Structural controls on the gold mineralization at the eastern margin of the North China Craton: Constraints from gravity and magnetic data from the Liaodong and Jiaodong Peninsulae

2021 
Abstract The eastern block of the North China Craton (NCC) has been completely decratonized and it hosts numerous early Cretaceous gold deposits dated at about 130–120 Ma. The Jiaodong Peninsula in the easternmost NCC is the largest gold producing district in China, and it hosts more than 150 gold deposits with known gold resources of over 5000 tonnes (t). Also located at the eastern margin of NCC, the Liaodong Peninsula is poorly explored at depths greater than 800 m, with no large concealed gold deposit being discovered yet. In this paper, we carefully analyzed the gravity and magnetic characteristics of the ore-controlling structures in both provinces, including faults, Precambrian basement metamorphic rocks and the Mesozoic granitic intrusions. The deep regional faults are characterized by linear gravity gradient zones or elongated positive magnetic anomalies. The Precambrian basement metamorphic rocks usually have large-amplitude gravity and magnetic highs, while the lithological contacts of Mesozoic granite intrusions are commonly defined by gravity lows or narrow magnetic high anomalies. Interpretations from gravity and magnetic signatures predict two concealed lithological contacts between Mesozoic granites and Precambrian metamorphic rocks beneath Liaodong and Jiaodong. The spatial locations of known gold deposits are then correlated with the concealed structures inferred from the gravity and magnetic data in our paper. Their spatial relationship suggests that the gold mineralization is mainly controlled by oblique regional faults along the structural and lithological contacts between Mesozoic granites and Precambrian metamorphic rocks. Additionally, the structural intersections of different ore-controlling faults, especially the hydrothermal alteration zones at the contacts between Precambrian basement metamorphic rocks and the Mesozoic granites, are most favorable for the gold mineralization in the Liaodong and Jiaodong areas. Many large gold deposits are documented along a deep-seated, but concealed, structure beneath the Jiaodong gold district, while the Qingchengzi ore field and its vicinity in the Liaodong Peninsula still remain underexplored, despite of having a very similar structural setting, and deserve further investigation.
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