Pyrite Textures and Trace Element Compositions from the Granodiorite-Hosted Gold Deposit at Jonnagiri, Eastern Dharwar Craton, India: Implications for Gold Mineralization Processes

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sakthi Saravanan Chinnasamy ◽  
Pranjit Hazarika ◽  
Debasis Pal ◽  
Raja Sen ◽  
Gokulakrishnan Govindaraj

Abstract The lone granodiorite-hosted gold deposit at Dona sector of Jonnagiri, eastern Dharwar craton, India, contains typical shear-hosted and vein-hosted alteration zones. Pyrite is the dominant sulfide mineral in these alteration zones. Texturally three varieties of pyrites were identified in these alteration zones: (1) early pyrite-I is coarse to medium grained and subhedral shaped and contains near margin-parallel silicate inclusions, (2) main (ore)-stage pyrite-II overgrows early pyrite-I and also occurs as discrete grains invariably associated with visible gold, and (3) late-stage pyrite-III is anhedral and coarse grained and contains randomly oriented inclusions of silicates, sulfides, and native gold grains. Electron microprobe analysis, coupled with X-ray element mapping and laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry, reveals that most early pyrites (pyrite-I) have higher concentrations of As and Au in both the zones. The shear-hosted main-stage pyrite-II can be divided into Ni-rich (median 211 ppm) pyrite-IIa and Co-rich (median 274 ppm) pyrite-IIb, respectively. While invisible gold content is higher in vein-hosted late-stage pyrite (pyrite-IIIa; ≤287 ppm) when compared to shear-hosted pyrites, native visible gold is associated with only vein-hosted main- and late-stage pyrites (pyrite-II and IIIa). Arsenic, Ni, Au, Se, Mo, and Te concentrations decrease from pyrite-I to pyrite-III, reflecting remobilization of trace elements during subsequent dissolution-reprecipitation of early formed pyrites. The oscillatory zoning of As, Co, and Ni and slight increase in Bi, Te, Se, Au, and Ag in pyrite-II and pyrite-IIIa represent pressure fluctuations and repeated local fluid phase separation in the ore-forming environment. A positive correlation of Au with Pb, Sb, Bi, and Te confirms the presence of nanoinclusions of mineral phases such as nagyagite, Pb-Sb-Bi tellurides, Au-Ag tellurides, tellurosulfides, and sulfosalts within pyrites, particularly in the vein-hosted zone. Based on several lines of evidence, the following paragenetic sequence is proposed for pyrite formation at Dona, Jonnagiri. Rapid crystallization of early (porous) pyrite-I was followed by its dissolution during ~E-W–trending Sh1 shearing. Crystallization of main-stage pyrite-II and the late-stage pyrite-IIIa is the product of dissolution-reprecipitation of early pyrite during ~N-S–trending Sh2 shearing. Changing fluid compositions caused by episodic fault-valve actions and associated boiling resulted in dissolution-reprecipitation of early formed pyrites and remobilization of trace elements. This further resulted in precipitation of the bulk of gold within the inner vein-hosted zone during the later Sh2 shearing event. At the culmination of shearing, late-stage pyrite-IIIb precipitation occurs with very low concentrations of all trace elements, including gold.

Minerals ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 190 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yu-Ji Wei ◽  
Li-Qiang Yang ◽  
Jian-Qiu Feng ◽  
Hao Wang ◽  
Guang-Yao Lv ◽  
...  

The Sizhuang gold deposit with a proven gold resource of >120 t, located in northwest Jiaodong Peninsula in China, lies in the southern part of the Jiaojia gold belt. Gold mineralization can be divided into altered rock type, auriferous quartz vein type, and sulfide-quartz veinlet in K-feldspar altered granite. According to mineral paragenesis and mineral crosscutting relationships, three stages of metal mineralization can be identified: early stage, main stage, and late stage. Gold mainly occurs in the main stage. The petrography and microthermometry of fluid inclusion shows three types of inclusions (type 1 H2O–CO2 inclusions, type 2 aqueous inclusions, and type 3 CO2 inclusions). Early stage quartz-hosted inclusions have a trapped temperatures range 303–390 °C. The gold-rich main stage contains a fluid-inclusion cluster with both type 1 and 2 inclusions (trapped between 279 and 298 °C), and a wide range of homogenization temperatures of CO2 occurs to the vapor phase (17.6 to 30.5 °C). The late stage calcite only contains type 1 inclusions with homogenization temperatures between 195 and 289 °C. With evidences from the H–O isotope data and the study of water–rock interaction, the metamorphic water of the Jiaodong Group is considered to be the dominating source for the ore-forming fluid. The ore-fluid belonged to a CO2–H2O–NaCl system with medium-low temperature (160–360 °C), medium-low salinity (3.00–11.83 wt% NaCl eq.), and low density (1.51–1.02 g/cm3). Fluid immiscibility caused by pressure fluctuation is the key mechanism in inducing gold mineralization in the Sizhuang gold deposit.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Scott R. Miller ◽  
◽  
Joseph G. Meert ◽  
Anthony F. Pivarunas ◽  
Anup K. Sinha ◽  
...  

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