4.7 Article

Enrichment of ion-exchangeable rare earth elements by felsic volcanic rock weathering in South China: Genetic mechanism and formation preference

Journal

ORE GEOLOGY REVIEWS
Volume 114, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.oregeorev.2019.103120

Keywords

Ion-exchangeable REEs; Ion adsorption-type REE mineralization; Felsic volcanic rock; Rhyolite; Weathering; South China

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41462005]
  2. Guangxi Natural Science Foundation [2014GXNSFAA118304]
  3. Collaborative Innovation Center for Exploration of Hidden Nonferrous Metal Deposits and Development of New Materials in Guangxi

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Felsic volcanic rocks are an important source for generating ion adsorption-type rare earth element (REE) resources. To better understand the supergene enrichment of REEs related to felsic volcanic rock weathering, this study conducted an investigation of Indosinian felsic volcanic rocks from Guangxi, southwest China, which have been subjected to deep weathering. The weathering has formed large areas of thick regolith with the potential to host ion adsorption-type REE mineralization. The felsic volcanic rocks belong to the dacite-rhyolite series and are peraluminous, high-K, calc-alkaline, and REE-rich (325-376 ppm). Abundant REE-bearing accessory minerals are present in the felsic volcanic rocks, including titanite (average Sigma REE = 15.1 wt%), allanite (average Sigma REE = 14.9 wt%), and apatite (average Sigma REE = 1510 ppm), and these three minerals contain an estimated 88.7% of the whole-rock REEs content. Significant REE enrichment is present in the felsic volcanic rock-derived regolith. A typical rhyolite-derived regolith profile has REE contents that increase from 376 ppm in the rhyolite to 1737 ppm in the regolith, representing an almost five-fold enrichment due to weathering. The REEs in the regolith are present in an ion-exchangeable form (iREEs), which accounts for 52%-87% of the total REEs present (TREEs). The occurrence of iREEs is closely linked to clay minerals, showing an affinity in the order halloy-site > kaolinite > illite. Continuous operations of REEs by an eluviation-illuviation process from the source minerals (titanite + allanite + apatite) to sink minerals (kaolinite + halloysite + illite) results in an iREE-enriched zone in the middle and lower parts of the rhyolitic regolith. Notably, besides the studied Indosinian felsic volcanic rocks, there are multi-epochs of such lithology outcropped in South China. Their related iREEs mineralizations, however, are preferentially developed in the weathered terrains of early Yanshanian and Indosinian felsic volcanic rocks, and not in those of the Yanshanian and late Yanshanian felsic volcanic rocks. A comparison of the mineralized and barren units indicates that the iREEs mineralization hosted in felsic volcanic rocks regolith is controlled by some key endogenic and exogenic ore-forming factors. High initial REE concentrations in the unaltered felsic volcanic rocks, a suitable climate, and a relatively quiescent tectonic setting are favorable for the formation and preservation of iREEs mineralization.

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