Abstract

Field relations, petrographic observations and fluid inclusion data are used to characterize the mineralizing fluids of gold-copper bearing quartz veins, which are spatially associated with a granite-porphyry, metavolcanics and metagabbro in the Hamash area, South Eastern Desert of Egypt. Four generations of genetically related quartz veins occur in the Hamash mine area. Two types of alteration are developed in vicinity of quartz veins; i.e., sericite-quartz-pyrite and chlorite-epidote-pyrite-sericite alteration. Fe-Cu sulfides in the veins were precipitated in two stages, early pyrite (PI) and chalcopyrite were altered to secondary chalcocite, bornite and digenite and a second generation of pyrite (PII and PIII). PI pyrite and quartz contain inclusions of gold as well as remobilized gold along cracks and microfractures. Two types of fluid inclusions are distinguished: 1) primary H2O-CO2-CH4-NaCl inclusions (type I) and 2) primary and secondary aqueous inclusions (type II). Type II is further subdivided by the inclusions occurrence within different vein types. Type I inclusions entrapped the endmembers of an unmixed fluid which consists of an aqueous phase and a CO2-rich gas phase, respectively. The entrapment conditions of approximately 250°C and 200 bars were estimated by intersecting the isochores of the two coexisting aqueous and CO2-rich fluids and indicate a shallow crustal level. The salinity of type IIa inclusions is generally low (< 9 wt.% NaCleq), they homogenize above 234°C and included heterogeneous and homogeneous fluids over a wide pressure range. Homogenization temperatures of type IIb inclusions vary between 102° and 284 °C, their assumed entrapping temperatures are 200°C and 110°C, respectively. The four generations of quartz veins are related with different inclusion types. The metals including primary gold were probably transported as bisulfide complexes and precipitated due to wallrock sulfidation, fluid mixing and phase separation. The Hamash Au-Cu mineralization shows a combination of porphyry- and epithermal-deposits characteristics.

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