Abstract

It has been well known that the influxing meteoric water can hydrothermally lower oxygen and hydrogen isotopes of rocks and/or minerals during continental magmatic or metamorphic processes in certain appropriate cases. Its opposite, however, is not implicitly true and needs independent testing. In terms of a novel procedure recently proposed for dealing with thermodynamic re-equilibration of oxygen isotopes between constituent minerals and water from fossil hydrothermal systems, the initial oxygen isotopes of water ({updelta }^{18}{text{O}}_{text{W}}^{text{i}}) are theoretically inverted from the early Cretaceous post-collisional granitoids and Triassic gneissic country rock across the Dabie orogen in central-eastern China. Despite ancient meteoric waters with low {updelta }^{18}{text{O}}_{text{W}}^{text{i}} value down to − 11.01 ± 0.43‰ (one standard deviation, 1SD), oxygen isotopes of hydrothermally altered rock-forming minerals from a granitoid were unexpectedly but concurrently lowered by an evolved magmatic water with mildly high {updelta }^{18}{text{O}}_{text{W}}^{text{i}} value of 2.81 ± 0.05‰ at 375 °C with a water/rock (W/R)c ratio of 1.78 ± 0.20 for the closed system. The lifetime of fossil hydrothermal systems studied herein is kinetically constrained to no more than 1.2 million years (Myr) via surface-reaction oxygen exchange in the late-stage of continental magmatism or metamorphism. Thereby, caution should be paid when lowered oxygen isotopes of hydrothermally altered rocks and/or minerals were intuitively and/or empirically inferred from the external infiltration of the purely meteoric water with a low {updelta }^{18}{text{O}}_{text{W}}^{text{i}} value alone.

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