Abstract

AbstractPorphyry-type deposits are the main global source of copper and molybdenum. An improved understanding of the most favorable structural settings for the emplacement of these deposits is necessary for successful exploration, particularly considering that most future discoveries will be made under cover based on conceptual target generation. A common view is that porphyry deposits are preferentially emplaced in pull-apart basins within strike-slip fault systems that favor local extension within a regional compressive to transpressive tectonic regime. However, the role of such a structural context in magma storage and evolution in the upper crust remains unclear. In this work, we propose a new model based on the integration of structural data and the geometry of magmatic-hydrothermal systems from the main Andean porphyry Cu-Mo metallogenic belts and from the active volcanic arc of southern Chile. We suggest that the magma differentiation and volatile accumulation required for the formation of a porphyry deposit is best achieved when the fault system controlling magma ascent is strongly misoriented for reactivation with respect to the prevailing stress field. When magmas and fluids are channeled by faults favorably oriented for extension (approximately normal to σ3), they form sets of parallel, subvertical dikes and veins, which are common both during the late stages of the evolution of porphyry systems and in the epithermal environment. This new model has direct implications for conceptual mineral exploration.

Highlights

  • Most of the world’s Cu and Mo are mined from porphyry deposits, which supply an important amount of Au and other metals (e.g., Ag, Pd, Zn)

  • Prevailing models of the large-scale structural controls on the emplacement of porphyry deposits agree that an environment of local extension within a regional context dominated by compression is the most favorable because it allows focused magma ascent from the MASH zone (e.g., Tosdal and Richards, 2001; Richards, 2003; Drew, 2005; Cloos and Sapiie, 2013)

  • We conclude that the most favorable conditions for the emplacement of a porphyry copper deposit are met when structural control is provided by deep-seated faults severely misoriented for activation (Fig. 4)

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Summary

Introduction

Most of the world’s Cu and Mo are mined from porphyry deposits, which supply an important amount of Au and other metals (e.g., Ag, Pd, Zn). Relevant data compiled include fault geometry and kinematics; the geometry of porphyritic intrusions related to mineralization, dikes, hydrothermal breccias, and vein systems; and the orientation of the prevailing stress tensor during the evolution of the magmatichydrothermal systems.

Results
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