Abstract

The large, newly discovered Sharang porphyry Mo deposit and nearby Yaguila skarn Pb–Zn–Ag (–Mo) deposit reside in the central Lhasa terrane, northern Gangdese metallogenic belt, Tibet. Multiple mineral chronometers (zircon U–Pb, sericite 40Ar–39Ar, and zircon and apatite (U–Th)/He) reveal that ore-forming porphyritic intrusions experienced rapid cooling (>100°C/Ma) during a monotonic magmatic–hydrothermal evolution. The magmatic–hydrothermal ore-forming event at Sharang lasted ~6.0Myr (~1.8Myr for cooling from >900 to 350°C and ~4.0Myr for cooling from 350 to 200°C) whereas cooling was more prolonged during ore formation at Yaguila (~1.8Myr from >900 to 500°C and a maximum of ~16Myr from >900 to 350°C). All porphyritic intrusions in the ore district experienced exhumation at a rate of 0.07–0.09mm/yr (apatite He ages between ~37 and 30Ma). Combined with previous studies, this work implies that uplift of the eastern section of the Lhasa terrane expanded from central Lhasa (37–30Ma) to southern Lhasa (15–12Ma) at an increasing exhumation rate. All available geochronologic data reveal that magmatic–hydrothermal–exhumation activities in the Sharang–Yaguila ore district occurred within four periods of magmatism with related mineralization. Significant porphyry-type Mo mineralization was associated with Late Cretaceous–Eocene felsic porphyritic intrusions in the central Lhasa terrane, resulting from Neotethyan oceanic subduction and India–Asia continental collision.

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