Abstract
For the large Svetlinsk gold deposit (South Urals) evidences of partial melting of minerals and possible participation of polymetallic melts in the concentration and redistribution of gold and other metals are given. Finding of bismuth and antimony minerals in ores, among which there are gold minerals new to the deposit (pampaloite, montbrayite and aurostibite), specific mineral intergrowths (polymineral Sb–Bi–Pb–Te–Ag–Au drop inclusions), enrichment of early sulphides with Low-Melting-point Chalcophile Elements (LMCE), high formation temperatures for ore assemblages (up to 400°C), as well as the occurring metamorphism of amphibolite facies indicate the possibility of the formation of such melts. Polymetallic melts at the deposit could be formed both by partial melting of early sulphides and directly from hydrothermal fluids. The signs of melting also include simplectites of calaverite and native gold in the marginal parts of the large montbrayite grain.
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