4.6 Article

Multi-stage hydrothermal processes involved in low-sulfide Cu(-Ni)-PGE mineralization in the footwall of the Sudbury Igneous Complex (Canada): Amy Lake PGE zone, East Range

Journal

MINERALIUM DEPOSITA
Volume 49, Issue 1, Pages 7-47

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00126-013-0468-1

Keywords

Sudbury structure; Low-sulfide Cu-(Ni-)PGE; Hydrothermal alteration; Multiple hydrothermal events

Funding

  1. Canada-Hungary Science and Technology Agreement
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  3. Geological Survey of Canada's Targeted Geoscience Initiative-4 Program

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The Amy Lake PGE zone is a low-sulfide-type Cu-(Ni-)PGE mineralization in the East Range footwall of the 1.85 Ga Sudbury Igneous Complex occurring in a 100-m-wide Sudbury Breccia belt that coincides with an impact-related major fracture zone (Bay Fault zone). Detailed hydrothermal alteration mapping, fluid inclusion, trace element, and stable isotope studies revealed a complex alteration and mineralization history in a multi-source, multi-stage Sudbury-related hydrothermal system. The two major stages of syn-Sudbury hydrothermal activity are characterized by similarly high-salinity, high-temperature fluids that are (1) locally derived from footwall granophyre bodies, and typified with high Ni/Cu and PGE/S ratios and high REE contents (magmatic-hydrothermal stage), and (2) a more voluminous Cu-Ni-PGE-rich fluid flux probably originated from the Sudbury Igneous Complex/footwall contact (hydrothermal stage). The second hydrothermal flux was introduced by brittle fractures in the area and resulted in a complex zonation of alteration assemblages and mineralization governed by local footwall composition. The Sudbury-related hydrothermal event was overprinted by shear-related epidote veining and calcite-chlorite replacement, both regionally present in the Sudbury structure. Based on analogies, the most important factors involved in the formation of hydrothermal low-sulfide mineralization are proposed to be (1) accumulation of PGE-enriched fluids, (2) large-scale brittle structures as conduits to these fluids, and (3) adequate host rock composition as a chemical trap resulting in sulfide and PGM precipitation. In environments meeting these criteria, hydrothermal PGE mineralization is known to have formed not only in the Sudbury footwall but also from mafic-ultramafic intrusions associated with primary magmatic PGE from several locations around the world.

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