Abstract

The formation of most fluorite deposits in northern Coahuila (NE Mexico) is explained by MVT models, and is a part of the metallogenic province of northeastern Mexico. However, fluorite skarn deposits also occur in the same region, and there is evidence for late hydrothermal manifestations with no clear origin and evolution. The latter are the main focus of this study; in particular, F–Be–U–Mo–V–P stringers in the Aguachile-Cuatro Palmas area that overprint preexisting fluorite mantos. The region experienced the emplacement of several intrusives during the Eocene and the Oligocene that are collectively grouped into the East Mexico Alkaline Province (EMAP) and postdate MVT-like deposits. Some of these intrusives have associated skarn deposits; most of them are polymetallic, but the unusual El Pilote deposit contains fluorite mineralisation that was remobilised from MVT-like deposits. The formation of the Aguachile deposit (and, collectively, part of the Cuatro Palmas deposit) has been attributed to a shallow retrograde skarn model. The Cuatro Palmas and Las Alicias fluorite deposits consist of MVT-like deposits overprinted by late hydrothermal fluorite mineralisation rich in Be–U–Mo–V–P, and the Aguachile deposit consists entirely of the latter type. The systematic fluid inclusion study of MVT-like, skarn, and late hydrothermal fluorite deposits reveals a very different distribution of temperature and salinity data that allows the discrimination of mineralising fluids for the type of deposit. MVT-like deposits were formed by fluids with temperatures of homogenisation that range between 50 °C and 152 °C and salinities between 5 and 15.5 wt.% NaCl equivalent. The El Pilote fluorite skarn was formed by fluids with temperatures of homogenisation that range between 78 °C and 394 °C and salinities between 5 and 34 wt.% NaCl equivalent, and include CaCl2-rich brines with salinities that range between 24.5 and 29.1 wt.% CaCl2. Late shallow fluorite–Be–U–Mo–V–P hydrothermal deposits were formed by fluids with temperatures of homogenisation that range between 70 °C and 180 °C and salinities between 0.9 and 3.4 wt.% NaCl equivalent; the sole exception to the above is the La Fácil deposit, with salinities that range between 7.9 and 8.8 wt.% NaCl equivalent. While temperatures of homogenisation are similar between MVT-like and late hydrothermal deposits, and both even have hydrocarbon-rich fluid inclusion associations, the salinity of late deposits is similar to that of retrograde skarn fluids, although further diluted. However, homogenisation temperatures tend to be higher in late hydrothermal than in MVT-like deposits, thus making them more similar to retrograde skarn fluids. Although this characteristic cannot solely establish a genetic link between a retrograde skarn model and late hydrothermal deposits in the study area, the characteristics of fluids associated with the latter separate these deposits from those ascribed to an MVT-like model. Assuming that mineralising fluids for late fluorite–Be–U–Mo–V–P hydrothermal deposits may correspond to a retrograde skarn (or “epithermal”) deposit, the source for fluorine may be either from (A) the dissolution of earlier formed MVT-like deposits, (B) the entrainment of remaining F-rich basinal brines, or (C) hydrothermal fluids exsolved from highly evolved magmas. Possibilities A and B are feasible due to a hypothetical situation similar to the El Pilote skarn, and due to the occurrence of hydrocarbon-rich fluid inclusions at the La Fácil deposit. Possibility C is feasible because intrusive bodies related to highly evolved magmas would have provided other highly lithophile elements like Be, U and Mo upon the exsolution of their hydrothermal fluids. Such intrusive bodies occur in both study areas, and are particularly conspicuous at the Aguachile collapse structure.

Highlights

  • The Aguachile mining district (Figure 1) lies northwest of Melchor Múzquiz in the northernmost part of the state of Coahuila

  • Besides U-rich associations, Be-rich associations that postdate Mississippi Valley Type (MVT)-like deposits, occur in the study area. As both the alkaline volcanogenic and MVT scenarios are reasonable to explain the formation of late U-bearing mineral associations to fluorite deposits, this paper aims to characterise the mineralogy and the mineralising fluids of the La Fácil and Las Alicias deposits

  • Three types of fluorite deposits occur in the Aguachile–Cuatro Palmas and the Buenavista areas in Northern Coahuila: MVT-like, skarns and shallow fluorite–Be–U–Mo–V–P

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Summary

Introduction

The Aguachile mining district (Figure 1) lies northwest of Melchor Múzquiz in the northernmost part of the state of Coahuila (northeastern Mexico) It occurs in the Mexican Fold and Thrust Belt, on the border between the Burro-Peyotes Paleopeninsula (or Platform) and the Sabinas Basin, that were two of the most prominent paleogeographic features in the region during the Mesozoic (see Figure 2 in [1]). The Aguachile deposit comprises a ring dyke hosted by Mesozoic limestones that developed a fluorite-Be mineralisation around the dyke, and a syenite intrusion in a central position, which are described as a collapse structure [5,6] These intrusions are part of the alkaline magmatism in the Eastern Mexican Alkaline Province (EMAP; dated Late Eocene to Present; see references in [3]), that correlates with the pre-Oligocene Trans-Pecos belt in Texas [7,8]

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