4.7 Article

Chadormalu Kiruna-type magnetite-apatite deposit, Bafq district, Iran: Insights into hydrothermal alteration and petrogenesis from geochemical, fluid inclusion, and sulfur isotope data

Journal

ORE GEOLOGY REVIEWS
Volume 83, Issue -, Pages 43-62

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.oregeorev.2016.11.031

Keywords

Chadormalu; Magnetite-Apatite; Bafq district; Central Iran; Hydrothermal alteration; Kiruna-type; Sulfur isotope

Funding

  1. Shahid Beheshti University research grant
  2. NSERC

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The Chadormalu is one of the largest known iron deposits in the Bafq metallogenic province in the Kashmar-Kerman belt, Central Iran. The deposit is hosted in Precambrian-Cambrian igneous rocks, represented by rhyolite, rhyodacite, granite, diorite, and diabasic dikes, as well as metamorphic rocks consisting of various schists. The host rocks experienced Na (albite), calcic (actinolite), and potassic (K-feldspar and biotite) hydrothermal alteration associated with the formation of magnetite-(apatite) bodies, which are characteristic of iron oxide copper-gold (IOCG) and iron oxide-apatite (IOA) systems. Iron ores, occurring as massive-type and vein-type bodies, consist of three main generations of magnetite, including primary, secondary, and recrystallized, which are chemically different. Apatite occurs as scattered irregular veinlets in various parts of the main massive ore-body, as well as apatite-magnetite veins and disseminated apatite grains in marginal parts of the deposit and in the immediate wall rocks. Minor pyrite occurs as a late phase in the iron ores. Chemical composition of magnetite is representative of an IOA or Kiruna-type deposit, which is consistent with other evidence. Whole rock geochemical data from various host rocks confirm the occurrence of Na, Ca, and K alteration consistent with the formation of albite, actinolite, and K-feldspar, respectively. The geochemical investigation also includes the nature of calc-alkaline igneous rocks, and helps elaborating on the spatial and temporal association, and possible contribution of mafic to felsic magmas to the evolution of ore bearing hydrothermal fluids. Fluid inclusion studies on apatites from massive-and vein-type ores show a range of homogenization temperatures from 266 to 580 degrees C and 208-406 degrees C, and salinities from 0.5 to 10.7 wt.% and 0.3-24.4 wt.% NaCl equiv., respectively. The fluid inclusion data suggest the involvement of evolving fluids, from low salinity-high temperature, to high salinity-low temperature, in the formation of the massive-and vein type ores, respectively. The delta S-34 values obtained for pyrite from various parts of the deposit range between +8.9 and +14.4%o for massive ore and +18.7 to +21.5%0 for vein-type ore. A possible source of sulfur for the S-34-enriched pyrite would be originated from late Precambrian-early Cambrian marine sulfate, or fluids equilibrated with evaporitic sulfates. Field observations, ore mineral and alteration assemblages, coupled with lithogeochemical, fluid inclusion, and sulfur isotopic data suggest that an evolving fluid from magmatic dominated to surficial brine rich fluid has contributed to the formation of the Chadormalu deposit. In the first stages of mineralization, magmatic derived fluids had a dominant role in the formation of the massive -type ores, whereas a later brine with higher delta S-34 contributed to the formation of the vein -type ores. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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