The Damoqujia gold deposit within the Zhaoping Fault Zone on Jiaodong Peninsula in eastern China is hosted primarily by Mesozoic granitoids and contains >60 t of gold, making it an important gold producer. Three mineralization stages are distinguished (early, middle, and late): (K-feldspar)-sericite-quartz-pyrite, quartz-gold - polymetallic sulfides, and quartz-carbonate. Gold deposition occurred mainly in the middle stage. The primary fluid inclusions of three stages are mainly homogenized at temperatures of 236-389, 191-346, and 104-251 degrees C, with salinities of 2.96-11.33, 1.39-17.28, and 0.53-11.48 wt.% NaCl equivalent, respectively. Fluid inclusion studies indicate that the metallogenic system evolved from CO2-rich mesothermal homogeneous fluids to CO2-poor aqueous fluids due to inputs of meteoric waters. The gold was carried as a bisulfide complex in the ore-forming fluids. Precipitation of gold was caused by a combination of fluid immiscibility and water-rock interaction. Studies of the fluid inclusion characteristics (medium temperature, CO2-rich, and low salinity H2O-CO2-NaCl homogeneous system), hydrogen and oxygen isotopes (delta O-18(H2O) =-1.0 parts per thousand to 7.6 parts per thousand, delta D =-109 parts per thousand to -77 parts per thousand, sulfur values (delta S-3(4)H2S = 4.5 parts per thousand to 8.5 parts per thousand), and regional geological events show that the ore-forming fluids reservoir was likely metamorphic in origin. Based on the immiscibility of fluid inclusion assemblages, the estimated depth and pressure of trapping are 8.3-10.2 km and 83-276 MPa, respectively, corresponding to the depth and pressure of mineralization.