Abstract

The concentrations of the lanthanide rare earth elements (REE) and Pt group elements (PGE) were measured in the Kupferschiefer from the Polish Zechstein Basin at, and in proximity to, the Rote Fäule near the Lubin Mining District. The Rote Fäule is a zone of post-depositional oxidation characterized by the presence of extensive amounts of Fe(III) oxides replacing syn-sedimentary framboidal pyrite. Outward from the Rote Fäule, the remainder of the Kupferschiefer is composed of Cu- and Pb/Zn-mineralized shale surrounding the Rote Fäule and a non-mineralized pyritic black shale in the central basin.The leading hypothesis explaining the high concentrations of PGE, and REE in the Kupferschiefer states that PGE, REE and the associated base metals were mobilized by oxidizing Cl− brines which migrated outward from the Rote Fäule into the reduced Kupferschiefer. According to available thermodynamic data, PGE were in all likelihood present as chloro-complexes in these oxidizing brines, as geologically realistic concentrations of Pt, Pd and Au could be transported as chloro-complexes. The Eh of these brines decreased as they migrated further from the Rote Fäule and into the Kupferschiefer. Base metals and PGE were precipitated in the order of their decreased solubility in these brines. As a result, the concentrations of least soluble PGE (Pt) are highest in the Rote Fäule and in the transition zone adjacent to the Rote Fäule (e.g. [Pt]=202–537 ppb) while the concentrations of the more soluble metals in these brines (Ag, Cu, Pb, and Re) are highest in the reduced-mineralized Kupferschiefer. The sources of the PGE and REE are enigmatic. It is likely that the metals were derived either from the underlying Rotliegendes sandstones and volcanics, the Variscan basement rocks, or the Kupferschiefer shale whose metals were mobilized by saline, oxidizing fluids released during intra-continental rifting in the Triassic period.

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