1. Discovery of Late Triassic mineralization in the Gangdese Metallogenic Belt, Tibet: The Banduo Pb–Zn deposit, Somdo area.
- Author
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Li, Lin-han, Xie, Chao-ming, Ren, Yun-sheng, Yu, Yun-peng, Dong, Yu-chao, Gao, Zhong-wei, and Hao, Yu-jie
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MINERALIZATION , *OCEANIC crust , *URANIUM-lead dating , *GRANODIORITE , *PROSPECTING , *METALLOGENY , *RUBIDIUM - Abstract
• The Banduo Pb-Zn deposit formed at the end of the Late Triassic, which is the oldest deposit in the Gangdese Metallogenic Belt. • The metal-rich magma was a mixture of mantle and crustal melts that experienced fractional crystallization. • The Banduo Pb–Zn deposit formed as a result of the northward subduction of the Neo-Tethys oceanic crust in the Late Triassic. The newly discovered Banduo Pb–Zn deposit in the Somdo area of Tibet is hosted by a Late Triassic granodiorite. A combination of zircon U–Pb dating, Hf isotopic compositions, sulfide Rb–Sr dating, and whole-rock geochemistry was used to determine the age of the mineralization and characterize the metallogenesis of the deposit. The weighted-mean U–Pb ages of zircon from the granodiorite (203.8 ± 1.7 Ma, MSWD = 0.53; 206.1 ± 0.4 Ma, MSWD = 0.098) and the weighted-mean Rb–Sr isochron age of sulfides from the Pb–Zn mineralization (202.7 ± 2.3 Ma; MSWD = 1.3) suggest that the timing of mineralization was close to that of granodiorite crystallization during the Late Triassic. The average (87Sr/86Sr) i value of 0.71026 implies that the ore-forming metals were sourced from a mixture of mantle and crustal material. The weakly altered granodiorite of the deposit is characterized by SiO 2 = 66.78–67.85 wt%, K 2 O = 2.57–3.37 wt%, Al 2 O 3 = 13.53–15.15 wt%, and Mg# = 45.5–51.3. It is enriched in LREEs and LILEs and depleted in HREEs and HFSEs, and it exhibits a negative Eu anomaly. The granodiorite has positive and negative εHf(t) values (−2.5 to 1.7) and crustal model ages (TC DM) of 1.14–1.40 Ga. Hf isotopic analyses and whole-rock geochemistry indicate that the Late Triassic granodiorite was likely sourced from of a mixture of mantle and ancient lower-crust material that had undergone variable degrees of fractional crystallization. Based on regional data, the Banduo deposit is the oldest Pb–Zn deposit in the Gangdese belt and likely formed as a result of the northward subduction of the Neo-Tethys Ocean. The metallogenic epoch indicates that deposits related to the northward subduction of the Neo-Tethys oceanic crust exist in this area. The Late Triassic age of granitoid-hosted mineralization provides additional prospects for exploration in the Gangdese Metallogenic Belt. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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