CONTROLS ON ORE METAL RATIOS IN GRANITE-RELATED ORE SYSTEMS - AN EXPERIMENTAL AND COMPUTATIONAL APPROACH

被引:182
作者
CANDELA, PA
机构
[1] Laboratory for Mineral Deposit Research, Department of Geology, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland
来源
TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF EDINBURGH-EARTH SCIENCES | 1992年 / 83卷
关键词
MAGMATIC-HYDROTHERMAL PROCESSES; ORE METALS; GRANITES;
D O I
10.1017/S0263593300007999
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
Size and composition (bulk metal ratios) of magmatic hydrothermal mineral deposits are affected by a number of chemical and physical processes including the nature of the source region and mode of emplacement. At shallow levels, rising plumes of vapour bubbles + melt, and the advection of water through interconnected vapour bubbles, allows access of the magmatic aqueous phase to the upper reaches of a magma chamber. These processes are operative at shallow levels where low water solubility and high molar volume for water make these processes more efficient. Partitioning experiments suggest that oxygen fugacity-dependent crystal/melt partitioning of ore metals leads to different efficiencies of removal of Cu, W, and Mo from silicate melts into ore-forming aqueous fluids. For example, the Mo/W ratio in magmatic hydrothermal deposits should increase as the oxygen fugacity of the magma increases. Further, Cu should behave as a crystal-compatible element in H2O-undersaturated, sulfide-saturated felsic magmas with f(O2) < NNO + 1 due to the strong partitioning of Cu from the melt into pyrrhotite. Cycling of oxidised, hydrated, sulfidised and Cl-enriched oceanic crust into mantle can give rise to magmas that contain S but are oxidised (greater-than-or-equal-to NNO). The combination of high oxidation state, relatively hydrous but shallow conditions and a high Cl/H2O ratio leads to saturation with respect to H2O early during crystallisation, and loss of a large proportion of magmatic Cu to the aqueous phase. Ores formed from these oxidised magmas also possess high Mo/W ratios due to the effect of oxygen fugacity on the sequestering of Mo vs W. In less oxidised magmas, Cu and Mo are partitioned into sulfides and Ti-bearing phases, respectively, resulting in lower efficiencies of removal of Cu and Mo from melts into aqueous fluids. Further, the partitioning of W into crystallising phases is reduced, producing a more efficient removal of W into ore-forming fluids. This ultimately leads to mineral deposits with higher W/(Mo + Cu) ratios relative to deposits associated with more oxidised systems. Silicic, high-F magmas with f(O2) almost-equal-to NNO can be found in tensional environments (e. g. rocks associated with the Climax-type deposits of the Colorado Mineral Belt). High HF/H2O activity ratios in the source regions yield melts that evolve an aqueous phase late during crystallisation, leading to relatively low ratios of compatible/incompatible elements in the melt at H2O saturation.
引用
收藏
页码:317 / 326
页数:10
相关论文
共 52 条
[1]  
Auge J.J., Brimhall G.H., Magmatic arc asymmetry and distribution of anomalous plutonic belts in the batholiths of California: Effects of assimilation, crustal thickness, and depth of crystallization, BULL GEOL SOC AM, 100, pp. 912-927, (1988)
[2]  
Andiambololona R., Dupuy C., Répartition et comportment des éléments de transition dans les roches volcaniques. I. cuivre et zinc, BULL B.R.G.M, 2, II, pp. 121-138, (1978)
[3]  
Barton M.D., Cretaceous magmatism, metamorphism, and metallogeny in the east-central Great Basin, The nature and origin of Cordilleran magmatism: Boulder Colorado. GEOL SOC AM MEM, 174, pp. 283-302, (1990)
[4]  
Barton M.D., Mesozoic contact metamorphism in the western United States, Metamorphism and crustal evolution, western conterminous United States, Rubey, 7, pp. 110-178, (1988)
[5]  
Brandeis G., Jaupart C., Allegre C.J., Nucleation, crystal growth and the thermal regime of cooling magmas, J GEOPHYS RES, 89, pp. 10161-10177, (1984)
[6]  
Brandeis G., Jaupart C., Crystal sizes in intrusions of different dimensions: constraints on the cooling regime and the crystallization kinetics, Magmatic processes: physiochemical principles, pp. 307-318, (1987)
[7]  
Brandeis G., Marsh B.D., The convective liquidus in a solidifying magma chamber: a fluid dynamic investigation, NATURE, 339, pp. 613-616, (1989)
[8]  
Candela P.A., Generalized mathematical models for the fractional evolution of vapor from magmas in terrestrial planetary crusts, In Advances in Physical Geochemistry 6: Chemistry and physics of the terrestrial planets, pp. 362-396, (1986)
[9]  
Candela P.A., Magmatic ore-forming fluids: thermodynamic and mass transfer calculations of metal concentrations, Ore Deposits Associated with Magmas, Reviews in Economic Geology, 4, pp. 203-221, (1989)
[10]  
Candela P.A., Felsic magmas, volatiles, and metallogenesis, Ore Deposits Associated with Magmas, Reviews in Economic Geology, 4, pp. 223-233, (1989)