M. Rodríguez-Mustafa, Adam C. Simon, Robert M. Holder, Holly Stein, A. Kylander‐Clark, B. Jicha, Daniel Blakemore, Edson L. B. Machado
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Integrated Re-Os, Ar/Ar, and U-Pb geochronology directly dates the timing of mineralization at the Mina Justa and Marcona deposits, Peru
Iron oxide−copper−gold (IOCG) and iron oxide−apatite (IOA) deposits are important sources of Cu and Fe, respectively. They contain abundant Fe-oxides and may contain Au, Ag, Co, rare earth elements (REEs), U, Ni, and V as economically important by-products. In Peru, the Mina Justa IOCG deposit is located next to the giant Marcona IOA deposit. Constraining the timing of Fe and Cu mineralization at Mina Justa is fundamental to understanding the duration and type of processes that generated this mineral deposit, and ultimately to testing the genetic link with other deposits in the area. Previous authors used alteration minerals to indirectly date Cu mineralization at Mina Justa at around 100 Ma. We report Ar/Ar dates of actinolite, U-Pb dates of magnetite, apatite, and titanite collected by in situ laser-ablation−multicollector−inductively coupled plasma−mass spectrometry, and Re-Os thermal ionization mass spectrometry dates for sulfides. These results indicate that Cu mineralization at Mina Justa occurred at ca. 160 Ma and that Fe mineralization is older and coeval with the neighboring Marcona IOA deposit, consistent with Cu mineralization overprinting IOA-style mineralization at Mina Justa.
期刊介绍:
The GSA Bulletin is the Society''s premier scholarly journal, published continuously since 1890. Its first editor was William John (WJ) McGee, who was responsible for establishing much of its original style and format. Fully refereed, each bimonthly issue includes 16-20 papers focusing on the most definitive, timely, and classic-style research in all earth-science disciplines. The Bulletin welcomes most contributions that are data-rich, mature studies of broad interest (i.e., of interest to more than one sub-discipline of earth science) and of lasting, archival quality. These include (but are not limited to) studies related to tectonics, structural geology, geochemistry, geophysics, hydrogeology, marine geology, paleoclimatology, planetary geology, quaternary geology/geomorphology, sedimentary geology, stratigraphy, and volcanology. The journal is committed to further developing both the scope of its content and its international profile so that it publishes the most current earth science research that will be of wide interest to geoscientists.