In situ oxygen isotope, trace element, and fluid inclusion evidence for a primary magmatic fluid origin for the shell-shaped pegmatoid zone within the giant Dahutang tungsten deposit, Jiangxi Province, South China

被引:10
|
作者
Zhang, Zhiyu [1 ]
Hou, Zengqian [1 ]
Peng, Huaming [2 ]
Fan, Xianke [1 ]
Wu, Xianyuan [3 ]
Dai, Jialiang [3 ]
机构
[1] Chinese Acad Geol Sci, Inst Geol, Beijing 100037, Peoples R China
[2] East China Univ Technol, Sch Earth Sci, Nanchang 330013, Jiangxi, Peoples R China
[3] China Univ Geosci, Sch Earth Sci & Resources, Beijing 100083, Peoples R China
基金
中国国家自然科学基金; 奥地利科学基金会;
关键词
Pegmatoid; Exsolution of magmatic fluids; In situ oxygen isotopic analysis; Trace elements; Fluid composition; Dahutang tungsten ore; W-MO DEPOSIT; HYDROTHERMAL ALTERATION; ORE GENESIS; QUARTZ; GRANITE; CU; PORPHYRY; GEOCHRONOLOGY; PETROGENESIS; MELT;
D O I
10.1016/j.oregeorev.2018.11.013
中图分类号
P5 [地质学];
学科分类号
0709 ; 081803 ;
摘要
The world-class Dahutang tungsten deposit is located within the Jiuling mining district of the central Jiangnan orogenic belt, Jiangxi Province, China. The deposit consists of a massive and gently dipping scheelite orebody that contains disseminated and veinlet-hosted mineralization located within a medium- to coarse-grained biotite granodiorite. The No. 1 ore block of the deposit also contains a 1.50-1.75 m thick shell-shaped pegmatoid zone that defines an inner contact zone between the mineralization-related porphyritic-like biotite granite and strongly mineralized biotite granodiorite that hosts the tungsten deposit. This pegmatoid zone contains very low concentrations of tungsten, but records the processes involved in the migration and enrichment of this element within the deposit. The pegmatoid contrasts with typical hydrothermal pegmatite-type ore in that it often contains megacrystic to giant alkali feldspar, quartz, and muscovite, and is spatially zoned in terms of unique texture and composition. The pegmatoid is zoned from a felsic aplite zone with a layered texture proximal to the intrusion through quartz-feldspar pegmatoid and feldspar-quartz pegmatoid zones to a final distal quartz dominated zone. The quartz-feldspar pegmatoid is striped and contains megacrystic feldspars that have grown nearly perpendicular to the edge of the pegmatoid, indicating the direction of movement of early exsolved magmatic fluids. Cathodoluminescence imaging indicates that there are five types of quartz within the feldspar-quartz pegmatoid: megacrystic, large phenocrystic, small phenocrystic, matrix, and vein-hosted quartz. Each of these generations of quartz crystallized early, with the disseminated metasomatic quartz that crystallized during the middle stages of pegmatoid generation being followed by the uniform crystallization of late-stage, space-filling quartz. In situ oxygen isotopic and trace element analysis indicates that all of the quartz within the pegmatoid records accelerated growth, with the middle-stage disseminated metasomatic quartz associated with an increase in delta O-18(quartz) values, and the late-stage space-filling quartz associated with a decrease in delta O-18(quartz) values. All of this quartz contains elevated concentrations of alkali metals and has low Li/Al ratios (generally < 0.35), indicating the majority of this quartz has an igneous origin, although some quartz formed from magmatic-hydrothermal or hydrothermal fluids. All the quartz formed under medium-high temperatures >= 483 degrees C) and elevated delta O-18 (11.05 parts per thousand <= delta O-18(quartz) <= 15.07 parts per thousand) conditions. The majority of delta O-18(quartz-water) values are > 10 parts per thousand, reflecting the fact that the fluids that formed these minerals were of the peraluminous granite water (PGW). The trace element compositions of the samples analyzed during this study also indicate a drop in the pH of the pegmatoid-forming fluids over time. The quartz within the feldspar-quartz pegmatoid also contains melt and gas-liquid fluid inclusions, with the latter containing significant amounts of gas-phase CH4, indicating that the pegmatoid formed from low oxygen fugacity fluids. Our data indicate that the shell-shaped pegmatoid zone within the Dahutang No. 1 ore block formed from primary PGW exsolved from the hosting intrusion, with the pegmatoid recording the transition from magmatic to hydrothermal processes during the continuous but multi-stage evolution of the Dahutang deposit. The late-stage, high-temperature, water-rich, high delta O-18, alkali metal-rich, low oxygen fugacity, and acidic nature of the hydrothermal fluids that formed the deposit promoted the transportation and further deposition of tungsten.
引用
收藏
页码:540 / 560
页数:21
相关论文
共 6 条
  • [1] Origin of the Yueguang gold deposit in Xinhua, Hunan Province, South China: insights from fluid inclusion and hydrogen–oxygen stable isotope analysis
    Hongxin Fan
    Qiang Wang
    Yulong Yang
    Yao Tang
    Hao Zou
    Acta Geochimica, 2024, 43 : 235 - 254
  • [2] Origin of the Yueguang gold deposit in Xinhua, Hunan Province, South China: insights from fluid inclusion and hydrogen–oxygen stable isotope analysis
    Hongxin Fan
    Qiang Wang
    Yulong Yang
    Yao Tang
    Hao Zou
    Acta Geochimica, 2024, 43 (02) : 235 - 254
  • [3] Metallogenic mechanism of the Houge'zhuang gold deposit, Jiaodong, China: Evidence from fluid inclusion, in situ trace element, and sulfur isotope compositions
    Chi, Naijie
    Han, Zuozhen
    Liu, Chuan'e
    Zhang, Wei
    Zhang, Yanhui
    Shan, Wei
    Li, Zengsheng
    Li, Min
    Wang, Xiufeng
    Sun, Yuqin
    FRONTIERS IN EARTH SCIENCE, 2022, 10
  • [4] Origin of the Yueguang gold deposit in Xinhua, Hunan Province, South China: insights from fluid inclusion and hydrogen-oxygen stable isotope analysis
    Fan, Hongxin
    Wang, Qiang
    Yang, Yulong
    Tang, Yao
    Zou, Hao
    ACTA GEOCHIMICA, 2024, 43 (02) : 235 - 254
  • [5] A case study of the Yanshanian fluorite mineralization in South China: Fluid inclusion, element and isotope geochemistry and zircon U-Pb geochronology of the Kantian fluorite deposit in southern Jiangxi Province
    You, Chao
    Wang, Chunlian
    Chen, Yanjing
    Jiang, Huihui
    Liu, Dianhe
    Liu, Sihan
    ORE GEOLOGY REVIEWS, 2024, 169
  • [6] Origin of the Tongda fluorite deposit related to the Palaeo-Pacific Plate subduction in southern Jiangxi Province, China: New evidence from geochronology, geochemistry, fluid inclusion, and H-O isotope compositions
    Yang, Shi-Wen
    Feng, Cheng-You
    Lou, Fa-Sheng
    Zhang, Fang-Rong
    Yu, Cheng-tao
    Cao, Sheng-hua
    He, Bin
    Li, Min
    Zou, Hao
    Xu, De-Ru
    GEOLOGICAL JOURNAL, 2022, 57 (01) : 238 - 253