Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Age and Origin of the Dongping Au-Te Deposit in the North China Craton Revisited: Evidence from Paragenesis, Geochemistry, and In Situ U-Pb Geochronology of Garnet
View through CrossRef
Abstract
Dongping is the largest Au-Te vein deposit (~120 t Au) in the North China craton, but its age, origin, and setting remain unsolved. Here, we integrate paragenesis, geochemistry, and in situ U-Pb geochronology of garnet to constrain the timing and possible origin of the Dongping Au-Te deposit. Gold mineralization at Dongping is hosted in the Shuiquangou alkaline complex (ca. 401–390 Ma) and dominated by quartz-sulfide veins with minor ores in adjacent alteration envelopes. Andradite to grossular garnets are recognized in pre-, syn-, and post-ore quartz veins as well as mineralized alteration envelopes and are closely associated with a variety of ore and gangue minerals, mainly including K-feldspar, quartz, specularite, magnetite, pyrite, tellurides, epidote, and calcite. The paragenetic, textural, fluid inclusion, and compositional data suggest that garnets precipitated directly from a low-salinity fluid at 302° to 383°C and 90 to 330 bar.
Garnets from various veins and alteration envelopes have similar U contents ranging from 0.80 to 13.89 mg/kg and yield reproducible U-Pb dates of 142 ± 5 to 139 ± 6 Ma (1σ) by laser ablation-inductively coupled plasmamass spectrometry. The dating results suggest that gold mineralization at Dongping occurred in the Early Cretaceous and thus preclude a genetic link between Au-Te mineralization and the ore-hosting alkaline intrusion as commonly suggested. When combined with independent geologic, geochemical, and geochronological studies, the new garnet U-Pb dates allow us to classify the Dongping Au-Te deposit as an oxidized intrusion-related gold deposit, with the causative magma likely derived from melting of an ancient enriched lithospheric mantle source due to destruction of the subcontinental lithospheric keel beneath the North China craton—a catastrophic event induced by the westward subduction of the Paleo-Pacific plate. This study highlights garnet U-Pb dating as a potential robust geochronometer for gold vein deposits elsewhere.
Society of Economic Geologists
Title: Age and Origin of the Dongping Au-Te Deposit in the North China Craton Revisited: Evidence from Paragenesis, Geochemistry, and In Situ U-Pb Geochronology of Garnet
Description:
Abstract
Dongping is the largest Au-Te vein deposit (~120 t Au) in the North China craton, but its age, origin, and setting remain unsolved.
Here, we integrate paragenesis, geochemistry, and in situ U-Pb geochronology of garnet to constrain the timing and possible origin of the Dongping Au-Te deposit.
Gold mineralization at Dongping is hosted in the Shuiquangou alkaline complex (ca.
401–390 Ma) and dominated by quartz-sulfide veins with minor ores in adjacent alteration envelopes.
Andradite to grossular garnets are recognized in pre-, syn-, and post-ore quartz veins as well as mineralized alteration envelopes and are closely associated with a variety of ore and gangue minerals, mainly including K-feldspar, quartz, specularite, magnetite, pyrite, tellurides, epidote, and calcite.
The paragenetic, textural, fluid inclusion, and compositional data suggest that garnets precipitated directly from a low-salinity fluid at 302° to 383°C and 90 to 330 bar.
Garnets from various veins and alteration envelopes have similar U contents ranging from 0.
80 to 13.
89 mg/kg and yield reproducible U-Pb dates of 142 ± 5 to 139 ± 6 Ma (1σ) by laser ablation-inductively coupled plasmamass spectrometry.
The dating results suggest that gold mineralization at Dongping occurred in the Early Cretaceous and thus preclude a genetic link between Au-Te mineralization and the ore-hosting alkaline intrusion as commonly suggested.
