Abstract

Organic matter and clay mineral anomalies surround the Polaris, Gays River and Gaspé Mines base-metal sulfide deposits. The Polaris mine, in the Canadian Arctic, is an MVT deposit formed by low temperature solutions (homogenization temperatures, T h: 105–120°C) and is characterized by a zone of pure illite above a kaolinite envelope surrounding the deposit. These clay mineral assemblages are laterally replaced by kaolinite-illite and chlorite-corrensite zones, while the background assemblage in the host rocks is illite-interstratified illite / smectite-chlorite. The organic matter reflectance ( R o) shows two trends depending on the permeability and chemical reactivity of the host rock: (1) an increase with depth above the ore zones in the overlying impermeable shaly cap rock. R o reaches a maximum value of 1.3% above the ore, compared to 0.8% in equivalent country rocks; (2) an anomalous decrease with depth in the mineralized carbonate horizon that hosts the deposit. The Gays River mine, Nova Scotia, is a medium temperature ( T h: 250°C) carbonate-hosted deposit associated with the replacement of well-crystallized detrital illite and chlorite by smectite forming a halo around the main ore zone and by kaolinite and chlorite-corrensite within the ore zone. Reflectance and its absolute variability increase in the host rocks toward the ore zone adjacent to the deposit (0.8 to 1.88%) and shows a relatively low R o in the ore. The economic mineralization at Gaspé Mines, Québec, is a typical high-temperature skarn and porphyry-copper deposit with the concomitant clay mineral alteration assemblages: chlorite-corrensite-illite, smectite-chlorite-illite and almost pure illite with traces of chlorite. The first assemblage is observed within the ore zone and extends slightly outside the procellanite halo. Smectite is also found near the mineralization, but its limit of occurrence is wider than the chlorite assemblage. The illite assemblage is found outside the chlorite zone and is present as irregular tongues. R o increases (1.2 to 15%) approaching ore over a lateral distance of 60 km. In the bleached zone, the organic matter exhibits mosaic and degasification textures and isotropic alteration rims with very low R o. These three deposits, as well as others studied by the authors, are centrally located within thermal aureoles whose size and intensity correlate directly with increasing temperature of formation. The decreasing values of R o in the ore zones of these deposits and the associated authigenic clay minerals reflect changes in chemical conditions due to precipitation of sulfides and to reaction of the ore and post-ore fluids with host rocks.

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