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Sulfur-Isotope Characteristics of the Volcanogenic Cu-Zn-Pb Deposits of the Eastern Pontide Region, Northeastern Turkey

Authors :
Baruch Spiro
Ahmet Gökçe
Cumhuriyet Univ, Dept Geol, TR-58140 Sivas, Turkey -- NERC, Isotope Geosci Lab, Nottingham NG12 5GG, England
Source :
International Geology Review. 42:565-576
Publication Year :
2000
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2000.

Abstract

WOS: 000088117800008<br />In the Eastern Pontide Region of northeastern Turkey, volcanogenic Cu-Zn-Pb deposits of the Kuroko type are widespread within the dacitic series of the Liassic-Eocene volcano-sedimentary succession. Sulfide mineralization within the studied deposits shows four different depositional styles: disseminated ore; polymetallic stockwork ores; polymetallic massive ores; and disseminated pyrite in the hanging-wall tuff units. Only the stockwork and massive ores are economically important, and usually one or the other dominates in each ore body. The delta(34)S of sulfide minerals belonging to the various styles of mineralization are in the range fi om -2.6 to +5.2 parts per thousand (VCDT): pyrite has the highest values and the galena lowest values in agreement with the usual isotopic-fractionation trends. Massive ores have heavier sulfur-isotope composition among the mineralization styles and the heaviest values are recorded in barite- and gypsum-rich deposits. The close similarity of the delta(34)S among the various mineralization episodes in some deposits indicates a single sulfur source having a stable and homogenous composition. The delta(34)S of sulfates fall into three groups: barites and primary gypsum (15.4 to 20.4 parts per thousand). close to coeval seawater sulfate: one value: of barite (25.4 parts per thousand) heavier than coeval sea water; and values of secondary gypsum (2.2 to 8.0 parts per thousand) either very light compared to coeval seawater sulfate, or within the range recorded from sulfide minerals. The delta(34)S values of pyrite disseminated in the brecciated dacite tuff units are very close to zero and similar to the ones reported for magmatic rocks, suggesting a magmatic source for the sulfur of the earliest sulfide mineralization episode. These delta(34)S data are not sufficient to calculate the fraction of the reduced sulfur derived from seawater sulfate, as the associated fractionation factor cannot be constrained.

Details

ISSN :
19382839 and 00206814
Volume :
42
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Geology Review
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e2d8fd6e2416eb21646edf0809313437
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/00206810009465100