Abstract

The Xiaoqinling district, the second largest gold producer in China, is situated on the southern margin of the North China Craton and immediately to the north of the Qinling Orogen. The timing and genesis of the gold deposits have been hotly debated because the area has undergone multiple tectono-magmatic events since the stabilization of the North China Craton in the early Paleoproterozoic. Whether they are genetically related to the Triassic orogeny that formed the Qinling Orogen or associated with the early Cretaceous tectonic reactivation of the craton remains controversial. Here we present monazite U-Pb and molybdenite Re-Os dating results from the Hongtuling vein deposit in the eastern part of the Xiaoqinling district to provide new insights into the age and tectonic setting of gold mineralization. The Hongtuling deposit consists of gold veins at the top and minor molybdenum veins at the bottom, with molybdenum veins being locally crosscut by gold veins. Molybdenum veins mainly consist of calcite, quartz, K-feldspar, molybdenite, and pyrite with minor amounts of galena, and a variety of accessory minerals. Gold veins are dominated by quartz and pyrite, with minor to trace amounts of chalcopyrite, galena, sphalerite, and sericite. Monazite grains are well developed both in molybdenum and gold veins, and are intergrown with molybdenite and pyrite, respectively. Monazites from gold vein contain lower REEs contents, more prominent negative Eu anomalies, and higher Th/U ratios than those from molybdenum vein. The textural and geochemical evidence indicates that monazites from both veins precipitated from contrasting ore-forming fluids. Laser ablation ICP-MS U-Pb dating of monazite from the molybdenum vein yields a 206Pb/238U age of 203.5 ± 8.1 Ma (MSWD = 0.23, 2σ), which is statistically indistinguishable from the molybdenite Re-Os age of 204 Ma. In contrast, monazite from the gold vein has a significantly younger 206Pb/238U age of 130.4 ± 5.3 Ma (MSWD = 0.99, 2σ). Results presented here, combined with independent studies, suggest that the molybdenum and gold veins of the Hongtuling deposit, and by inference the other deposits in the district, formed in two discrete mineralization events in the late Triassic and early Cretaceous. The molybdenum mineralization is most likely related to the post-collisional magmatism associated with the Qinling orogeny, whereas gold mineralization occurred in an extensional setting associated with the decratonization of the North China Craton.

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