Abstract

The Chifeng-Chaoyang region, located along the northern margin of the North China Craton, is an important gold producer in China, with a proven gold reserve of about 500 tons. Most gold deposits are fault-controlled and formed in the Mesozoic, but the absolute ages of gold mineralization in this region have not been well constrained due to the lack of suitable dating minerals. This study presents in situ U-Pb ages of hydrothermal rutile and titanite for the Chaihulanzi gold deposit and obtains a distinctive age. The Chaihulanzi deposit (∼27 t Au) is located in the western portion of the Chifeng-Chaoyang region and mainly hosted in the carbonaceous mica schist of the Neoarchean-Paleoproterozoic Jianping Group along NW to NWW striking faults. It contains auriferous quartz veins and disseminated ores in hydrothermal alteration zones, with pyrite and pyrrhotite as the predominant ore minerals. Based on field and petrographic observations, four stages of mineralization process can be identified, involving stage I quartz-pyrite, stage II quartz-pyrite-pyrrhotite-chalcopyrite, stage III quartz-polymetallic sulfides, and stage IV quartz-calcite. Stage II represents the main gold stage and contains abundant hydrothermal rutile and titanite, which are intergrown with pyrite, pyrrhotite and native gold. Rutile grains have high contents of V, Nb, Fe, Cr, W and low contents of Zr and yield a Tera-Wasserburg lower intercept age of 285.4 ± 8.5 Ma (n = 37, MSWD = 3.9). Titanite grains show low Th/U and La/Yb ratios (0.03 to 0.66 and 0.26 to 3.98, respectively) and flat chondrite-normalized REE patterns (LREE/HREE = 0.88–5.72, Eu/Eu* = 0.71–1.71), with a Tera-Wasserburg lower intercept age of 282.3 ± 3.4 Ma (n = 20, MSWD = 2.1). Combined with the emplacement age of a post-ore mafic dyke (ca. 275.5 Ma), the timing of the Chaihulanzi deposit can be constrained to Early Permian, representing a new gold mineralization epoch in the Chifeng-Chaoyang region. On the basis of available geological and geochronological evidence, the Chaihulanzi deposit can be classified as an orogenic gold deposit formed during the southward subduction of the paleo-Asian Ocean. These new findings likely have important implications for future regional gold exploration.

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