Abstract

There are many lode gold deposits and occurrences in the Kalamaili area of the East Junggar, northwestern China. However, little is known about the specifics of ore geology and geochemistry of these gold deposits because of very limited exploration and research work in this region. Field geology, fluid inclusions, stable isotopes, trace elements in quartz, and hydrothermal zircon U-Pb dating are combined in this study to constrain the nature and source of ore fluids, the timing of mineralization, and the mechanism of gold precipitation in Kalamaili. The gold deposits are confined to a narrow zone between two regional NW- to NWW-trending shear zones and are structurally controlled by secondary, high-angle faults of the shears. The orebodies occur in the Middle Devonian and Lower Carboniferous, zeolite to lower greenschist facies clastic sedimentary and pyroclastic rocks. Gold mineralization occurs as auriferous quartz-sulfide ± tourmaline veins/veinlets and disseminated ores in the immediate altered wall rocks. The ore mineralogy is relatively simple and dominated by quartz with minor to trace amounts of sulfides (pyrite and arsenopyrite), sericite, calcite, and native gold. Quartz of various generations contains three types of fluid inclusions, including predominant H2O-CO2-NaCl inclusions and subordinate H2O-NaCl inclusions and CO2 ± CH4 ± N2 inclusions. The mineralizing fluid is uniformly characterized by a medium to high homogenization temperature (mostly 240−330 °C), low salinity (typically <6 wt% NaCl equivalent), reduced, and CO2-rich-H2O-NaCl ± CH4 fluid. The hydrogen and oxygen isotope data (δ18OH2O = +5.6‰ to +14.3‰, δDH2O = −99‰ to −62‰) indicate a metamorphic origin for the mineralizing fluid. The majority of sulfide δ34S values range between 0‰ and +10‰, indicative of a largely sedimentary rock reservoir of sulfur in the ore-forming fluids. Geochemically, the auriferous quartz is characterized by low concentrations of most trace elements including Ti, Al, Li, Ge, and Sb. Laser ablation−inductively coupled plasma−mass spectrometry U-Pb isotope dating of hydrothermal zircons from the auriferous quartz vein yielded a weighted mean 206Pb/238U age of ca. 313 Ma. Phase separation of ore fluids and fluid-rock interaction are suggested as key mechanisms for the gold precipitation. Integrated geological and geochemical evidence indicates that formation of the orogenic gold system in Kalamaili is related to the transition from compressional to transcurrent deformation during the Late Carboniferous. Target gold exploration in this region should focus on the northeast side of the Kalamaili fault zone, where there exist suitable structural and stratigraphic trap sites with high fluid flux and potential gold mineralization.

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