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Evolution of metal-bearing fluids at the Nussir and Ulveryggen sediment-hosted Cu deposits, Repparfjord Tectonic Window, northern Norway.

Authors :
Mun, Yulia
Palinkaš, Sabina Strmić
Kullerud, Kåre
Nilsen, Kjell S.
Bekker, Andrey
Source :
Norwegian Journal of Geology. 2020, Vol. 100 Issue 1, p1-53. 53p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The Palaeoproterozoic greenstone belts of Fennoscandia are metamorphosed and deformed volcanic and sedimentary rocks that formed in basins with a high base-metal ore potential. One of these, the Repparfjord Tectonic Window (RTW), is exposed in the Caledonides of northern Norway and contains several sediment-hosted Cu deposits including Nussir and Ulveryggen. The RTW is composed of mafic metavolcanic rocks (metabasalts, volcanoclastic metabreccia and metatuffite) intercalated with carbonatesiliciclastic sedimentary rocks (dolomitic marble, metasandstone to metapelite). This succession was deformed and metamorphosed up to greenschist to lower amphibolite facies during the Svecofennian Orogeny (c. 1.84 Ga). The Cu-mineralisation at the Nussir deposit is hosted by a dolomitic marble. It occurs mostly in the form of quartz-carbonate veins with chalcopyrite, bornite, chalcocite and covellite as the main ore minerals. In contrast, the Ulveryggen mineralisation is predominantly disseminated within a metasiliciclastic succession and dominated by chalcopyrite, bornite, chalcocite, covellite and neodigenite. Mineralogical, geochemical, stable isotope and fluid-inclusion studies provide insights into the evolution of the Cu-bearing fluids. A wide range in homogenisation temperatures (135-350°C at the Nussir deposit and 102-520°C at the Ulveryggen deposit) and fluid-inclusion salinities (from 0.35 up to 36 wt.% NaCl equivalents) suggest an evolving system with brines developed by subsurface evaporite dissolution. Fluid-inclusion and Cu-sphalerite geothermometry data constrain the temperature-pressure conditions of the Cu mineralisation in the Nussir deposit at 330-340°C and 1.1-2.7 kbars. High salinities at relatively high temperatures within the ore-bearing fluids imply that Cu was transported predominantly by Cuchloride complexes. The interaction of ore-bearing fluids with carbonate-rich host lithologies is proposed as the main mechanism for deposition of the Cu mineralisation at Nussir. In contrast, at the Ulveryggen deposit the mineralisation was mostly controlled by dilution and cooling when ore-bearing fluids mixed with groundwaters. Locally, reaction of Cu-bearing fluids with sediment-hosted pyrite might also have triggered copper precipitation. Similar ranges of ẟ13C (- 0.9 to + 2.9‰ V-PDB) and ẟ18O (- 18.3 to - 15.9‰ V-PDB) values in carbonates from ore-bearing veins and underlying host dolomitic marbles reflect a carbonate rock-buffered system without a significant contribution of magmatic or hydrothermal CO². [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23875852
Volume :
100
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Norwegian Journal of Geology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
148816304
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1785/njg100-2-5