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World-Class Fe-Ti-V Oxide Deposits Formed in Feeder Conduits by Removing Cotectic Silicates TEXT SIZE: A A A
Extremely thick Fe-Ti-V oxide layers are hosted in mafic-ultramafic intrusions of the Emeishan large igneous province (LIP) in the Pan-Xi district of southwest China, accounting for a quarter of the world's Ti and V resource. It is unclear why these small intrusions contain such huge ore reserves that form world-class Fe-Ti-V oxide deposits. We find that the Hongge intrusion contains 35% Fe-Ti-V oxides, which is twice the typical content in mafic-ultramafic intrusions worldwide and the experimentally determined cotectic proportion in natural ferrobasaltic magma systems. The V content is almost constant in titanomagnetite across the entire Hongge intrusion in the Emeishan LIP, indicating a small (10-20%) proportion of cotectic Fe-Ti-V oxide during fractional crystallization. The bulk composition of the intrusion indicates an open magma system at the time of its formation. Clinopyroxene phenocrysts from overlying basalts contain Fe-Ti-V oxide inclusions, indicating that the phenocrysts crystallized at depth from magma saturated in Fe-Ti-V oxide and were then transported to the surface. We suggest that these intrusions were feeder conduits to the overlying basalts, where the silicates were cotectic with Fe-Ti-V oxides which were then extracted from the underlying intrusion as phenocrysts. Such a fundamental process is key to increase the proportion of oxide minerals in the residual assemblage, thereby upgrading the barren oxide-bearing rocks to world-class Fe-Ti-V oxide deposits in the small intrusions of the Emeishan LIP. A similar process might have occurred in LIPs elsewhere, meaning that intrusions formed as conduit-like open systems to the basalts in LIPs are good exploration targets for giant high-grade Fe-Ti-V oxide deposits.
 

Publication name

 ECONOMIC GEOLOGY Volume: 116 Issue: 3 Pages: 681-691 DOI: 10.5382/econgeo.4805 Published: MAY 2021

Author(s)

 Bai, Zhong-Jie; Zhong, Hong; Hu, Rui-Zhong; Zhu, Wei-Guang

Corresponding author(s) 

 BAI Zhongjie 
 baizhongjie@vip.gyig.ac.cn  
 Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Geochem, State Key Lab Ore Deposit Geochem, Guiyang 550081, Peoples R China.

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