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A SHAKE-UP IN THE PORPHYRY WORLD?

Authors :
Richards, Jeremy P.
Source :
Economic Geology & the Bulletin of the Society of Economic Geologists; Sep/Oct2018, Vol. 113 Issue 6, p1225-1233, 9p
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Porphyry Cu deposits form in the shallow crustal parts of arc magmatic systems, which root in the mantle wedge, evolve in lower crustal MASH (melting, assimilation, storage, homogenization) zones and lower to midcrustal hot zones, and accumulate in mid- to upper crustal batholiths at depths of 5 to 10 km. A small proportion of the magma and most of the volatile load rises toward the surface due to buoyancy, and may erupt as volcanic or fumarolic emissions. Low levels of volcanism and fumarolic activity, as well as subsurface hydrothermal flow and alteration, are normal and semicontinuous features of active arc magmatic systems, which may operate for millions of years. Porphyry Cu deposits, on the other hand, form rarely (typically < 1 per batholith) and rapidly (<100,000 years) in the subsurface (2-5 km depth), where hydrous volatiles exsolved from the underlying batholith are channeled into structurally controlled cupola zones and cool before reaching the surface. The explosively brecciated character of early mineralization stages (breccia pipes and stockworks) suggests that the initiation of fluid flow maybe essentially instantaneous and catastrophic, with the longer total duration of hydrothermal activity reflecting slower kinetically controlled fluid exsolution processes, or draining of deeper parts of the system. These fluids generate intense subsurface hydrothermal alteration, and may precipitate economic concentrations of Cu-sulfide minerals in potassic alteration zones as they cool between -400° and 300°C. The suddenness and infrequency of these ore-forming hydrothermal events suggest that they are triggered by an external process acting on otherwise normally evolving magmatic systems. Sudden depressurization or agitation of a large, primed, volatile-saturated or supersaturated mid-upper crustal magma chamber could lead to rapid and voluminous volatile exsolution and fluid discharge. This sudden volatile flux could result in either a large explosive volcanic eruption if the surface is breached, or a large magmatic-hydrothermal system that could form a porphyry Cu deposit if fluid flow is restricted to the subsurface. Candidates for triggers of these destabilizing events are catastrophic mass wasting such as volcanic edifice collapse, or mega-earthquakes, the latter possibly causing the former. The frequency of such catastrophic events occurring in proximity to active arc batholiths may approximate the recurrence rate of formation of large porphyry Cu deposits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03610128
Volume :
113
Issue :
6
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Economic Geology & the Bulletin of the Society of Economic Geologists
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
133358230
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5382/econgeo.2018.4589