Abstract
The Alastuo gold deposit, located in the Narati region of the Chinese West Tianshan, is a newly discovered gold deposit within the world-class Tianshan gold belt. The gold mineralization is hosted by an Early Carboniferous granodiorite intrusion and controlled structurally by subsidiary faults of the transcrustal North Narati Fault. The deposit consists of auriferous alteration assemblages and minor vein ores. Field relations and petrographic data suggest four stages of mineralization with gold precipitated coevally with quartz, chlorite, epidote, pyrite, and galena during the second and third stages that are characterized by tectonic transformation from ductile shearing to brittle deformation. The temperature range of gold precipitation is estimated to be 280–330 °C using chlorite geothermometry. Ten auriferous pyrite samples yielded a well-defined Re-Os isochron age of 325 ± 3 Ma and two sericite samples yielded plateau-like 40Ar/39Ar ages of 321.7 ± 3.0 Ma and 321.2 ± 2.8 Ma. These consistent ages suggest that the gold mineralization in the Narati region was emplaced in a transitional regime from subduction to continental collision between the Tarim block and Middle Tianshan terrane (325–310 Ma), rather than during the post-collisional stage as in most part of the Tianshan gold belt. Gold-bearing pyrite has an initial Osi value of 0.7 ± 0.1 and lead isotopes ratios of 17.897 to 18.723 for 206Pb/204Pb, 15.474 to 15.643 for 207Pb/204Pb, and 37.522 to 38.299 for 208Pb/204Pb, while samples of pyrite, galena, and sphalerite have 34SV-CDT of +1.9 to +7.8‰. The isotope data suggest that the sulfur and metals are most likely derived from mixed mantle and crustal sources including metamorphic devolatilization of subducted oceanic slab and overlying sedimentary rocks. The mineralization styles, structural controls, metal and sulfur sources, and the timing of gold mineralization with respect to the orogenic event all suggest that the Alastuo gold deposit represents an orogenic type deposit. This newly recognized Carboniferous orogenic gold mineralization event calls for a re-evaluation of the gold metallogeny in the Middle Tianshan.
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