Abstract

The Hongtaiping Cu polymetallic deposit in Yanbian area (NE China) is located in the tectonic junction between the eastern Central Asian Orogenic Belt and the North China Craton. Two mineralization types are identified at the Hongtaiping deposit, i.e., stratiform mineralization hosted in the pyroclastic rocks of the Middle Permian Miaoling Formation (Fm.) and the quartz-sulfide vein-type mineralization controlled by fractures. To determine temporal and genetic relations between the two mineralization types, sulfide Rb–Sr dating and in-situ LA–ICP–MS trace element analysis were conducted. Seven sulfide samples from stratiform orebodies yielded a Rb–Sr isochron age of 268.3 ± 2.6 Ma, which is similar to the reported zircon U–Pb age of ore-hosting pyroclastic rocks of the Miaoling Fm., suggesting that the stratiform mineralization was syngenetic. The initial 87Sr/86Sr ratios of these sulfide samples show value of 0.7102–0.7103 (average of 0.7103), implying a major crustal origin, with certain mantle-derived input, for the ore-forming materials of the stratiform mineralization. Sulfides from the stratiform and vein-type ores have distinct trace elemental features. High Co/Ni ratio and low Se content in pyrite, and high Sn content and low Zn content in chalcopyrite reflect high temperature and vice versa. In the pyrite from stratiform and vein-type ores, average Se contents are 19.72 ppm and 9.70 ppm, and average Co/Ni ratios are 0.20 and 2.46, respectively. Whilst in the chalcopyrite from stratiform and vein-type ores, average Sn contents are 2.49 ppm and 60.31 ppm and average Zn contents are 346.55 ppm and 236.17 ppm, respectively, indicating that the temperature of the stratiform mineralization is lower than that of the vein-type mineralization. Integrating the geological and geochronological features of the two types of mineralization and wall rocks, as well as trace element compositions of the sulfides, we inferred that the stratiform mineralization at the Hongtaiping deposit can be classified as volcanogenic massive sulfide (VMS)-type, associated with the Middle Permian submarine volcanism caused by the subduction of the Paleo-Asian Ocean. The vein-type mineralization was likely related to the Late Triassic felsic magmatism. In a word, two-phase mineralization implies the VMS-hydrothermal reworking-type for the Hongtaiping deposit.

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