Dissolution-Reprecipitation Process Of Magnetite From The Chengchao Iron Deposit: Insights Into Ore Genesis And Implication For In-Situ Chemical Analysis Of Magnetite

Ore Geology Reviews(2014)

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Abstract
Magnetite formed in different environments commonly has distinct assemblages and concentrations of trace elements that can potentially be used as a genetic indicator of this mineral and associated ore deposits. In this paper, we present textural and compositional data of magnetite from the Chengchao iron deposit, Daye district, China to provide a better understanding in the formation mechanism and genesis of the deposit and shed light on analytical protocols for in-situ chemical analysis of hydrothermal magnetite. Magnetite grains from the ore-related granitoid pluton, mineralized endoskarn, magnetite-dominated exoskarn, and vein-type iron ores hosted in marine carbonate intruded by the pluton were examined using scanning electron microscopy and analyzed for major and trace elements using electron microprobe. Back-scattered electron images reveal that primary magnetite from the mineralized skams and vein-type ores were all partly reequilibrated with late-stage hydrothermal fluids, forming secondary magnetite domains that are featured by abundant porosity and have sharp contact with the primary magnetite. These textures are interpreted as resulting from a dissolution-reprecipitation process of magnetite, which, however, are mostly obscure under optically.Primary magnetite grains from the mineralized endoskam and vein-type ores contain high SiO2 (0.92-3.21 wt.%), Al2O3 (0.51-2.83 wt.%), and low MgO (0.15-0.67 wt.%), whereas varieties from the exoskarn ores have high MgO (2.76-3.07 wt.%) and low SiO2 (0.03-023 wt.%) and Al2O3 (0.54-1.05 wt.%). This compositional contrast indicates that trace-element geochemical composition of magnetite is largely controlled by the compositions of magmatic fluids and host rocks of the ores that have reacted with the fluids. Compared to its precursor mineral, secondary magnetite is significantly depleted in most trace elements, with SiO2 deceasing from 1.87 to 0.47 wt.% (on average) and Al2O3 from 0.89 to 0.08 wt.% in mineralized endoskam and vein type ores, and MgO from 2.87 to 0.60 wt.% in exoskarn ores. On the contrary, average content of iron is notably increased from 69.2 wt.% to 71.9 wt.% in the secondary magnetite grains. The results suggest that the dissolution-reprecipitation process has been important in significantly removing trace elements from early-stage magnetite to form high-grade, high-quality iron ores in hydrothermal environments. The textural and compositional data confirm that the Chengchao iron deposit is of hydrothermal origin, rather than being crystallized from immiscible iron oxide melts as previously suggested. This study also highlights the importance of textural characterization using various imaging techniques before in-situ chemical analysis of magnetite, as is the case for texturally complicated U-Th-bearing accessory minerals that have been widely used for U-Pb geochronology study. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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Key words
Magnetite,Dissolution-reprecipitation,Iron deposit,Chengchao,Ore genesis
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