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Mobilisation of deep crustal sulfide melts as a first order control on upper lithospheric metallogeny

Authors :
David A. Holwell
Marco L. Fiorentini
Thomas R. Knott
Iain McDonald
Daryl E. Blanks
T. Campbell McCuaig
Weronika Gorczyk
Source :
Nature Communications, Nature Communications, Vol 13, Iss 1, Pp 1-12 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group UK, 2022.

Abstract

Magmatic arcs are terrestrial environments where lithospheric cycling and recycling of metals and volatiles is enhanced. However, the first-order mechanism permitting the episodic fluxing of these elements from the mantle through to the outer Earth’s spheres has been elusive. To address this knowledge gap, we focus on the textural and minero-chemical characteristics of metal-rich magmatic sulfides hosted in amphibole-olivine-pyroxene cumulates in the lowermost crust. We show that in cumulates that were subject to increasing temperature due to prolonged mafic magmatism, which only occurs episodically during the complex evolution of any magmatic arc, Cu-Au-rich sulfide can exist as liquid while Ni-Fe rich sulfide occurs as a solid phase. This scenario occurs within a ‘Goldilocks’ temperature zone at ~1100–1200 °C, typical of the base of the crust in arcs, which permits episodic fractionation and mobilisation of Cu-Au-rich sulfide liquid into permeable melt networks that may ascend through the lithosphere providing metals for porphyry and epithermal ore deposits.<br />The presence and mobility of metal-rich sulfides in lower crustal magma chambers can act as a gateway for metals to be trapped, or released into ascending magmas that are then able to form upper crustal porphyry copper and gold deposits.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f270d5db2900d5142e2f1de24fa1ce2f