the halogen-rich (F, Cl) aqueous fluids during hydrothermal mineralization. In situ U-Pb dating of the type-III rutile yields a lower intercept age of 41.8 ± 1.2 Ma, which brackets the timing of the Cu-Mo mineralization. The relationship between rutile textures and composition indicates that W-bearing rutile can serve as a recorder of hydrothermal processes in porphyry Cu deposits.
Mineralogical Society of America
Title: Hydrothermal fluid signatures of the Yulong porphyry Cu-Mo deposit: Clues from the composition and U-Pb dating of W-bearing rutile
Description:
AbstractHydrothermal rutile (TiO2) is a widely distributed accessory mineral in hydrothermal veins or alteration assemblages of porphyry deposits and provides important information for further understanding hydrothermal fluid signatures.
This study determines the geochemical composition and U-Pb dates of hydrothermal rutile from the Yulong porphyry Cu-Mo deposit in east Tibet, China.
Three types of TiO2 polymorphs have been identified based on their Raman spectroscopic, textural, and chemical characteristics.
(1) Brookite and anatase pseudomorphs after titanite in a fine-grained matrix, indicating low-temperature hydrothermal fluids destabilizing primary Ti-bearing minerals during argillic alteration (type-I).
(2) Elongated and prismatic rutile present in hydrothermal veins or in clusters in accompanying alteration envelope characterized by weak zoning (type-II).
And (3) rutile intergrown with sulfides in hydrothermal veins, characterized by well-developed patchy and sector zoning (type-III).
In contrast to the type-I and type-II TiO2 polymorphs, tungsten is enriched in backscattered bright patches and sector zones in type-III rutile, which is due to the substitution of W6+ in the Ti4+ octahedral site.
The mechanism of the enrichment of tungsten is effectively driven by the halogen-rich (F, Cl) aqueous fluids during hydrothermal mineralization.
In situ U-Pb dating of the type-III rutile yields a lower intercept age of 41.
8 ± 1.
2 Ma, which brackets the timing of the Cu-Mo mineralization.
The relationship between rutile textures and composition indicates that W-bearing rutile can serve as a recorder of hydrothermal processes in porphyry Cu deposits.
Related Results
Evolution of magmatic-hydrothermal system of the Kalaxiange’er porphyry copper belt and implications for ore formation (Xinjiang, China)
Evolution of magmatic-hydrothermal system of the Kalaxiange’er porphyry copper belt and implications for ore formation (Xinjiang, China)
Abstract
The Kalaxiange’er porphyry copper ore belt is situated in the eastern part of the southern Altai of the Central Asian Orogenic Belt and forms part of a broa...
Mineral markers of porphyry processes: regional and local signatures of porphyry prospectivity
Mineral markers of porphyry processes: regional and local signatures of porphyry prospectivity
Porphyry-style mineralisation occurs chiefly as a consequence of the release of large volumes of metal-bearing aqueous brine during the cooling and crystallization of plutonic and ...
Hydrothermal Alteration and Mineralization of Middle Jurassic Dexing Porphyry Cu‐Mo Deposit, Southeast China
Hydrothermal Alteration and Mineralization of Middle Jurassic Dexing Porphyry Cu‐Mo Deposit, Southeast China
AbstractThe Dexing deposit is located in a NE‐trending magmatic belt along the southeastern margin of the Yangtze Craton. It is the largest porphyry copper deposit in China, consis...
Insights Into the Magma Source and Evolution of the Taca Taca Bajo Porphyry Deposit: Implications for the Metallogeny and Cu Fertility of the Central Andean Retro Arc
Insights Into the Magma Source and Evolution of the Taca Taca Bajo Porphyry Deposit: Implications for the Metallogeny and Cu Fertility of the Central Andean Retro Arc
Abstract
The magmatic processes that lead to porphyry Cu ore formation in continental retro-arc environments are not well understood. As a result, the uncertainty of...
Fluid and melt inclusion study of magmatic-hydrothermal mineralization in the Ossa Morena Zone (SW Spain)
Fluid and melt inclusion study of magmatic-hydrothermal mineralization in the Ossa Morena Zone (SW Spain)
The Ossa Morena Zone (OMZ) in the southwest of Spain is one of the most complex and best studied areas in the Variscan Belt, and records a heterogeneous tectonic evolution from the...
Magmatic Evolution and Nb-Ta Enrichment of Early Jurassic Granitic Porphyry from the Shangxiahu Nb-Ta Deposit of the Nanling Range
Magmatic Evolution and Nb-Ta Enrichment of Early Jurassic Granitic Porphyry from the Shangxiahu Nb-Ta Deposit of the Nanling Range
The Shangxiahu Nb-Ta deposit is located in the Yongding region of Fujian Province, the south-eastern section of the Nanling Range, South China. A series of Nb-Ta deposits, associat...
Platinum-Group Element Geochemistry of Igneous Rocks in the Chongjiang Cu–Mo–Au Deposit, Southern Tibet: Implications for the Formation of Post-Collisional Porphyry Cu Deposits
Platinum-Group Element Geochemistry of Igneous Rocks in the Chongjiang Cu–Mo–Au Deposit, Southern Tibet: Implications for the Formation of Post-Collisional Porphyry Cu Deposits
Abstract
The timing and extent of sulfide saturation have been suggested as controlling factors in the formation of economically significant porphyry Cu deposits in ...
Formation of a granite-related Sn-Pb-Zn-(Ag) deposit from three discrete mineralization events around a common magmatic-hydrothermal center over a span of ~45 million years at Changpu, eastern Guangdong, South China
Formation of a granite-related Sn-Pb-Zn-(Ag) deposit from three discrete mineralization events around a common magmatic-hydrothermal center over a span of ~45 million years at Changpu, eastern Guangdong, South China
Abstract
Magmatic-hydrothermal Sn-(W) mineralization is commonly associated with Pb-Zn-Ag mineralization, forming Sn-polymetallic deposits that typically exhibit a z...

