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Recognition of Late Triassic Cu-Mo Mineralization in the Northern Yidun Arc (SE Tibetan Plateau): Implications for Regional Exploration TEXT SIZE: A A A

The Yidun arc, located in the southeastern Tibetan Plateau, was formed by the westward subduction of the Ganze-Litang Paleo-Tethys ocean in Late Triassic. It is well-known for the formation of numerous Mesozoic porphyry-skarn Cu-Mo-(Au) deposits in the arc. To date, more than 20 Cu-Mo-(Au) deposits (>10 million tonnes Cu resources) have been discovered in the southern Eastern Yidun arc. However, few Cu-Mo deposits have been discovered in the northern Eastern Yidun arc. In recent years, some Cu-Mo deposits or occurrence are successively discovered in the northern Eastern Yidun arc, but their ore-forming ages are not well constrained. It remains unclear whether such Cu-Mo mineralization formed by similar metallogenic event and geodynamic setting as the Cu-Mo-(Au) mineralization in the south. In order to determine the metallogenic age and shed light on potential links between Cu-Mo mineralization and regional magmatic events, we present molybdenite Re-Os and zircon U-Pb ages to constrain the timing of two types of Cu-Mo mineralization in the northern Eastern Yidun arc (type I and type II). Molybdenite ICP-MS Re-Os dating results show that type I mineralization was formed at 217.7 +/- 3.6 Ma, which is highly consistent with the formation ages of the host granite (218.1 +/- 1.5 Ma, 2 sigma, n = 15, MSWD = 0.92) and aplite dyke (217.3 +/- 1.3 Ma, 2 sigma, n = 16, MSWD = 0.50) within error. While the type II mineralization has a relatively younger formation age of 211.8 +/- 4.7 Ma than the host granite (217.1 +/- 1.5 Ma, 2 sigma, n = 14, MSWD = 0.96) and type I Cu-Mo mineralization. These data indicate that the Cu-Mo mineralization in the northern Eastern Yidun arc was temporally and spatially related to the Late Triassic magmatism in the region. Rhenium (Re) concentrations in the molybdenite from type I mineralization, ranging from 12.77 to 111.1 ppm (typically > 100 ppm), indicate that the ore-forming metals were derived mainly from a mantle source. However, Re contents in molybdenite from the type II mineralization, ranging from 7.983 to 10.40 ppm, indicate that the ore-forming metals were derived from a mixed mantle and crustal source with a predominantly crustal component. This study confirms that the northern Eastern Yidun arc exists Late Triassic Cu-Mo metallogenesis, and thus much attention should be paid on this region to find more Late Triassic Cu-Mo resources.

Publication name

 MINERALS Volume: 9 Issue: 12 Article Number: 765 DOI: 10.3390/min9120765 Published: DEC 2019

Author(s)

 Tian, Zhen-Dong; Leng, Cheng-Biao; Zhang, Xing-Chun; Zhou, Li-Min; Tang, Yan-Wen

Corresponding author(s) 

 LENG Chengbiao 
 lengchengbiao@vip.gyig.ac.cn  
 Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Geochem, State Key Lab Ore Deposit Geochem, Guiyang 550081, Peoples R China
 East China Univ Technol, State Key Lab Nucl Resources & Environm, Nanchang 330013, Jiangxi, Peoples R China

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