Abstract

High-tech metals including Ge, Ga and In are often sourced as by-products from a range of ore minerals, including sphalerite from Zn-Pb deposits. The Hilton Zn-Pb (Ag) deposit in the Mount Isa Inlier, Queensland, contains six textural varieties of sphalerite that have formed through a diverse range of processes with variable co-crystallising sulphides. This textural complexity provides a unique opportunity to examine the effects of co-crystallising sulphides and chemical remobilisation on the trace element geochemistry of sphalerite. Early sphalerite (sph-1) is stratabound and coeval with pyrrhotite, pyrite and galena. Disseminated sphalerite (sph-2) occurs as isolated fine-grained laths rarely associated with co-crystallising sulphides and represents an alteration selvage accompanying the precipitation of early stratabound sphalerite (sph-1). Sphalerite (sph-3) occurs in early ferroan-dolomite veins and formed from the chemical remobilisation of stratabound sphalerite (sph-1) during brittle fracturing and interstitial fluid flow. This generation of veins terminate at the interface, and occurs within clasts of the paragenetically later sphalerite-dominated breccias (sph-4). Regions of high-grade Cu (>2%) mineralisation contain a late generation of sphalerite (sph-5), which formed from the recrystallisation of breccia-type sphalerite (sph-4) during the infiltration of a paragenetically late Cu- and Pb-rich fluid. Late ferroan-dolomite veins crosscut all previous stages of mineralisation and also contain chemically remobilised sphalerite (sph-6). Major and trace elements including Fe, Co, In, Sn, Sb, Ag and Tl are depleted in sphalerite associated with abundant co-crystallised neighbouring sulphides (e.g., pyrite, pyrrhotite, galena and chalcopyrite) relative to sphalerite associated with minor to no co-crystallising sulphides. This depletion is attributed to the incorporation of the trace elements into the competing sulphide minerals. Chemically remobilised sphalerite is enriched in Zn, Cd, Ge, Ga and Sn, and depleted in Fe, Tl, Co, Bi and occasionally Ag, Sb and Mn relative to the primary minerals. This is attributed to the higher mobility of Zn, Ge, Ga and Sn relative to Fe and Co during the chemical remobilisation process, coupled with the effect of co-crystallising with galena and ferroan-dolomite. Results from this study indicate that the consideration of co-crystallising sulphides and post-depositional processes are important in understanding the trace element composition of sphalerite on both a microscopic and deposit-scale, and has implications for a range of Zn-Pb deposits worldwide.

Highlights

  • The growth in technical innovation and an increasing drive for ‘green’ technology has prompted a growth in the demand for a previously underutilised set of metals and non-metals [1]

  • The identification of a complex paragenesis of six texturally distinct sphalerite types from the Hilton Zn-Pb deposit allows for evaluation of the effect that co-crystallising sulphides, recrystallisation and chemical remobilisation have on the trace element geochemistry of sphalerite

  • Sphalerite that is interpreted to have formed via chemical remobilisation is enriched in Zn, Ga, Ge and Sn, and depleted in Fe, Tl, Co, Bi, Ag, Sb and Mn relative to its parent material

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Summary

Introduction

The growth in technical innovation and an increasing drive for ‘green’ technology has prompted a growth in the demand for a previously underutilised set of metals and non-metals [1]. Ga, In, Co and Cd are used in the production of a wide variety of technologies such as solar panels, LCD glasses, batteries, transistors and optical fibres [2] These elements are often concentrated in polymetallic sulphide deposits, preferentially residing in sphalerite [3,4,5]. The Hilton Zn-Pb (Ag) deposit, northern Australia (Figure 1) contains numerous textural varieties of sphalerite that have precipitated via different formation mechanisms and alongside a range of co-crystallising sulphides [14,15]. This study uses detailed petrography to determine the multiple stages of sphalerite and co-genetic minerals present within the deposit This is accompanied by the trace element analysis of each sphalerite variety to determine the relationship between the trace element composition of sphalerite, the presence/absence of co-crystallising sulphides and the effect of small-scale chemical remobilisation.

Background
Sampling Selection
Spot Analyses
Trace Element Maps
Data Processing
Sphalerite Textures and Generations
Stratabound
Disseminated
Sphalerite
LA-ICP-MS Spot Analysis
LA-ICP-MS Trace Element Maps
LA-ICP-MS
Trace Element Substitution Mechanisms
Bell deformation of the Isan who favour the emplacement of early
Effect of Chemical Remobilisation
Conclusions
Full Text
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