Abstract

The Huangyangshan alkaline pluton is located within the southern part of the Eastern Junggar orogenic belt in Xinjiang Province, and forms part of the Kalamaili alkaline granite belt. The pluton hosts the Huangyangshan super-large graphite deposit, which develops unique spherical structure and coexists with metal sulfides. This study examines the genetic relationship between the alkaline magmatism that formed the pluton and the graphite mineralization using zircon LA–ICP–MS U–Pb dating, geochemical analysis for representative rock types in the Huangyangshan pluton, and new Re–Os isotope dating for the graphite in the Huangyangshan graphite deposit. Zircons from medium-grained arfvedsonite granite, medium–fine-grained amphibole granite, medium-grained biotite granite, and fine-grained biotite granite phases of the Huangyangshan pluton yield weighted mean U–Pb ages of 322.7 ± 4.5, 318.3 ± 4.0, 303.9 ± 2.1, and 301.1 ± 3.6 Ma, respectively, indicating that all of the granite phases were emplaced during the Late Carboniferous over a period of around 20 Myr. Six graphite samples from the deposit yield a Re–Os isochron age of 332 ± 53 Ma. Combining these ages with the genetic relationship between the graphite mineralization and magmatism in the study area and the relatively large uncertainty on the Re–Os isochron age for the graphite suggests that the mineralization formed at ca. 320 Ma. The graphite samples yield an initial 187Os/188Os value of 0.38 ± 0.2, indicative of carbon derived from a mixture of organic and mantle-derived sources. The different granite phases in the Huangyangshan pluton are geochemically similar with relatively high SiO2 (75.6–78.2 wt%) and Na2O + K2O (8.01–9.04 wt%) and relatively low CaO (0.18–0.7 wt%), MgO (0.06%–0.13 wt%) and Fe2O3 (TFe2O3 = 1.08–2.06 wt%) contents. The granites are enriched in light rare earth elements (LREE), large-ion lithophile elements (LILEs) (e.g. Rb, Th, and K), and high field strength elements (HFSEs) (e.g. Zr and Hf), depleted in heavy rare earth elements (HREEs), and have negative Ba, Sr, P, Ti, and Eu anomalies. These geochemical characteristics are indicative of derivation from juvenile basaltic oceanic crustal materials in the lower crust. This suggests that the Huangyangshan pluton formed from magmas generated by partial melting caused by mantle-derived magma underplating, with the magmas then undergoing mixing, separation, and significant fractional crystallization. Diorite enclaves within the granites have weaker trace element anomalies that are indicative of magma mixing. In addition, the mantle-derived intermediate–basic end-member involved in the magma mixing is likely one of the important carriers of carbon and metal. In summary, the Late Carboniferous Huangyangshan pluton and its associated graphite mineralization formed in a post-collision extensional tectonic setting in the Kalamaili area.

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