1. Strontium and Lead Isotopic Study of the Carbonate-hosted Xujiashan Antimony Deposit from Hubei Province, South China: Implications for its Origin
- Author
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Ian M. Coulson, Neng-Ping Shen, Shen Liu, Jian-Tang Peng, and Ruizhong Hu
- Subjects
Calcite ,Mineralization (geology) ,Strontium ,Radiogenic nuclide ,Geochemistry ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Mineralogy ,Geology ,Hydrothermal circulation ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Antimony ,Geochemistry and Petrology ,Carbonate ,Stibnite - Abstract
The Xujiashan antimony deposit is hosted by marine carbonates of the Upper Sinian Doushantuo and Dengying Formations in Hubei Province, South China. Our Sr isotopic data from pre- and syn-mineralization calcites that host the mineralization show that the pre-mineralization calcite displays a narrow range of 87 Sr/ 86 Sr ratios (0.7096 to 0.7097), similar to the ratios of the Sinian seawater, and high Sr concentrations (2645 to 8174 ppm). In contrast, the syn-mineralization calcite exhibits low Sr concentrations (785 to 2563 ppm) and high 87 Sr/ 86 Sr ratios (0.7109 to 0.7154), which is interpreted as the result of addition of radiogenic strontium during the antimony mineralization. The study of Sr isotopes suggests that their Sr component to the pre-mineralization calcite derived directly from the host rocks (i.e. the Sinian marine carbonates), while radiogenic 87 Sr for the syn-mineralization calcite derived from the underlying Mesoproterozoic Lengjiaxi Group basement through hydrothermal fluid circulation along the major fault that hosts the mineralization. The Pb isotopic ratios of stibnite are subdivided into two groups (Group A and Group B), Group A is characterized by higher radiogenic lead, with 206 204 Pb/
- Published
- 2010
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