Abstract

The Stillwater Complex, Montana (USA), is one of the world’s largest layered intrusions and hosts the Johns-Manville (J-M) Reef, a world-class platinum group element (PGE) deposit. In this study, zircon and baddeleyite were successfully extracted from three mineralized samples of the J-M Reef. The samples, which were collected over 15 km of strike length of the deposit, provide high-precision crystallization ages for the reef and the Stillwater Complex. All samples are coarse grained to pegmatitic and range in composition from olivine-bearing gabbronorite to anorthosite and troctolite. Irregular (anhedral) morphology and prominent sector zoning characterize interstitial zircon. U-Pb crystallization zircon ages determined by chemical abrasion thermal ionization mass spectrometry (CA-TIMS) for the three samples are indistinguishable within uncertainty: Frog Pond adit (2709.11 ± 0.56 Ma), East Boulder mine (2709.28 ± 0.32 Ma), and West Fork area (2709.00 ± 0.45 Ma). A U-Pb baddeleyite date from the Frog Pond adit sample (2708.85 ± 0.46 Ma) is identical within uncertainty with the zircon dates. Collectively, the results illustrate that the J-M Reef is an intrusion-wide time marker that formed at ca. 2709 Ma during crystallization of the Lower Banded series of the Stillwater Complex. The recognition that zircon can be successfully extracted from mafic-ultramafic rocks associated with magmatic ore deposits provides new opportunities for testing the timing of mineralization and duration of mineralization processes in layered intrusions worldwide.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call