Carbon and oxygen isotopic composition of fluid inclusion CO2 and CH4 within the Archean Junction gold deposit, Kambalda, Western Australia

P. Polito, T. Kyser, A. Vuletich, Y. Bone
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However, establishing that the gases in the soil are indeed present within the deposit and that those gases are related to the syn-Au alteration minerals is achievable through stable-isotope studies. Carbon and O stable-isotope compositions of pre-gold, syn-gold, and post-gold quartz veins; syn-gold and post-gold calcite; and CO2 and CH4 in the fluid inclusions that each of these minerals host were investigated to establish if the various mineral and fluid-gas species in the deposit are in isotopic equilibrium with each other, an important first step to relate syn-ore minerals with the relevant gases.\n Pre-ore Mo-type quartz veins contain CO2 (δ13Cgas = –1‰) and CH4 (δ13Cgas = ca. –33‰) in fluid inclusions at a ratio of ca. 93:7. The paucity of Mo-type quartz veins in the deposit suggests that these veins were not the main source of the soil-gas signature. Syn-gold alteration post-dates the Mo-type quartz veins. Quartz and co-existing calcite in the Au-bearing Junction shear zone have δ18Omineral values around 12.0 and 10.5‰, respectively. Multiple co-existing quartz-calcite pairs indicate that gold deposition occurred at ∼400 °C. This temperature agrees with mineral equilibria temperature estimates, the entrapment temperatures of fluid inclusions, and temperature modelling of solid-solution mineral phases. The temperature dictates that the quartz and calcite are in isotopic equilibrium with each other.\n The calcite in the Junction shear zone has δ13Cmineral values from –7.4 to –2.5‰, indicating that the CO2-rich ore fluid had a δ13Cfluid value of –3.7 ± 0.9‰. CO2 and CH4 released from quartz-hosted fluid inclusions have δ13Cgas values from –4.3 to +3.5‰ (mean = –1.5 ± 1.9‰) and –50.5 to –35.2‰, respectively. The isotopic composition of the fluid inclusion CO2 is in disequilibrium with co-existing CH4 that was co-released from the same quartz vein and the calculated δ13Cfluid value from co-existing calcite. Isotopic mass balance calculations using the two co-released gases show that the CO2 was initially in equilibrium with the syn-ore calcite but has since re-equilibrated with CH4 at temperatures below 200 °C. The abundance of CH4 in some quartz veins suggests that the syn-gold vein assemblage could be the source for the soil-gas anomaly.\n Post-gold veins contain quartz and calcite that have δ18Omineral values of ca. 11.0 and 10.0‰, respectively. Individual mineral pairs indicate precipitation at ∼320 °C from a fluid with a δ18Ofluid value of 4.7 ± 0.9‰, distinct from that which formed the syn-gold quartz veins. The post-gold calcite has δ13Ccalcite values from –7.5 to –5.4‰, indicative of formation from a CO2-bearing fluid having a δ13Cfluid value of –4.6 ± 0.9‰. The δ13Cfluid values are indistinguishable from fluid inclusion CO2 values of –3.6 ± 0.9‰, indicating no post entrapment re-equilibration, which suggests that CH4 was at trace volumes or absent in the post-gold quartz veins.\n These data lead to the conclusion that post-entrapment reequilibration between fluid inclusion CO2 and CH4 has occurred, but that the two gases were likely in equilibrium at the time of entrapment. This has implications for the interpretation of C isotope studies that focus on fluid inclusion CO2 measured from other gold and base-metal deposits, especially when the isotopic value of that CO2 is assumed to represent a specific source for the ore-forming fluids. The data also lead to a model that proposes that the syn-gold alteration assemblage could have produced the soil-gas anomalies observed above the mineralization.","PeriodicalId":134244,"journal":{"name":"The Canadian Mineralogist","volume":"72 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-09-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"The Canadian Mineralogist","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3749/canmin.2000027","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

