第三十八章:浅成热液型、卡林型和造山型热液型金矿床

S. Simmons, B. Tutolo, S. Barker, R. Goldfarb, F. Robert
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引用次数: 11

摘要

浅成热液型、卡林型和造山型金矿床形成于不同的地质环境和深度范围,金在不同的物理和化学过程中从热液流体中沉淀出来。然而,在所有三种矿床类型中,含金硫化物热液溶液的组成大致相似。在大多数情况下,它们包含低盐度的水,这些水被还原,具有接近中性的pH值,二氧化碳浓度在10% wt %之间。实验研究表明,控制热液中Au浓度的主要因素是还原态S的浓度,在没有含铁矿物的情况下,Au的溶解度对温度不敏感。在含有~300 ppm H2S的溶液中,Au的最大浓度为~1 ppm,这是许多成矿溶液的合理上限。在含铁矿物向黄铁矿转化的过程中,由于还原s浓度的降低,Au溶解度随着温度的降低而降低。在强氧化和强酸性氯化物溶液中也可以获得较高的Au浓度(~500 ppb),这反映了只有在岩浆-热液高硫化浅热液环境中剧烈水解浸出时才会形成的化学条件。在相对较宽的pH值和氧化还原状态范围内,金也可在低至中等水平(10-100 ppb)下溶解。诱发金沉积的化学机制可分为两大类。一种是通过物理和化学过程引起的溶液平衡的扰动来达到金的过饱和状态,这些过程包括相分离(沸腾)、流体混合和含铁矿物硫化导致的黄铁矿沉积。第二种方法是将离子Au吸附到生长中的硫化物晶体(主要是砷黄铁矿)表面。两组机制均有产矿能力,具有明显的矿物学和地球化学特征。新西兰陶波火山带的金运移和沉积过程表明,在三种不同的热液环境中,金的矿级浓度是如何通过沉淀、相分离和吸附两种不同的机制积累的。由减压引起的闪蒸引起的相分离,与地热井中的高能流体流动有关,从含有几ppb Au的热液中产生含高达6 wt.% Au的硫化物沉淀。在香槟池温泉中,对As-Sb-S胶体的吸附产生含有数十到数百ppm Au的沉淀。对富砷黄铁矿的吸附也导致地下热液蚀变火山岩中金的异常禀赋高达1ppm。在所有这些环境中,不饱和的金溶液产生的异常金浓度与典型的矿级浓度相当,甚至超过了典型的矿级浓度,这表明接近饱和的溶解金属浓度并不是产生经济金矿床的先决条件。浅成热液矿床中金的沉积原因与剧烈的温度压力梯度有关,这种梯度引起了相分离(沸腾)和混合。在卡林矿床中,金的沉积受表面化学和富砷黄铁矿边缘的吸附过程控制。在造山带矿床中,至少存在两种产金机制;一种涉及相分离,另一种涉及水岩相互作用产生黄铁矿的硫化反应;涉及Au-As在硫化物中共沉积的第三种机制可能也很重要。热液流体流动形式的差异与金的沉淀机制对矿带的大小和几何形状的形成起着重要的作用。金的沉积机制与矿石的冶金特征之间也有密切的联系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Chapter 38: Hydrothermal Gold Deposition in Epithermal, Carlin, and Orogenic Deposits
Epithermal, Carlin, and orogenic Au deposits form in diverse geologic settings and over a wide range of depths, where Au precipitates from hydrothermal fluids in response to various physical and chemical processes. The compositions of Au-bearing sulfidic hydrothermal solutions across all three deposit types, however, are broadly similar. In most cases, they comprise low-salinity waters, which are reduced, have a near-neutral pH, and CO2 concentrations that range from <4 to >10 wt %. Experimental studies show that the main factor controlling the concentration of Au in hydrothermal solutions is the concentration of reduced S, and in the absence of Fe-bearing minerals, Au solubility is insensitive to temperature. In a solution containing ~300 ppm H2S, the maximum concentration of Au is ~1 ppm, representing a reasonable upper limit for many ore-forming solutions. Where Fe-bearing minerals are being converted to pyrite, Au solubility decreases as temperature cools due to the decreasing concentration of reduced S. High Au concentrations (~500 ppb) can also be achieved in strongly oxidizing and strongly acidic chloride solutions, reflecting chemical conditions that only develop during intense hydrolytic leaching in magmatic-hydrothermal high-sulfidation epithermal environments. Gold is also soluble at low to moderate levels (10–100 ppb) over a relatively wide range of pH values and redox states. The chemical mechanisms which induce Au deposition are divided into two broad groups. One involves achieving states of Au supersaturation through perturbations in solution equilibria caused by physical and chemical processes, involving phase separation (boiling), fluid mixing, and pyrite deposition via sulfidation of Fe-bearing minerals. The second involves the sorption of ionic Au on to the surfaces of growing sulfide crystals, mainly arsenian pyrite. Both groups of mechanisms have capability to produce ore, with distinct mineralogical and geochemical characteristics. Gold transport and deposition processes in the Taupo Volcanic Zone, New Zealand, show how ore-grade concentrations of Au can accumulate by two different mechanisms of precipitation, phase separation and sorption, in three separate hydrothermal environments. Phase separation caused by flashing, induced by depressurization and associated with energetic fluid flow in geothermal wells, produces sulfide precipitates containing up to 6 wt.% Au from a hydrothermal solution containing a few ppb Au. Sorption on to As-Sb-S colloids produces precipitates containing tens to hundreds of ppm Au in the Champagne Pool hot spring. Sorption on to As-rich pyrite also leads to anomalous endowments of Au of up to 1 ppm in hydrothermally altered volcanic rocks occurring in the subsurface. In all of these environments, Au-undersaturated solutions produce anomalous concentrations of Au that match and surpass typical ore-grade concentrations, indicating that near-saturated concentrations of dissolved metal are not a prerequisite for generating economic deposits of Au. The causes of Au deposition in epithermal deposits are related to sharp temperature-pressure gradients that induce phase separation (boiling) and mixing. In Carlin deposits, Au deposition is controlled by surface chemistry and sorption processes on to rims of As-rich pyrite. In orogenic deposits, at least two Au-depositing mechanisms appear to produce ore; one involves phase separation and the other involves sulfidation reactions during water-rock interaction that produces pyrite; a third mechanism involving codeposition of Au-As in sulfides might also be important. Differences in the regimes of hydrothermal fluid flow combined with mechanisms of Au precipitation play an important role in shaping the dimensions and geometries of ore zones. There is also a strong link between Au-depositing mechanisms and metallurgical characteristics of ores.
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