Abstract

The origins of partings within the Late Carboniferous No. 6 coal in the Jungar Coalfield, North China, and their relationship to the enrichment of critical metals in the coal, is poorly understood. This study combines UPb ages and LuHf isotope data of zircon, whole-rock geochemistry, LA–ICP–MS elemental mapping, and selective chemical extraction experiments to investigate the provenance of the partings and the occurrence mode of critical metals in the partings collected from the exploration area in the northwest of the Jungar Coalfield. It was found that the zircons in the kaolinite-dominant partings yielded a single age group of ca. 300 Ma at the latest Carboniferous (Gzhelian), indicating that the partings are alteration products of air-fall volcanic ash (tonsteins). The zircons are characterized by negative εHf(t) values and a continental arc tectonic setting, suggesting a genetic connection between the volcanic ash and the Late Paleozoic continental arc that existed in the Inner Mongolia Paleo-Uplift, related to the southward subduction of the Paleo-Asian oceanic plate beneath the northern margin of the North China Block. During the devitrification of volcanic glasses to kaolinite in the mires, the incompatible elements, such as Nb, Ta, Zr, Hf, and rare earth elements (REEs and Y, REY), preserved in the volcanic glasses were leached out as they are incompatible with the crystal lattice of kaolinite. Niobium and Ta, similar to Ti in ionic radii, were preferentially incorporated into fine-grained Ti oxides as reprecipitated products in the alteration process of volcanic ash. The enrichment of Nb, Ta, and Ti in organic matter in the tonsteins suggests that they have some mobility during alteration of volcanic ash and could be, to some extent, transported into the enclosing peats. Zirconium, Hf, and REY were fixed by organic matter admixed with the volcanic ash after their deposition in the mires. Meanwhile, they could also be transported into the enclosing peats, as no secondary minerals formed could substantially retain them. Although Li and Ga were able to be incorporated into the crystal lattice of kaolinite during their crystallization, they could also be transported into the enclosing peats due to their fluid-mobile nature. Both the leaching of a voluminous amount of volcanic ash contacting with the peats and the input of the volcanic ash as an admixture into the peats contributed to the enrichment of critical metals in the Late Carboniferous coal in the Jungar Coalfield.

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