Abstract

Research subject. The orogenic marginal-continental and collisional volcanic-plutonic belts, and the zonality of magmatism and metallogeny within them, as well as the relationship of endogenous metallogeny with magmatic zonality and geodynamics of belt formation.Materials and methods include the long-term studies of the Devonian and Upper-Paleozoic belts of Kazakhstan and the Cretaceous-Paleogenic belt of Sikhote-Alin; an analysis of the alterations in the material parameters of magmatites; the identification of the front and rear parts of the belts and the arrangement features of metallogenic zones within their limits; and the data on other belts of the world.Results. For the marginal continental belts, an asymmetric change of the tholeiitic and low-potassium magmatites of the calcareous-alkaline petrochemical series of the frontal zone of the belt into the magmatites of the high-potassium branch of the calcareous-alkaline and shoshonite series of the rear zone (Devonian and Upper Paleozoic belts of Kazakhstan) has been established. In the same direction, the elemental, as well as the genetic type of deposits changes: pyrite copper-polymetallic frontal zones are replaced by molybdenum-copper-porphyry rear zones (near the border with the frontal zone) and then by rare metal ones. This is also characteristic of the Andean and Okhotsk-Chukchi belts. The collision belts are characterised by symmetrical zonality with a change from rare metal deposits in the centre to copper-polymetallic deposits at the edges (Mongolia). In some cases (Sikhote-Alin and Japan), the continuity of the marginal-continental belt is disrupted as a result of the mantle diapir (or plume), symmetrical magmatic and metallogenic zonality occurs with the change of polymetallic manifestations (near the ocean–continent boundary) to rare-metal ones in the distance. Conclusions. The change in the material parameters of the magmatites of the marginal-continental belts correlates with the removal of their ranges from the ocean–continent transition zone to the interior of the latter. In this case, copper-polymetallic pyrite ore formations are replaced by copperporphyry and then by rare metal ones in this direction. This is due to subduction processes. The collision situation is characterised by a symmetrical zonality of material magmatic parameters with respect to the crowding zone and a symmetrical arrangement of metallogenic zones with a change of rare metal deposits in the crowding zone to copper and polymetallic along the frame. These data are important for metallogenic prediction, as well as for palaeotectonic reconstructions.

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