The Junction orogenic gold deposit in the St Ives district of Western Australia is characterized by a syn-gold mineral assemblage dominated by quartz-calcite-albite-biotite-chlorite-pyrrhotite. The deposit had a light hydrocarbon,CO2, and O2 soil-gas signature above known mineralization prior to mining and it has been proposed that the source of the light hydrocarbon gases in the soil was gas-rich fluid inclusions trapped in gold-related alteration minerals, particularly calcite, albite, quartz, and pyrrhotite. Linking the soil gases with those in the deposit is extremely difficult. However, establishing that the gases in the soil are indeed present within the deposit and that those gases are related to the syn-Au alteration minerals is achievable through stable-isotope studies. Carbon and O stable-isotope compositions of pre-gold, syn-gold, and post-gold quartz veins; syn-gold and post-gold calcite; and CO2 and CH4 in the fluid inclusions that each of these minerals host were investigated to establish if the various mineral and fluid-gas species in the deposit are in isotopic equilibrium with each other, an important first step to relate syn-ore minerals with the relevant gases. Pre-ore Mo-type quartz veins contain CO2 (δ13Cgas = –1‰) and CH4 (δ13Cgas = ca. –33‰) in fluid inclusions at a ratio of ca. 93:7. The paucity of Mo-type quartz veins in the deposit suggests that these veins were not the main source of the soil-gas signature. Syn-gold alteration post-dates the Mo-type quartz veins. Quartz and co-existing calcite in the Au-bearing Junction shear zone have δ18Omineral values around 12.0 and 10.5‰, respectively. Multiple co-existing quartz-calcite pairs indicate that gold deposition occurred at ∼400 °C. This temperature agrees with mineral equilibria temperature estimates, the entrapment temperatures of fluid inclusions, and temperature modelling of solid-solution mineral phases. The temperature dictates that the quartz and calcite are in isotopic equilibrium with each other. The calcite in the Junction shear zone has δ13Cmineral values from –7.4 to –2.5‰, indicating that the CO2-rich ore fluid had a δ13Cfluid value of –3.7 ± 0.9‰. CO2 and CH4 released from quartz-hosted fluid inclusions have δ13Cgas values from –4.3 to +3.5‰ (mean = –1.5 ± 1.9‰) and –50.5 to –35.2‰, respectively. The isotopic composition of the fluid inclusion CO2 is in disequilibrium with co-existing CH4 that was co-released from the same quartz vein and the calculated δ13Cfluid value from co-existing calcite. Isotopic mass balance calculations using the two co-released gases show that the CO2 was initially in equilibrium with the syn-ore calcite but has since re-equilibrated with CH4 at temperatures below 200 °C. The abundance of CH4 in some quartz veins suggests that the syn-gold vein assemblage could be the source for the soil-gas anomaly. Post-gold veins contain quartz and calcite that have δ18Omineral values of ca. 11.0 and 10.0‰, respectively. Individual mineral pairs indicate precipitation at ∼320 °C from a fluid with a δ18Ofluid value of 4.7 ± 0.9‰, distinct from that which formed the syn-gold quartz veins. The post-gold calcite has δ13Ccalcite values from –7.5 to –5.4‰, indicative of formation from a CO2-bearing fluid having a δ13Cfluid value of –4.6 ± 0.9‰. The δ13Cfluid values are indistinguishable from fluid inclusion CO2 values of –3.6 ± 0.9‰, indicating no post entrapment re-equilibration, which suggests that CH4 was at trace volumes or absent in the post-gold quartz veins. These data lead to the conclusion that post-entrapment reequilibration between fluid inclusion CO2 and CH4 has occurred, but that the two gases were likely in equilibrium at the time of entrapment. This has implications for the interpretation of C isotope studies that focus on fluid inclusion CO2 measured from other gold and base-metal deposits, especially when the isotopic value of that CO2 is assumed to represent a specific source for the ore-forming fluids. The data also lead to a model that proposes that the syn-gold alteration assemblage could have produced the soil-gas anomalies observed above the mineralization.
西澳大利亚Kambalda太古宙结金矿流体包裹体CO2和CH4的碳氧同位素组成
西澳大利亚St Ives地区的Junction造山带金矿床具有以石英-方解石-钠长石-黑云母-绿泥石-磁黄铁矿为主的同型金矿组合特征。矿床具有轻烃、CO2和O2的土壤气体特征,在开采前已知矿化之上,认为土壤中轻烃气体的来源是与金有关的蚀变矿物,特别是方解石、钠长石、石英和磁黄铁矿中的富气流体包裹体。将土壤气体与沉积物中的气体联系起来是极其困难的。然而,通过稳定同位素研究,可以确定土壤中的气体确实存在于矿床中,并且这些气体与顺金蚀变矿物有关。前金、同金和后金石英脉碳、氧稳定同位素组成同金和后金方解石;研究了这些矿物所含流体包裹体中的CO2和CH4,以确定矿床中各种矿物和流体气体是否处于同位素平衡状态,这是将同矿矿物与相关气体联系起来的重要第一步。成矿前mo型石英脉流体包裹体中含有CO2 (δ13Cgas = -1‰)和CH4 (δ13Cgas = -33‰),比值约为93:7。钼矿床中缺乏钼型石英脉,表明这些脉不是该矿床的主要土气标志来源。同金蚀变晚于莫型石英脉。含金结切变带石英和共生方解石的δ18矿物值分别在12.0和10.5‰左右。多个共存的石英-方解石对表明金沉积发生在~ 400°C。这个温度与矿物平衡温度估计、流体包裹体的夹持温度和固溶矿物相的温度模型一致。温度表明石英和方解石彼此处于同位素平衡状态。结切变带方解石的δ 13c值为-7.4 ~ -2.5‰,说明富co2矿液的δ 13c值为-3.7±0.9‰。石英包裹体释放的CO2和CH4的δ13Cgas值分别为-4.3 ~ +3.5‰(平均= -1.5±1.9‰)和-50.5 ~ -35.2‰。流体包裹体CO2同位素组成与同石英脉共释放的CH4同位素组成不平衡,与共存方解石计算的δ 13c流体值不平衡。使用这两种共释放气体进行的同位素质量平衡计算表明,CO2最初与同矿方解石处于平衡状态,但在低于200℃的温度下与CH4重新平衡。部分石英脉中CH4含量丰富,说明同金脉组合可能是该异常的成因。后金脉含石英和方解石,δ18矿物值分别约为11.0‰和10.0‰。个别矿物对表明,在~ 320℃下,流体的δ18Ofluid值为4.7±0.9‰,与形成同金石英脉的流体不同。后金期方解石的δ13Ccalcite值为-7.5 ~ -5.4‰,表明其形成流体的δ13Cfluid值为-4.6±0.9‰。δ13Cfluid值与流体包裹体CO2值(-3.6±0.9‰)无明显差异,表明成矿后未发生再平衡,表明成矿后石英脉中存在微量CH4或不存在CH4。这些数据表明,流体包裹体CO2和CH4在圈闭后发生了再平衡,但两种气体在圈闭时可能处于平衡状态。这对C同位素研究的解释具有启示意义,这些研究的重点是从其他金和贱金属矿床测量的流体包裹体CO2,特别是当假定该CO2的同位素值代表成矿流体的特定来源时。这些数据还导致了一个模型,该模型提出,同金蚀变组合可能产生了矿化上方观察到的土壤-天然气异常。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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