Pressure, temperature, and timing of mineralization of the sedimentary rock-hosted orogenic gold deposit at Klipwal, southeastern Kaapvaal Craton, South Africa

被引:16
作者
Chinnasamy, Sakthi Saravanan [1 ]
Uken, Ron [1 ]
Reinhardt, Juergen [1 ]
Selby, David [2 ]
Johnson, Spencer
机构
[1] Univ KwaZulu Natal, Sch Agr Earth & Environm Sci, Discipline Geol Sci, ZA-4000 Durban, South Africa
[2] Univ Durham, Dept Earth Sci, Durham DH1 3LE, England
关键词
Orogenic gold deposits; Fluid inclusions; Klipwal; Kaapvaal Craton; South Africa; EASTERN DHARWAR CRATON; BEARING QUARTZ VEINS; EQUATION-OF-STATE; ABITIBI GREENSTONE-BELT; RE-OS SYSTEMATICS; FLUID EVOLUTION; SHEAR ZONES; SUPERCRITICAL FLUIDS; MOLECULAR-DYNAMICS; COMPUTER-PROGRAMS;
D O I
10.1007/s00126-014-0573-9
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
Gold mineralization in the Klipwal Shear Zone (KSZ) at the Klipwal Gold Mine is confined to laminated quartz-carbonate lodes, stringers, and associated alteration in sandstone and siltstone of the Delfkom Formation in the upper Mozaan Group of the Mesoarchaean Pongola Supergroup. The moderately dipping brittle-ductile KSZ strikes N-S with an oblique-reverse, sinistral sense of shear. The deformational events that are recognized include an early compressional phase that produced anastomosing shears defined by shear fabrics with numerous shear-parallel laminated quartz-carbonate fault-fill veins and, in places, extensional quartz vein stockworks, and a late brittle reactivation phase that produced fault breccias, displacing earlier extensional veins. Three closely spaced economic reefs (lodes) are developed: the main R-reef constitutes the KSZ, while the J- and H-reefs represent footwall splays. Alteration comprises chlorite, muscovite, epidote, feldspar, and carbonates along with pyrite, arsenopyrite, and chalcopyrite +/- pyrrhotite. An inner alteration zone is dominated by laminated quartz-carbonate veins with alternating quartz-carbonate-rich and muscovite-chlorite-rich laminae, whereas the proximal zone is characterized by alteration halos of K-feldspar, albite, epidote, chlorite, and muscovite along with carbonates and associated quartz veins. Chlorite thermometry from the inner and proximal zones yielded temperatures of 267 to 312 A degrees C. Arsenopyrite compositions provide temperatures in the same range, 255 to 318 A degrees C. Fluid inclusion microthermometry and Raman spectrometry of quartz veins in the mineralized reefs reveal the presence of metamorphogenic aqueous-gaseous fluid with an average salinity of 6.5 wt% NaCl equiv. Fluid compositions and estimated pressure-temperature (P-T) range (1.1 to 2.5 kbar at 255 to 318 A degrees C) are typical of orogenic gold deposits. Devolatilization during the regional facies metamorphism of the Pongola Supergroup is considered the likely fluid-forming event with fluid flow focused into a "compressional jog" of the KSZ. Shear-induced pressure fluctuations generated a phase separation of the initial aqueous-gaseous fluid, producing a gaseous and low-salinity aqueous fluid. This, together with fluid-rock interaction, and a decrease in fO(2) lead to sulfide and gold precipitation at Klipwal. Re-Os data from six sulfide samples constrain the age of sulfide precipitation and, by inference, gold mineralization, to 2563 A +/- 84 Ma, with an initial Os-187/Os-188 = 0.29 A +/- 0.08 (MSWD = 0.38). This age is distinctly younger than the post-Pongola granites (2863-2721 Ma), ruling out the association of granite emplacement with mineralization. This would suggest that mineralization is linked to the regional D-3 folding event which reactivated the KSZ after emplacement of the post-Pongola granites and that final brittle, post-mineralization reactivation is related to Karoo age faulting. Low initial Os values suggest that ore fluid interacted with mafic rocks, leaching non-radiogenic Os, the likely source being the deeper seated Nsuze Group volcanics and/or the greenstone belts that underlie the Pongola Supergroup.
引用
收藏
页码:739 / 766
页数:28
相关论文
共 119 条
[111]   On the source of orogenic gold [J].
Tomkins, Andrew G. .
GEOLOGY, 2013, 41 (12) :1255-1256
[112]   Fluids in metamorphic rocks [J].
Touret, JLR .
LITHOS, 2001, 55 (1-4) :1-25
[113]   P-T-deformation-Fe3+/Fe2+ mapping at the thin section scale and comparison with XANES mapping:: application to a garnet-bearing metapelite from the Sambagawa metamorphic belt (Japan) [J].
Vidal, O. ;
De Andrade, V. ;
Lewin, E. ;
Munoz, M. ;
Parra, T. ;
Pascarelli, S. .
JOURNAL OF METAMORPHIC GEOLOGY, 2006, 24 (07) :669-683
[114]   A thermodynamic model for Fe-Mg aluminous chlorite using data from phase equilibrium experiments and natural pelitic assemblages in the 100° to 600°C, 1 to 25 kb range [J].
Vidal, O ;
Parra, T ;
Trotet, F .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SCIENCE, 2001, 301 (06) :557-592
[115]  
Wilkinson JJ, 1996, GEOLOGY, V24, P395, DOI 10.1130/0091-7613(1996)024<0395:PFPSAG>2.3.CO
[116]  
2
[117]  
Wilson A.C., 1988, South African Journal of Geology, V91, P404
[118]  
ZANG W, 1995, MINER DEPOSITA, V30, P30
[119]   DETERMINATION OF THE HOMOGENIZATION TEMPERATURES AND DENSITIES OF SUPERCRITICAL FLUIDS IN THE SYSTEM NACL-KCL-CACL2-H2O USING SYNTHETIC FLUID INCLUSIONS [J].
ZHANG, YG ;
FRANTZ, JD .
CHEMICAL GEOLOGY, 1987, 64 (3-4) :335-350