Abstract

Nielsenite, a rare intermetallide of palladium and copper, was described previously as a late-magmatic formation. A different genetic type of nielsenite was studied in the layered ultrabasite–basite Yoko-Dovyren intrusive. The maximum concentrations of Pd, Pt, Au, and Ag minerals are confined to crosscutting bodies of pegmatoid sulfide-bearing anorthosites within the contact zone between the troctolites and overlapping gabbro-norites strata in this intrusive. Postmagmatic pneumatolytic (fluid-metasomatic) Pd, Pt, Au, and Ag minerals, such as kotulskite, moncheite, michenerite, zvyagintsevite, telargpalite, paolovite, electrum, and sperrillite, compose metasomes in Fe–Ni–Cu sulfides and in the silicate matrix nearby. The Yoko-Dovyren intrusive is tectonized and tilted, crossed by inclined faults with streamlined serpentinized rocks, which contain lizardite, antigorite, clinozoisite, chlorite, actinolite, prehnite, pectolite, and hydrogarnet and are often transformed into rodingites of a prehnite–pumpellyite facies. The serpentinization process is younger than the intrusive rocks by 55 million years. In metamorphosed anorthosites, chalcopyrite is replaced by bornite, chalcocite, digenite, and magnetite; pentlandite is replaced with violarite, heazlewoodite, …; pyrrhotine is replaced by magnetite, …; moncheite is replaced with cuproplatinum–tulameenite; the veins of clinozoisite and pectolite with chlorite inclusions of chalcosine and native copper are well developed. Curved veins of nielsenite in brecciated chalcopyrite occasionally extend such veins. The size of the veins of metamorphogenic-hydrothermal nielsenite reaches up to 200 × 10 microns. Nielsenite metasomes up to 12 microns in diameter are developed nearby. The composition of the Yoko-Dovyren nielsenite is stable and close to stoichiometric with the formula Pd1.01Cu2,81Fe0,17Ni0,01. The Yoko-Dovyren nielsenite differs from the holotype of nielsenite of the Skergaard intrusive by the absence of Pt and Au impurities and a significant impurity of Fe. Yoko-Dovyren nielsenite was likely to appear under conditions of the prehnite–pumpellyite metamorphism facies at a high fugacity of О2 and at an extremely low fugacity of sulfide sulfur (log f S2 < –24 at ≈300°C).

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