Abstract

The Howard’s Pass district of sedimentary exhalative (SEDEX) Zn-Pb deposits is located in Yukon Territory and comprises 14 Zn-Pb deposits that contain an estimated 400.7 Mt of sulfide mineralization grading 4.5 % Zn and 1.5 % Pb. Mineralization is hosted in carbonaceous and calcareous and, to a lesser extent, siliceous mudstones. Pyrite is a minor but ubiquitous mineral in the host rocks stratigraphically above, within, and below mineralization. Petrographic analyses reveal that pyrite has a complex and protracted growth history, preserving multiple generations of pyrite within single grains. Sulfur isotope analysis of paragenetically complex pyrite by secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) reveals that sulfur isotope compositions vary with textural zonation. Within the Zn-Pb deposits, framboidal pyrite is the earliest pyrite generation recognized, and this exclusively has negative δ34S values (mean = −16.6 ± 4.1 ‰; n = 55), whereas paragenetically later pyrite and galena possess positive δ34S values (mean = 29.1 ± 7.5 and 22.4 ± 3.0 ‰, n = 13 and 13, respectively). Previous studies found that sphalerite and galena mineral separates have exclusively positive δ34S values (mean = 16.8 ± 3.3 and 12.7 ± 2.8 ‰, respectively; Goodfellow and Jonasson 1986). These distinct sulfur isotope values are interpreted to reflect varying contributions of bacterially reduced seawater sulfate (negative; framboidal pyrite) and thermochemically reduced seawater sulfate and/or hydrothermal sulfate (positive; galena, sphalerite, later forms of pyrite). Textural evidence indicates that framboidal pyrite predates galena and sphalerite deposition. Collectively, the in situ and bulk sulfur isotope data are much more complex than δ34S values permitted by prevailing genetic models that invoke only biogenically reduced sulfur and coeval deposition of galena, sphalerite, and framboidal pyrite within a euxinic water column, and we present several lines of evidence that argue against this model. Indeed, the new data indicate that much of the base metal sulfide mineralization was emplaced below the sediment-water interface within sulfidic muds under reducing conditions during early diagenesis. Furthermore, thermochemical sulfate reduction provided most of the reduced sulfur within the Zn-Pb deposits.

Highlights

  • The Late Ordovician to Early Silurian Howard’s Pass Zn-Pb district (HPD) of sedimentary exhalative (SEDEX) deposits comprises 14 sulfide deposits that contain an estimated 400.7 Mt grading 4.5 % Zn and 1.5 % Pb (Kirkham et al 2012)

  • The HPD is located within the Selwyn Basin (Fig. 1), a metallogenic province that is primarily known for its worldclass Zn-Pb (±Ag ± Ba) sediment-hosted deposits (Fig. 1)

  • The Duo Lake Formation is subdivided into informal members that, from the base to the top, comprise the Pyritic Siliceous Mudstone member (PSMS), Lower Cherty Mudstone member (LCMS), Calcareous Mudstone member (CCMS), Active member (ACTM), and Upper Siliceous Mudstone member (USMS) (Morganti 1979)

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Summary

Introduction

The Late Ordovician to Early Silurian Howard’s Pass Zn-Pb district (HPD) of sedimentary exhalative (SEDEX) deposits comprises 14 sulfide deposits that contain an estimated 400.7 Mt grading 4.5 % Zn and 1.5 % Pb (Kirkham et al 2012). Other major Zn-Pb districts in the Selwyn Basin include the Middle Cambrian Anvil district and the Middle to Late Devonian MacMillan Pass district. These districts, together with the HPD, collectively formed during a long, episodic. Deposits in the HPD are hosted in the Duo Lake Formation, which consists of carbonaceous, calcareous to siliceous mudstones (Gadd et al 2016; Goodfellow and Jonasson 1986; Morganti 1979). The Duo Lake Formation is subdivided into informal members that, from the base to the top, comprise the Pyritic Siliceous Mudstone member (PSMS), Lower Cherty Mudstone member (LCMS), Calcareous Mudstone member (CCMS), Active member (ACTM), and Upper Siliceous Mudstone member (USMS) (Morganti 1979). Pyrite is a minor but ubiquitous component of these rocks and constitutes, on average, 4.6 wt% of the CCMS, 5.4 wt% of the ACTM, and 2.9 wt% of the USMS

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