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Fingerprinting the metal source and cycling of the world’s largest antimony deposit in Xikuangshan, China

Authors :
Zheng-Yu Long
Kun-Feng Qiu
M. Santosh
Hao-Cheng Yu
Xiang-Yong Jiang
Li-Qun Zou
Dai-Wen Tang
Source :
GSA Bulletin. 135:286-294
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Geological Society of America, 2022.

Abstract

The Xikuangshan antimony (Sb) deposit is the largest Sb deposit in the world; however, the metal source and cycling and a holistic understanding of the deposit genesis remain equivocal. Sulfur isotope signatures offer a means of fingerprinting different sources in a hydrothermal deposit, although one must be careful to rule out subsequent isotope fractionation during fluid ascent, mixing, and ore precipitation. Here, we investigated the sulfur isotope composition of stibnite occurring at depth in the Xikuangshan deposit to distinguish the isotopic signals from the source and the superimposed imprint from near-surface–derived sulfur mixing or isotopic fractionation. All stibnites from the deep orebodies displayed limited δ34S variation from +6.8‰ to +8.4‰, despite their widely varying depths. These results provide direct evidence that δ34S values measured in deep orebodies are representative of the isotopic composition of initial fluids. The most likely factor controlling the variation of the sulfur isotopes in shallow stibnites (+3.5‰ to +16.3‰) is a series of hydrothermal processes, including Rayleigh fractionation during ore precipitation, fluid boiling induced by pressure release, and/or local input of pyrite from wall rocks via fluid-rock interaction. Accordingly, we conclude that the Neoproterozoic basement served as the metal source. We propose a holistic genetic model wherein we envisage that Sb and S were leached from the basement rocks, and the ore-bearing fluids ascended along a deep fault and eventually precipitated beneath the Devonian shale cap. Thus, sulfur isotopic systematics represent a powerful repository for interrogating the metal source and cycling in the hydrothermal ore system.

Subjects

Subjects :
Geology

Details

ISSN :
19432674 and 00167606
Volume :
135
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
GSA Bulletin
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........3ef384621c0fd385af93c57e94ee8fb4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1130/b36377.1