Title: Magmatic-Hydrothermal Evolution in the “Bottoms” of Porphyry Copper Systems: Evidence from Silicate Melt and Aqueous Fluid Inclusions in Granitoid Intrusions in the Gyeongsang Basin, South Korea
Abstract: The Gyeongsang Basin of southeastern Korea contains numerous Cretaceous-early Tertiary (120–40 Ma) granitoid intrusions formed at a convergent plate boundary. The geotectonic setting is similar to that associated with porphyry-type mineralization elsewhere in the Circumpacific region. However, erosion has removed higher-level economic mineralization and exposed deeper levels of the granitoids, representing the poorly mineralized "bottoms" of porphyry copper systems. The intrusions of the Gyeongsang Basin thus provide a unique opportunity to advance our understanding of magmatic-hydrothermal evolution in the roots of porphyry-type systems, below the level of economic mineralization. The physical and chemical environment during crystallization of the magmas has been characterized through studies of silicate melt and aqueous fluid inclusions in the granitoids. Two different types of silicate melt inclusions were recognized based on occurrence and room-temperature appearance. Type-I inclusions contain one or more crystalline phases and vapor; type-II inclusions consist of a cluster of small crystals, partially devitrified glass, and vapor. Petrographic and Raman analyses indicate that most silicate melt inclusions contain muscovite daughter crystals. Some also contain feldspar. Solidus temperatures of type-I inclusions in quartz phenocrysts range from ≈630to 650°C, whereas solidus temperatures of type-I and type-II inclusions in vug quartz are slightly higher (640–670°C). Liquidus temperatures span a much wider range compared to solidus temperatures, with maximum liquidus temperatures of melts in phenocrysts being slightly higher (≤930°C) than those in vug quartz (≤910°C). Three types of aqueous inclusions were observed based on occurrence and room temperature phase proportions. Type-A inclusions are liquid rich and low to moderate in salinity; type-B inclusions are vapor rich and low in salinity; type-C inclusions are liquid rich and contain a halite daughter mineral. Some type- A inclusions with a salinity of approximately 25 wt% NaCl equivalent are spatially associated with silicate melt inclusions in phenocrysts, where they occur as three-dimensional clusters of tiny inclusions surrounding the silicate melt inclusion. Type-A inclusions also occur along fractures in quartz phenocrysts. Non-fracture-controlled type-C inclusions are rare in phenocryst quartz, but are common in vug quartz, where they are associated with silicate melt inclusions. Type-C inclusions that coexist with silicate melt inclusions generally homogenize by halite dissolution after the vapor bubble and show a wide range in salinity, from about 30 to >60 wt% NaCl equivalent. Coexisting halite-bearing (Type-C) and vapor-rich (Type-B) inclusions in phenocryst quartz suggest local immiscibility in the late-or post-magmatic fluid. Pressure-temperature conditions during the final stages of magmatic-hydrothermal activity associated with the granitoid intrusions of the Gyeongsang Basin were approximately 630° to 670° C and 1.9 to 2.5 kbars. These results suggest that the granitoids do not contain economic porphyry coppertype mineralization because the magmas crystallized at high pressures (relative to typical porphyry copper magmas) and did not become saturated in water until a relatively late stage in the crystallization history. Failure to reach water saturation resulted in most of the copper in the original melt being sequestered as a trace component in earlier-crystallizing silicate and sulfide phases to produce anomalous but subeconomic copper grades. Furthermore, owing to the depth of emplacement, less energy was available to fracture the rocks when water did exsolve from the magma, and the pressure remained too high for aqueous fluid immiscibility to be an important metal-concentrating or depositing mechanism. Geological, petrographic, and geochemical characteristics suggest that the granitoid rocks of the Gyeongsang Basin represent ethroot zones of porphyry-type systems, and any higher-grade mineralization that may have been present higher in the system has since been removed by erosion.
Publication Year: 1994
Publication Date: 1994-07-01
Language: en
Type: article
Indexed In: ['crossref']
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Cited By Count: 60
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