Abstract

The first part of this article can be found here: 10.3389/feart.2023.819129 (DOI). Occurrences of significant concentrations of platinum-group elements (PGE) in porphyry deposits have seen limited attention and the geochemical controls on their deposition are poorly understood. New Afton is a late Triassic alkalic Cu-Au porphyry deposit situated 10 km west of Kamloops, British Columbia with Pt and Pd enrichments locally exceeding 30 ppm. Primary PGE deposition accompanied hypogene Cu-Au mineralization linked to potassic alteration, with Pt and Pd deportment dominated by their inclusion in early Ni- and Co-rich pyrite with secondary amounts of platinum-group minerals (PGM) mertieite-II, isomertieite > temagamite, and kotulskite. Secondary hydrothermal alteration of hypogene PGE-rich pyrite promoted remobilization of PGE, creating vein-controlled PGE enrichment where essentially all Pt and Pd are hosted by PGM dominated by temagamite > mertieite-II, and sperrylite, leaving behind complementary PGE-depleted domains. Thermodynamic modelling shows that primary co-precipitation of Pt with Co and Pd with Ni can be explained solely through the cooling of a hydrothermal system, regardless of whether the mineralizing fluid was a brine or a low-density vapour. Pd and Pt were transported from an underlying magma reservoir into the porphyry system by a magmatic-hydrothermal fluid as Cl− complexes. Pt-rich cobaltian pyrite formed at the highest temperatures, whereas Pd-rich nickeliferous pyrite formed at somewhat lower temperatures. Zonation of metals in pyrite suggests that PGE were incorporated in pyrite under conditions of fluctuating fluid temperatures during transport and cooling of orthomagmatic fluids during the main Cu-Au mineralization stage. There exists a hitherto overlooked potential for significant Pt and Pd mineralization in early hypogene pyrite that may be spatially separated from visible Cu mineralization, especially in potassic or ultrapotassic systems.

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