6 research outputs found

    The latest Aptian / earliest Albian age of the Kekura gold deposit, Western Chukotka, Russia: Implications for mineralization associated with post-collisional magmatism

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    The Kekura gold deposit (76.2 t Au at 8.1 g/t) is situated in Western Chukotka, a region that hosts several Au, Ag, Cu, and Mo deposits and prospects. The Kekura deposit is related to the eponymous granite intrusion that is cut by porphyry dikes. The U-Pb zircon age of one of these dikes is 112 ± 1 Ma (2σ) that corresponds to the latest Aptian/earliest Albian. Both intrusion and dikes are hydrothermally altered and are cut by gold-quartz and molybdenite-quartz veins and stringers. Two molybdenite samples yield Re-Os model ages of 112.5 ± 0.6 and 112.3 ± 0.6 Ma (2σ). These Re-Os ages indicate the close temporal relationship between the molybdenite mineralization and the porphyry dikes. The age of the Kekura mineral system is similar to that of the post-collisional granitic plutons of the Anyui zone spatially scattered, between 140 and 210 km northwest of Kekura. We suggest that this temporal relationship may increase the likelihood of further discoveries of economic gold mineralization related to the currently underexplored Aptian post-collisional magmatic complexes of the Western Chukotka area

    Tourmaline composition of the kışladağ porphyry au deposit, Western Turkey: Implication of epithermal overprint

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    The Kışladağ porphyry Au deposit occurs in a middle Miocene magmatic complex comprising three different intrusions and magmatic-hydrothermal brecciation related to the multiphase effects of the different intrusions. Tourmaline occurrences are common throughout the deposit, mostly as an outer alteration rim around the veins with lesser amounts disseminated in the intrusions, and are associated with every phase of mineralization. Tourmaline mineralization has developed as a tourmaline-rich matrix in brecciated zones and tourmaline-quartz and/or tourmaline-sulfide veinlets within the different intrusive rocks. Tourmaline was identified in the tourmaline-bearing breccia zone (TBZ) and intrusive rocks that had undergone potassic, phyllic, and advanced argillic alteration. The tourmaline is present as two morphological varieties, aggregates of fine crystals (rosettes, fan-shaped) and larger isolated crystals and their aggregates. Four tourmaline generations (tourmaline I to IV) have different compositions and substitutions. Tourmaline I in TBZ and INT#1 is distinguished by the highest Fetot and enriched in Fe3+. Tourmalines II and III occur as fine aggregates, accompanied by the formation of isolated crystals and are characterized by lower Fetot and Fe3+. Tourmaline IV is characterized by the lowest Fetot, enriched in Cl, and has the highest proportion of X-site vacancy among all the tourmalines. Tourmaline I may be attributed to the potassic stage in INT#1 and early tourmaline in TBZ. Tourmalines II and III from INT#1 and the TBZ could be referred to the phyllic stage. The low Fe content in tourmaline is caused by the simultaneous deposition of sulfide minerals. Tourmaline IV from the TBZ and tourmaline II from INT#3 are distinguished by the high X-site vacancy proportion up to the formation of X-site vacant species as well as enriched in Cl; they can be attributed to the argillic stage of the hydrothermal process. The textural and especially chemical data of the tourmaline from the Kışladağ Au deposit provide information on the physico-chemical conditions during the porphyry to epithermal transition and subsequent epithermal overprinting. © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland
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