Title of article :
Native antimony in the Baogutu gold deposit (west Junggar, NW China): Its occurrence and origin
Author/Authors :
An، نويسنده , , Fang and Zhu، نويسنده , , Yongfeng، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages :
10
From page :
214
To page :
223
Abstract :
The Baogutu gold deposit, West Junggar (Xinjiang, NW China), is composed of quartz–sulfide veins and their stockworks and is hosted within an Early Carboniferous volcanic–sedimentary sequence. Three ore-forming paragenetic stages can be identified: coarse-grained quartz–sulfide vein (stage I), gold-bearing fine-grained quartz–sulfide vein (stage II), and native antimony-bearing calcite–sulfide veinlets (stage III). The estimated formation temperatures (approximately 360 to 220 °C), fS2 (− 7 to − 15 log units), and fO2 (− 26 to − 43 log units) decrease from stage I, through stage II, to stage III. The nature of the hydrothermal fluid changed from weakly acidic (pH: 5 to 6 at stage I) to alkaline (pH: > 7 at stage III). fferent occurrences of native antimony could be identified: one coexists with chalcopyrite and pyrrhotite, whereas the other occurs as isolate grains within calcite veins. Native antimony (up to 100 μm in size) contains minor amounts of As (2.0 to 2.7 wt.%); empirical formula Sb0.95–0.96As0.03–0.04. Decrease of temperature and fO2 at high pH and low fS2 conditions favored co-precipitation of native antimony–ullmannite assemblages and the decomposition of tetrahedrite. Native antimony crystallized later than the native gold, suggesting fractionation between Au and Sb during the hydrothermal evolution of the deposit.
Keywords :
CHINA , Xinjiang , West Junggar , Baogutu , Native antimony , Hydrothermal gold deposit
Journal title :
Ore Geology Reviews
Serial Year :
2010
Journal title :
Ore Geology Reviews
Record number :
2283137
Link To Document :
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