Alteration, mineralization, and fluid evolution at the Eloise Cu-Au deposit, Cloncurry District, northwest Queensland, Australia

被引:58
|
作者
Baker, T [1 ]
机构
[1] James Cook Univ N Queensland, Sch Earth Sci, Natl Key Ctr Econ Geol, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia
关键词
D O I
10.2113/gsecongeo.93.8.1213
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
The Eloise deposit (3.1 million metric tons, Mt, @ 5.5% Cu, 1.4 g/t Au and 16 g/t Ag) is hosted by Proterozoic rocks of the Soldiers Cap Group in the Eastern fold belt of the Mount Isa inlier. The deposit is characterized by very high grade, chalcopyrite-pyrrhotite-rich mineralization hosted by mafic silicate alteration. Alteration and mineralization lie within and adjacent to a major shear zone. The main metasomatism comprised three stages. Early pervasive albite alteration (stage I) was overprinted by stage II hornblende-biotite-quartz veins and alteration; stage III chalcopyrite, pyrhotite, magnetite, pyrite, calcite, quartz, chlorite, and actinolite replaced and brecciated the earlier mafic silicates. The lodes occupy a narrow portion of a zoned, mineralized system that is at least 2 km in length. Magnetite-pyrite-rich mineralization occurs in the south, with chalcopyrite-pyrrhotite-rich mineralization in the central lode zone, and pyrrhotite-rich mineralization in the north. The system has a distinct chemistry, with enriched Cu, Au, Ag, Co, Ni, and Zn. Fluid inclusions in pre-, syn- and late- to postmineralization veins indicate an evolving fluid history. Primary inclusions and associated hornblende-biotite assemblages in premineralization veins indicate a high-temperature fluid (450 degrees-600 degrees C), and salinity estimates suggest it was an ultrasaline brine (32-68 wt % total salts). Fluid inclusions in stage III quartz in mineralized veins display a wide range of homogenization temperatures (similar to 100 degrees-500 degrees C), and gangue assemblages (actinolite-chlorite-muscovite) suggest mineralization was a cooler event (200 degrees-450 degrees C). Inclusions associated with the mineralization have a lower salinity (30-47 wt % total salts) than do premineralization inclusions, and variable fluid inclusion types occur within the same clusters, which may reflect fluid mixing. The ultrasaline nature of the fluids and preliminary sulfur isotope results (0.4-2.0 parts per thousand) suggest the ore fluid was predominantly magmatic. Metals were carried as chlorocomplexes and H(2)S was the dominant sulfur species. Important factors in ore deposition were a decrease in temperature and salinity, and sulfidation of Fe-silicates. Eloise is interpreted to be a structurally controlled, distal, magmatic, hydrothermal vein deposit.
引用
收藏
页码:1213 / 1236
页数:24
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Fluid evolution of alteration and mineralization at the Duobaoshan porphyry Cu (Mo) deposit, Heilondiang Province
    Wei Hao
    Xu JiuHua
    Zeng QingDong
    Wang YanHai
    Liu JianMing
    Chu ShaoXiong
    ACTA PETROLOGICA SINICA, 2011, 27 (05) : 1361 - 1374
  • [32] Fluid mixing versus unmixing as an ore-forming process in the Cloncurry Fe-oxide-Cu-Au District, NW Queensland, Australia: evidence from fluid inclusions
    Fu, B
    Williams, PJ
    Oliver, NHS
    Dong, GY
    Pollard, PJ
    Mark, GM
    JOURNAL OF GEOCHEMICAL EXPLORATION, 2003, 78-9 : 617 - 622
  • [33] Eloise Cu-Au deposit, East Mt Isa Block: Structural environment and structural controls on ore
    Baker, T
    Laing, WP
    AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF EARTH SCIENCES, 1998, 45 (03) : 429 - 444
  • [34] Alteration-mineralization zoning and fluid inclusions of the high sulfidation epithermal Cu-Au mineralization at Zijinshan, Fujian Province, China
    So, CS
    Zhang, DQ
    Yun, ST
    Li, DX
    ECONOMIC GEOLOGY AND THE BULLETIN OF THE SOCIETY OF ECONOMIC GEOLOGISTS, 1998, 93 (07): : 961 - 980
  • [35] Hydrothermal alteration and mineralization in Santo Domingo Sur Iron Oxide (-Cu-Au) (IOCG) deposit, Atacama Region, Chile
    Daroch, Giancarlo A.
    Barton, Mark D.
    LET'S TALK ORE DEPOSITS, VOLS I AND II, 2011, : 486 - 488
  • [36] Multiple and prolonged porphyry Cu-Au mineralization and alteration events in the Halasu deposit, Chinese Altai, Xinjiang, northwestern China
    Xue, Chunji
    Chi, Guoxiang
    Zhao, Xiaobo
    Wu, Ganguo
    Zhao, Zhanfeng
    Dong, Lianhui
    GEOSCIENCE FRONTIERS, 2016, 7 (05) : 799 - 809
  • [37] The sulfur isotope evolution of the Duobuza Cu-Au porphyry deposit in the Duolong district, Central Tibet, China
    Sun, Jia
    Mao, Jingwen
    Beaudoin, Georges
    Mathur, Ryan
    Duan, Xianzhe
    Li, Yubin
    MINERALIUM DEPOSITA, 2025,
  • [38] The superlarge Malmyzh porphyry Cu-Au deposit, Sikhote-Alin, eastern Russia: Igneous geochemistry, hydrothermal alteration, mineralization, and fluid inclusion characteristics
    Soloviev, Serguei G.
    Kryazhev, Sergey G.
    Dvurechenskaya, Svetlana S.
    Vasyukov, Vladislav E.
    Shumilin, Dmitry A.
    Voskresensky, Konstantin, I
    ORE GEOLOGY REVIEWS, 2019, 113
  • [39] Age of Cu-Au mineralisation, Cloncurry district, eastern Mt Isa Inlier, Queensland, as determined by 40Ar/39Ar dating
    Perkins, C
    Wyborn, LAI
    AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF EARTH SCIENCES, 1998, 45 (02) : 233 - 246
  • [40] The role of fluid overpressure in Cu-Au porphyry mineralization: Evidence from the Oubulage deposit, Inner Mongolia, China
    Chen, Xuegen
    Su, Shangguo
    Santosh, M.
    Zhang, Yanan
    Wu, Xiaoman
    Zhong, Jingyu
    Li, Xiaowei
    GEOCHEMISTRY, 2025, 85 (01):