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Petrogenesis and metallogenic implications of volcanic rocks from the Lawu basin, eastern Tibet: Insights into the intracontinental Eocene-Oligocene porphyry copper systems TEXT SIZE: A A A

Generally, porphyry Cu deposits are associated with the comagmatic porphyry (or subvolcanic)-volcanic systems of high magmatic H2O-fO(2) conditions. The volcanic rocks, as the counterpart of the porphyries, thus can provide some significant insights into the fertility of the porphyries to some extent. For this reason, we have used the Lawu volcanic rocks and spatial-temporal closely-related porphyries in the newly discovered porphyry Cu prospects (e.g., Seli, Zongguo, Mamupu) in the southern segment of the Yulong intracontinental porphyry Cu belt to illustrate the relationship between the porphyries and volcanic rocks, petrogenesis of the volcanic rocks, and then to evaluate the ore potential of the porphyries based on the magmatic H2O-fO(2) conditions.

Both the Lawu volcanic rocks and Seli-Zonguo-Mamupu porphyries are shoshonitic and metaluminous, and have similar REE patterns, and Sr-Nd-Hf isotopic compositions, which suggest a comagmatic relation between the volcanic rocks and porphyries. An episodic magmatism model is proposed to explain the slightly younger age (similar to 36-35 Ma) and less evolved nature of volcanic rocks than the porphyries. The Lawu volcanic rocks of mainly intermediate composition (SiO2 = 54.25-64.68 wt%) have high K2O (4.75-5.94 wt%) and high K2O/Na2O ratios (1.69-2.00), broadly similar to the coeval Yulong fertile granitic porphyries and the Nangqian mafic lavas. The (Sr-87/Sr-86)(i) and epsilon(Nd)(t) values, uniform zircon epsilon H-f(t) and delta O-18 values, and lack of inherited zircons of the Lawu volcanic rocks don't support their formation by mixing between the mantle-derived Nangqian mafic lavas and crustderived Yulong felsic porphyries or assimilation and fractional crystallization (AFC) of mafic magmas. They are characterized by high Ba/Th, Ba/La and listric-shaped normalized rare earth element profile with significantly negative Nb-Ta-Ti anomalies, and have high initial Sr-87/Sr-86 ratios (0.7071-0.7079) and low epsilon(Nd)(t) values (- 5.71 to - 3.05), and low zircon epsilon(Hf)(t) (-1.53 to 4.09) and clearly high delta O-18 values (6.67-8.42 parts per thousand), suggesting that, they were probably formed by fractional crystallization (FC) of mantle-derived mafic magmas and originated from mantle domains modified by significant amount of H2O-rich marine sediments of the Paleo-Tethyan oceanic slab.

Magmatic H2O contents calculated from deepest-crystallized amphiboles indicate that, the Lawu volcanic rocks and Zongguo porphyries have initial magmatic H2O contents as high as the Yulong fertile porphyries and typical porphyry Cu systems worldwide (commonly > 4 wt% H2O). Magmatic fO(2) (Delta FMQ) of the Lawu volcanic rocks (0.6-1.3, ave. 0.9 +/- 0.1) and the Zongguo porphyries (0.9-1.7, ave. 1.4 +/- 0.2) are clearly lower than the fertile porphyries in the giant Yulong deposit (Delta FMQ = 1.6-3.3, ave. 2.3 +/- 0.5) and typical porphyry Cu deposits in the world (commonly Delta FMQ > 2). The slightly lower magmatic H2O contents and slightly higher magmatic fO(2) of the Zongguo porphyries than the Lawu volcanic rocks were ascribed to variable degassing during magmatic evolution. These suggest that, in spite of the high magmatic H2O contents, the comagmatic porphyries (at least the Zongguo porphyries) of the Lawu volcanic rocks in the southern segment of the Yulong porphyry Cu belt are unlikely to produce large-scale porphyry Cu mineralization like the giant Yulong deposit, due to the low magmatic fO(2) conditions.

Publication name

 ORE GEOLOGY REVIEWS, 111 10.1016/j.oregeorev.2019.103001 AUG 2019

Author(s)

 Xu, Yue; Xu, Leiluo; Bi, Xianwu; Hu, Ruizhong; Chen, Xilian; Ma, Rui; Zhu, Jingjing; Yu, Hongjun; Liu, Baohua; Li, Juan

Corresponding author(s) 

 XU Leiluo 
 xuleiluo@vip.gyig.ac.cn  
 Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Geochem, State Key Lab Ore Deposit Geochem, Guiyang 550081, Guizhou, Peoples R China.  

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