Nature and source of the ore-forming fluids associated with orogenic gold deposits in the Dharwar Craton
Neoarchean orogenic gold deposits, associated with the greenstone-granite milieus in the Dharwar Craton include (1) the famous Kolar mine and the world class Hutti deposit; (2) small mines at Hira-Buddini, Uti, Ajjanahalli, and Guddadarangavanahalli; (3) prospects at Jonnagiri; and (4) old mining ca...
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doaj-12ba850caee345d486d41f13344a01ae2020-11-25T00:07:00ZengElsevierGeoscience Frontiers1674-98712018-05-0193715726Nature and source of the ore-forming fluids associated with orogenic gold deposits in the Dharwar CratonBiswajit Mishra0Kamal Lochan Pruseth1Pranjit Hazarika2Sakthi Saravanan Chinnasamy3Department of Geology and Geophysics, Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur 721302, India; Corresponding author.Department of Geology and Geophysics, Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur 721302, IndiaDepartment of Geological Sciences, Gauhati University, Guwahati 781014, IndiaDepartment of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, National Institute of Technology, Rourkela 769008, IndiaNeoarchean orogenic gold deposits, associated with the greenstone-granite milieus in the Dharwar Craton include (1) the famous Kolar mine and the world class Hutti deposit; (2) small mines at Hira-Buddini, Uti, Ajjanahalli, and Guddadarangavanahalli; (3) prospects at Jonnagiri; and (4) old mining camps in the Gadag and Ramagiri-Penakacherla belts. The existing diametric views on the source of ore fluid for formation of these deposits include fluids exsolved from granitic melts and extracted by metamorphic devolatilization of the greenstone sequences. Lode gold mineralization occurs in structurally controlled higher order splays in variety of host rocks such as mafic/felsic greenstones, banded iron formations, volcaniclastic rocks and granitoids. Estimated metamorphic conditions of the greenstones vary from lower greenschist facies to mid-amphibolite facies and mineralizations in all the camps are associated with distinct hydrothermal alterations. Fluid inclusion microthermometric and Raman spectroscopic studies document low salinity aqueous-gaseous (H2O + CO2 ± CH4 + NaCl) ore fluids, which precipitated gold and altered the host rocks in a narrow P–T window of 0.7–2.5 kbar and 215–320 °C. While the calculated fluid O- and C-isotopic values are ambiguous, S-isotopic compositions of pyrite-precipitating fluid show distinct craton-scale uniformity in terms of its reduced nature and a suggested crustal sulfur source.Available ages on greenstone metamorphism, granitoid plutonism and mineralization in the Hutti Belt are tantamount, making a geochronology-based resolution of the existing debate on the metamorphic vs. magmatic fluid source impossible. In contrast, tourmaline geochemistry suggests involvement of single fluid in formation of gold mineralization, primarily derived by metamorphic devolatilization of mafic greenstones and interlayered sedimentary rocks, with minor magmatic contributions. Similarly, compositions of scheelite, pyrite and arsenopyrite point toward operation of fault-valves that caused pressure fluctuation-induced fluid phase separation, which acted as the dominant process of gold precipitation, apart from fluid-rock sulfidation reactions. Therefore, results from geochemistry of hydrothermal minerals and those from fluid inclusion microthermometry corroborate in constraining source of ore fluid, nature of gold transport (by Au-bisulfide complex) and mechanism of gold ore formation in the Dharwar Craton. Keywords: Dharwar, Gold, Fluid inclusions, Isotopes, Fluid composition, Greenstone metamorphismhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1674987117301615 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Biswajit Mishra Kamal Lochan Pruseth Pranjit Hazarika Sakthi Saravanan Chinnasamy |
spellingShingle |
Biswajit Mishra Kamal Lochan Pruseth Pranjit Hazarika Sakthi Saravanan Chinnasamy Nature and source of the ore-forming fluids associated with orogenic gold deposits in the Dharwar Craton Geoscience Frontiers |
author_facet |
Biswajit Mishra Kamal Lochan Pruseth Pranjit Hazarika Sakthi Saravanan Chinnasamy |
author_sort |
Biswajit Mishra |
title |
Nature and source of the ore-forming fluids associated with orogenic gold deposits in the Dharwar Craton |
title_short |
Nature and source of the ore-forming fluids associated with orogenic gold deposits in the Dharwar Craton |
title_full |
Nature and source of the ore-forming fluids associated with orogenic gold deposits in the Dharwar Craton |
title_fullStr |
Nature and source of the ore-forming fluids associated with orogenic gold deposits in the Dharwar Craton |
title_full_unstemmed |
Nature and source of the ore-forming fluids associated with orogenic gold deposits in the Dharwar Craton |
title_sort |
nature and source of the ore-forming fluids associated with orogenic gold deposits in the dharwar craton |
publisher |
Elsevier |
series |
Geoscience Frontiers |
issn |
1674-9871 |
publishDate |
2018-05-01 |
description |
Neoarchean orogenic gold deposits, associated with the greenstone-granite milieus in the Dharwar Craton include (1) the famous Kolar mine and the world class Hutti deposit; (2) small mines at Hira-Buddini, Uti, Ajjanahalli, and Guddadarangavanahalli; (3) prospects at Jonnagiri; and (4) old mining camps in the Gadag and Ramagiri-Penakacherla belts. The existing diametric views on the source of ore fluid for formation of these deposits include fluids exsolved from granitic melts and extracted by metamorphic devolatilization of the greenstone sequences. Lode gold mineralization occurs in structurally controlled higher order splays in variety of host rocks such as mafic/felsic greenstones, banded iron formations, volcaniclastic rocks and granitoids. Estimated metamorphic conditions of the greenstones vary from lower greenschist facies to mid-amphibolite facies and mineralizations in all the camps are associated with distinct hydrothermal alterations. Fluid inclusion microthermometric and Raman spectroscopic studies document low salinity aqueous-gaseous (H2O + CO2 ± CH4 + NaCl) ore fluids, which precipitated gold and altered the host rocks in a narrow P–T window of 0.7–2.5 kbar and 215–320 °C. While the calculated fluid O- and C-isotopic values are ambiguous, S-isotopic compositions of pyrite-precipitating fluid show distinct craton-scale uniformity in terms of its reduced nature and a suggested crustal sulfur source.Available ages on greenstone metamorphism, granitoid plutonism and mineralization in the Hutti Belt are tantamount, making a geochronology-based resolution of the existing debate on the metamorphic vs. magmatic fluid source impossible. In contrast, tourmaline geochemistry suggests involvement of single fluid in formation of gold mineralization, primarily derived by metamorphic devolatilization of mafic greenstones and interlayered sedimentary rocks, with minor magmatic contributions. Similarly, compositions of scheelite, pyrite and arsenopyrite point toward operation of fault-valves that caused pressure fluctuation-induced fluid phase separation, which acted as the dominant process of gold precipitation, apart from fluid-rock sulfidation reactions. Therefore, results from geochemistry of hydrothermal minerals and those from fluid inclusion microthermometry corroborate in constraining source of ore fluid, nature of gold transport (by Au-bisulfide complex) and mechanism of gold ore formation in the Dharwar Craton. Keywords: Dharwar, Gold, Fluid inclusions, Isotopes, Fluid composition, Greenstone metamorphism |
url |
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1674987117301615 |
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