Abstract

Abstract The Bundelkhand “giant quartz reef” (BGQR) system comprises 20 major quartz reefs which run for tens of km in strike length of average width of 40 m and occurs in spatial intervals of 12–19 km in the Bundelkhand craton, North Central India. The BGQR system is distinct from quartz vein systems originating from crustal scale shearing observed in ancient as well as modern convergent tectonic settings. Fluid inclusions studied in BGQR system are intriguingly diverse although dominated by aqueous fluid which exhibit a broad range of salinity from ~0 to 28.9 wt% NaCl equivalent and temperature of homogenization range of 58 to 385°C. Primary and pseudosecondary aqueous inclusions in assemblages in grain interiors and growth zones vary randomly in their Th—salinity characteristics that preclude identification of discrete fluid events. Aqueous fluid in the BGQR system evolved through mixing of two distinct sources of fluids—a meteoric fluid and a moderate temperature—moderate salinity fluid that was possibly derived from the Bundelkhand granodiorite based on an important clue provided by hydrous mineral bearing fluid inclusions detected by Raman microspectrometry. The results of modeling with PHREEQC indicate that mixing of fluids could be a suitable mechanism in formation of these giant reefs. The available 1-dimensional diffusive transport model for deposition of silica helps in putting constraints on the time span of deposition of silica in the context of the BGQR system. The BGQR system is a possible result of shallow-crustal sources of fluid and silica and could be visualized as a “Paleoproterozoic geothermal system” in a granitic terrane.

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