Archaean hydrothermal fluid modified zircons at Sunrise Dam and Kanowna Belle gold deposits, Western Australia: Implications for post-magmatic fluid activity and ore genesis

To further our knowledge of ore genesis in one of Australia's preeminent ore districts, we have completed a comprehensive geochemical study of ore-related porphyritic intrusions from the Archaean Kanowna Belle and Sunrise Dam gold deposits (both >10 Moz), Eastern Goldfields, Western Aust...

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Main Authors: Wang, R., Jeon, H., Evans, Noreen
Format: Journal Article
Published: Mineralogical Society of America 2018
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/74764
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author Wang, R.
Jeon, H.
Evans, Noreen
author_facet Wang, R.
Jeon, H.
Evans, Noreen
author_sort Wang, R.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description To further our knowledge of ore genesis in one of Australia's preeminent ore districts, we have completed a comprehensive geochemical study of ore-related porphyritic intrusions from the Archaean Kanowna Belle and Sunrise Dam gold deposits (both >10 Moz), Eastern Goldfields, Western Australia. Zircon samples (including samples from the newly developed Velvet mine) with ages ranging from 2.8 to 2.2 Ga, were investigated for O-OH isotopic signatures, trace element abundance, and U-Th-Pb compositions to elucidate the nature of the magmatic source and ore-related fluid. These intrusions have similarly high Sr/Y and La/Yb ratios to adakites from the Aleutian and Cook Islands, but lower Mg# values and higher K2O contents, suggesting they were derived from partial melts in a thickened crust. The modern analogs are post-collisional, high-Sr/Y granitoid porphyries in southern Tibet. Magmatic zircons have intermediate d18O values (+5% to +6.3%), and estimated magmatic crystallization temperatures (Ti-in-zircon) in between 660-760 °C. They are interpreted as having crystallized from positive d18O magmas during water-fluxed melting of juvenile lower crust. Hydrothermal fluid modified zircons are texturally indistinguishable from magmatic zircons, but their trace element, OH, and isotopic compositions are distinct. The involvement of hydrothermal fluid in zircon growth is evidenced by a negative correlation between OH content and d18O. In addition, the studied hydrothermal fluid modified zircons are characterized by high La contents, flat rare earth element patterns, weak Ce anomalies, and high Eu/Eu ratios, suggesting they were related to a high-temperature, Zr-saturated, high-Eu, Cl-rich, and low-pH hydrothermal fluid. Such fluids are common in eastern Yilgarn gold camps.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-747642019-08-21T03:23:57Z Archaean hydrothermal fluid modified zircons at Sunrise Dam and Kanowna Belle gold deposits, Western Australia: Implications for post-magmatic fluid activity and ore genesis Wang, R. Jeon, H. Evans, Noreen To further our knowledge of ore genesis in one of Australia's preeminent ore districts, we have completed a comprehensive geochemical study of ore-related porphyritic intrusions from the Archaean Kanowna Belle and Sunrise Dam gold deposits (both >10 Moz), Eastern Goldfields, Western Australia. Zircon samples (including samples from the newly developed Velvet mine) with ages ranging from 2.8 to 2.2 Ga, were investigated for O-OH isotopic signatures, trace element abundance, and U-Th-Pb compositions to elucidate the nature of the magmatic source and ore-related fluid. These intrusions have similarly high Sr/Y and La/Yb ratios to adakites from the Aleutian and Cook Islands, but lower Mg# values and higher K2O contents, suggesting they were derived from partial melts in a thickened crust. The modern analogs are post-collisional, high-Sr/Y granitoid porphyries in southern Tibet. Magmatic zircons have intermediate d18O values (+5% to +6.3%), and estimated magmatic crystallization temperatures (Ti-in-zircon) in between 660-760 °C. They are interpreted as having crystallized from positive d18O magmas during water-fluxed melting of juvenile lower crust. Hydrothermal fluid modified zircons are texturally indistinguishable from magmatic zircons, but their trace element, OH, and isotopic compositions are distinct. The involvement of hydrothermal fluid in zircon growth is evidenced by a negative correlation between OH content and d18O. In addition, the studied hydrothermal fluid modified zircons are characterized by high La contents, flat rare earth element patterns, weak Ce anomalies, and high Eu/Eu ratios, suggesting they were related to a high-temperature, Zr-saturated, high-Eu, Cl-rich, and low-pH hydrothermal fluid. Such fluids are common in eastern Yilgarn gold camps. 2018 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/74764 10.2138/am-2018-6402 Mineralogical Society of America restricted
spellingShingle Wang, R.
Jeon, H.
Evans, Noreen
Archaean hydrothermal fluid modified zircons at Sunrise Dam and Kanowna Belle gold deposits, Western Australia: Implications for post-magmatic fluid activity and ore genesis
title Archaean hydrothermal fluid modified zircons at Sunrise Dam and Kanowna Belle gold deposits, Western Australia: Implications for post-magmatic fluid activity and ore genesis
title_full Archaean hydrothermal fluid modified zircons at Sunrise Dam and Kanowna Belle gold deposits, Western Australia: Implications for post-magmatic fluid activity and ore genesis
title_fullStr Archaean hydrothermal fluid modified zircons at Sunrise Dam and Kanowna Belle gold deposits, Western Australia: Implications for post-magmatic fluid activity and ore genesis
title_full_unstemmed Archaean hydrothermal fluid modified zircons at Sunrise Dam and Kanowna Belle gold deposits, Western Australia: Implications for post-magmatic fluid activity and ore genesis
title_short Archaean hydrothermal fluid modified zircons at Sunrise Dam and Kanowna Belle gold deposits, Western Australia: Implications for post-magmatic fluid activity and ore genesis
title_sort archaean hydrothermal fluid modified zircons at sunrise dam and kanowna belle gold deposits, western australia: implications for post-magmatic fluid activity and ore genesis
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/74764