Abstract

Hydrothermal processes have played a significant role in rare earth element (REE) precipitation in the Bayan Obo REE-Nb-Fe deposit. The poor preservation of primary fluid inclusions and superposition or modification by multiphase hydrothermal activities have made identification of physico-chemical conditions of ore-forming fluids extremely difficult. Fortunately, with more and more reliable thermodynamic properties of aqueous REE species and REE minerals reported in recent years, a series of thermodynamic calculations are conducted in this study to provide constraints on REE precipitation in hydrothermal solutions, and provide an explanation of typical paragenesis of REE and gangue minerals at Bayan Obo. During the competition between fluocerite and monazite for LREE in the modelled solution (0.1 M HCl, 0.1 M HF and 0.1 M trichloride of light rare earth elements (LREE) from La to Sm), all LREE would eventually be hosted by monazite at a temperature over 300 °C, with continuous introduction of H3PO4. Additionally, monazite of heavier LREE would precipitate earlier, indicating that the Ce- and La-enriched monazite at Bayan Obo was crystallized from Ce and La pre-enriched hydrothermal fluids. The fractionation among LREE occurred before the ore-forming fluids infiltrating ore-hosting dolomite. When CO2 (aq) was introduced to the aqueous system (model 1), bastnaesite would eventually and completely replace monazite-(Ce). Cooling of hot hydrothermal fluids (>400 °C) would significantly promote this replacement, with only about one third the cost of CO2 for the entire replacement when temperature dropped from 430 °C to 400 °C. Sole dolomite addition (model 2) would make bastnaesite replace monazite and then be replaced by parisite. The monazite-(Ce) replaced by associated bastnaesite and apatite is an indicator of very hot hydrothermal fluids (>400 °C) and specific dolomite/fluid ratios (e.g., initial dolomite at 1 kbar: 0.049–0.068 M and 0.083–0.105 M at 400 °C and 430 °C). In hot solution (>430 °C) that continuously interacts with dolomite, apatite precipitates predating the bastnaesite, but it behaves oppositely at <400 °C. The former paragenesis is in accord with petrography observed in this study. Some mineral pairs, such as monazite-(Ce)-fluorite and monazite-(Ce)-parisite would never co-precipitate at any calculated temperature or pressure. Therefore, their association implies multiphase hydrothermal activities. Pressure variation would have rather limited influence on the paragenesis of REE minerals. However, temperature and fluid composition variation (e.g., CO2 (aq), dolomite, H3PO4) would cause significantly different associations between REE and gangue minerals.

Highlights

  • The Bayan Obo REE-Nb-Fe deposit is a typical carbonatite-related deposit, which indicates the rare earth element (REE) resources originated from local carbonatite magma [1,2]

  • A few fluid inclusions with fluorocarbonate daughter minerals reach homogenization at over 400 ◦ C [8], most of the fluid inclusions trapped in the megacrysts of gangue minerals from the vein-type ores display a homogenization temperature

  • In the modelled solution with 0.1 M HCl, 0.1 M HF and 0.1 M trichloride of each LREE (La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm), phosphoric acid was added stepwise into the aqueous solution, with 0.001 M H3PO4 at each step

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Summary

Introduction

The Bayan Obo REE-Nb-Fe deposit is a typical carbonatite-related deposit, which indicates the rare earth element (REE) resources originated from local carbonatite magma [1,2]. Some recent studies have even proposed that most of the REE-bearing minerals precipitated during hydrothermal processes at Bayan Obo [6,7]. There is a fundamental problem about the physico-chemical conditions of the ore-forming fluids and REE precipitation. Thermodynamic modelling provides an alternative approach to the physico-chemical conditions of the ore-forming fluids and REE precipitation. These semi-quantitative calculations are able to explain the paragenesis or sequent formation of various REE minerals qualitatively, which is vital to exploring the theoretical mechanism of Bayan Obo REE mineralization. Considering that the dominating REE-bearing minerals at Bayan Obo are monazite and fluorocarbonate (bastnaesite, parisite and so on), it is time to perform thermodynamic calculations about the precipitation of REE minerals when all the requirements have been met

Geological Setting
Methods
Petrography
LREE Fractionation during Precipitation of Monazite
Replacement of Bastnaesite by Monazite
10. Discrete amounts of introduced dolomite were model the same fluids in as
Discussion
Replacement of Parisite by Bastnaesite
Conclusions
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