Abstract

The Ciweigou low-17 sulfidation epithermal Cu-Au mining district, NE China, is hosted by Early Cretaceous andesite of the Jingouling Formation. From bottom to top (not explored below the 100 m level), the ore bodies consist of gold-bearing quartz veins, gold-bearing quartz-calcite veins, and calcite veins and the sides are stockwork veins and hydrothermal breccia ore bodies. Five mineralization stages are distinguished: (I) pyrite-sericite, (II) quartz-calcite, (III) grey quartz, (IV) milky quartz-adularia and (V) late carbonate. Au-bearing minerals deposited in stages II and III. Hydrothermal alteration is composed of an inner silicic-pyritic zone, intermediate zone of quartz-sericite-adularia, outer zone of quartz-chlorite-epidote and upper zone of calcite. Systematic fluid inclusion petrography shows that two-phase vapour-rich and liquid-rich inclusions are the dominant fluid inclusions types in the quartz and calcite veins, suggesting that the ore-forming fluids belong to a moderate- to low-temperature (140 °C−320 °C) and low-salinity (0 wt%−14 wt% NaCl-eqv.) H2O-NaCl-CO2 system. HO isotopes (δ18OH2O = -14.0 ‰ to −4.9 ‰ and δD = −123.4 ‰ to −88.1 ‰) indicate that the ore-forming fluids likely originated from mixed fluids driven by residual andesitic magmatic fluid. The precipitation mechanisms are mixing and major fluid boiling. The comprehensive geological and isotopic characteristics show that the Ciweigou deposit is a low-sulfidation epithermal deposit. Six pyrite samples from stages I and II yielded a Rb-Sr isochron age of 102.6 ± 2.2 Ma (MSWD = 1.19), consistent with other low-sulfidation epithermal gold mineralization ages in the Yanbian district and Lesser Xing'an Range. The timing of the Ciweigou gold mineralization at ∼103 Ma postdates the eruption of andesitic magma (106.4 ± 2.1 Ma, zircon U–Pb) and granodiorite porphyry (106.6 ± 1.2 Ma, zircon U–Pb) and diorite porphyry (107.8 ± 1.8 Ma, zircon U–Pb) emplacement, suiting in an extensional environment attributed to the rollback of the subducting Paleo-Pacific Plate.

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