Abstract

The Gonzalito polymetallic mining district is located within the northeast tip of the 600 km-long NE-trending polymetallic belt of the North Patagonian Massif, in Patagonia, Argentina. It comprises Paleozoic igneous-metamorphic rocks of the Mina Gonzalito complex, which are intruded by Middle Triassic trachytic-andesitic dykes of the Monasa Fm. through a complex system of high-angle fractures. Rhyolitic dykes crosscut the pre-Jurassic rocks. Numerous semi-parallel vein-like mineral deposits, whose classification and age have been subject of debate, sharply crosscut the igneous-metamorphic, trachytic-andesitic and rhyolitic units. Mineralization shows a strong structural control through a complex system of semi-parallel NW-N-NE oriented fracture-hosted mineral deposits. Extensional jogs and open dilational fractures allow multiband vein infills, vein-like hydrothermal and fault-tectonic breccias, stockwork veins and veinlets with primary growth open-space and boiling-derived textures, indicating a brittle geological setting that is proper of the epithermal environment. Based on the structural setting, sulfide-gangue-alteration mineral assemblages and textures, sulfide mineral chemistry and whole-rock geochemical analyses, two different styles of hydrothermal deposits can be distinguished: massive-sulfide intermediate sulfidation epithermal Pb – Zn ± Ag ± Cu ± In and disseminated-sulfide low sulfidation Au ± Pb ± Ag ± Zn. The first has a main-stage pyrite – In-rich sphalerite – chalcopyrite – galena ore assemblage in scarce quartz - carbonates gangue. The second shows disseminated pyrite ± sphalerite ± chalcopyrite ± galena with economic grades of Au in abundant quartz – adularia ± fluorite gangue. SHRIMP U–Pb zircon data of rhyolites reveal Early Jurassic ages of 193 ± 2 and 191 ± 2 Ma and, along with their bulk-rock geochemical features, they can be included within the Chon Aike magmatic province, locally known as Marifil volcanic complex. Crosscutting relationships between the Lower Jurassic rhyolites and the epithermal veins in the Gonzalito district, and the presence of Oligocene basalts partially covering the epithermal deposits towards the western area, constrain the mineralization event between the Lower Jurassic and the Oligocene. However, the crosscutting relationships of this district along with the already proven genetic, temporal and spatial links between epithermal ore and fluorite-rich deposits and the Jurassic magmatism-rifting of Patagonia suggest that the studied epithermal deposits might be yielded closer or during the Lower Jurassic.

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