Abstract

Iron-oxide ores and pyroclastics from the Kostenginskoye deposit in the Malyi Khingan (Russian Far East) contain numerous silicate, iron-oxide, and copper-gold-silver microspherules. Silicate spherules are composed of immiscible iron- and silica-rich glasses, gas cavities and mineral inclusions. Iron-oxide spherules include magnetite with minor ilmenite and Fe-rich silicate glass. Copper-gold-silver spherules contain inclusions predominantly of copper oxide compositions. The studied microspherules are considered to have formed during the rapid ascent of metal-silicate melts from depth and their degassing controlled by liquid immiscibility differentiation. The paper discusses the possible volcanic origin of iron-oxide ores and the associated noble metal mineralization for the deposits of this type.

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