When combined with independent geologic, geochemical, and geochronological studies, the new garnet U-Pb dates allow us to classify the Dongping Au-Te deposit as an oxidized intrusion-related gold deposit, with the causative magma likely derived from melting of an ancient enriched lithospheric mantle source due to destruction of the subcontinental lithospheric keel beneath the North China craton—a catastrophic event induced by the westward subduction of the Paleo-Pacific plate.
This study highlights garnet U-Pb dating as a potential robust geochronometer for gold vein deposits elsewhere.
Related Results
The clustered nucleation and growth processes of garnet in regional metamorphic rocks from north‐west Connecticut, USA
The clustered nucleation and growth processes of garnet in regional metamorphic rocks from north‐west Connecticut, USA
Serial sectioning and imaging with a flatbed scanner yielded the three‐dimensional size and spatial distribution of garnet porphyroblasts in two garnet schists and one staurolite‐b...
Phlogopite 40Ar/39Ar Geochronology for Guodian Skarn Fe Deposit in Qihe–Yucheng District, Luxi Block, North China Craton: A Link between Craton Destruction and Fe Mineralization
Phlogopite 40Ar/39Ar Geochronology for Guodian Skarn Fe Deposit in Qihe–Yucheng District, Luxi Block, North China Craton: A Link between Craton Destruction and Fe Mineralization
The Guodian Fe deposit is representative of the newly discovered Qihe–Yucheng high-grade Fe skarn ore cluster, Luxi Block, eastern North China Craton (NCC). The age of the Pandian ...
Garnet and Zircon U‐Pb Geochronology and Geochemistry Reveal Genesis of the Dafang Au‐Pb‐Zn‐Ag Deposit, Southern Hunan
Garnet and Zircon U‐Pb Geochronology and Geochemistry Reveal Genesis of the Dafang Au‐Pb‐Zn‐Ag Deposit, Southern Hunan
AbstractGarnet is a primary mineral in skarn deposits and plays a significant role in recording copious mineralization and metallogenic information. This study systematically inves...
A recalibration of the garnet‐olivine geothermometer and a new geobarometer for garnet peridotites and garnet‐olivine‐plagioclase‐bearing granulites
A recalibration of the garnet‐olivine geothermometer and a new geobarometer for garnet peridotites and garnet‐olivine‐plagioclase‐bearing granulites
AbstractThe garnet‐olivine Fe‐Mg exchange geothermometer and the garnet‐olivine‐plagioclase geobarometer have been simultaneously calibrated using reversed experimental data based ...
Late Carboniferous to Permian paleoclimatic and tectono-sedimentary evolution of the central Ordos Basin, western North China Craton
Late Carboniferous to Permian paleoclimatic and tectono-sedimentary evolution of the central Ordos Basin, western North China Craton
The paleogeographic and tectonic environments of the North China Craton experienced dramatic transitions throughout the end-Carboniferous to Permian, having been depicted to record...
Petrology and P–T path of the Fuping mafic granulites: implications for tectonic evolution of the central zone of the North China craton
Petrology and P–T path of the Fuping mafic granulites: implications for tectonic evolution of the central zone of the North China craton
The Fuping Complex and the adjoining Wutai and Hengshan Complexes are located in the central zone of the North China craton. The dominant rock types in the Fuping Complex are high‐...
Prograde temperature–time evolution in the Barrovian type–locality constrained by Sm/Nd garnet ages from Glen Clova, Scotland
Prograde temperature–time evolution in the Barrovian type–locality constrained by Sm/Nd garnet ages from Glen Clova, Scotland
Abstract:
The timing of garnet growth during metamorphism associated with the Grampian Orogeny in the sillimanite zone of the Barrovian type-locality in Glen Clova, Sco...
Garnet chronology: status quo
Garnet chronology: status quo
The wish to obtain age data from garnet became reality in 1980 when Griffin and Brueckner1 published the first-ever Sm-Nd garnet ages. The Silurian Sm-Nd ages that they obtained fo...

