Early Paleozoic Orogenic Gold Deposit in the Cathaysia Block, China: A first example from the Shuangqishan Deposit
2021
Abstract The Shuangqishan gold deposit (>20t gold) is located in a hitherto poorly-documented gold province in the southeastern Cathaysia Block, South China. It is hosted by Neoproterozoic amphibolite-facies metamorphic rocks and consists of quartz-sulfide veins with distinct alteration haloes. Three stages of hydrothermal activity have been identified, and gold is mainly associated with veins of Stage II (quartz-pyrite±chalcopyrite). Gold occurs both as refractory gold hosted by pyrite and free gold enclosed in, or filling, microfractures of pyrite and quartz. U-Pb isotope dating of hydrothermal apatite from the Substage IIa veins yielded an age of 436.8 ± 7.6 Ma. The ore fluid was of carbonic-aqueous composition and low oxygen fugacity. Total homogenization temperatures in Substage IIa and IIb range from 270° to 310°C and 250° to 295°C, respectively. Variable CO2/H2O ratios indicate fluid unmixing under fluctuating pressures. Stage I quartz veins show evidence of ductile deformation and have δ18Ofluid and δD values of 10.3 to 11.2‰ and −67to −66‰, respectively, consistent with a metamorphic fluid. Stage II veins have slightly higher δ18O values of 10.9 to 13.7‰, with calculated δ18Ofluid values of 4.8 to 8.0‰. The 3He/4He ratios of pyrite are elevated (0.06–0.23 Ra) relative to crustal He reservoirs (
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