Abstract

Mesozoic iron deposits in the Ningwu volcanic basin in eastern China are genetically linked to the gabbrodiorite porphyries, which have long been regarded as the subvolcanic intrusive of the andesitic volcanics. Compared with abundant research conducted on the mineralization process, the magmatic process of the ore-forming intrusion has been poorly understood. This study performed petrographic and in situ analyses of representative phenocrysts from the ore-forming gabbrodiorite porphyry of the Meishan iron deposit to gain new insights into the magmatic process. The phenocrysts are composed of clinopyroxene and plagioclase, which commonly exhibit disequilibrium features, such as reverse zoning and sieved textures, suggesting that the gabbrodiorite porphyry evolved in an open-system andesitic-magma reservoir into which mafic magma was repeatedly recharged. The zoned clinopyroxene phenocrysts show consistent trace-element distribution patterns and a narrow range of 87Sr/86Sr of 0.7037–0.7049, which suggest that the recharged mafic magma was the primitive basaltic magma and crystal fractionation dominated the evolution from basaltic magma to andesitic magma. Pressure estimations based on clinopyroxene phenocryst compositions indicate that the magma reservoirs were emplaced at the uppermost mantle. Comparison of clinopyroxene phenocryst compositions between the Meishan gabbrodiorite porphyry and published andesitic volcanics shows distinct rare earth element distribution patterns, which don't support a volcanic–subvolcanic relationship between the gabbrodiorite porphyry and andesitic volcanics. Estimated pressures indicate that the primitive magma of andesitic volcanics evolved in lower crust reservoir, which was much shallower than the reservoirs of the ore-forming gabbrodiorite porphyry. Therefore, the Meishan gabbrodiorite porphyry was not the subvolcanic intrusive of the andesitic volcanics and probably represented an independent magmatic pulse. This understanding suggests that the exploration target of iron deposits in the Ningwu basin is not necessarily limited to the contact zone between gabbrodiorite porphyry and andesitic volcanics.

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