4.5 Article

The effect of crystal-melt partitioning on the budgets of Cu, An, and Ag

Journal

AMERICAN MINERALOGIST
Volume 93, Issue 8-9, Pages 1437-1448

Publisher

MINERALOGICAL SOC AMER
DOI: 10.2138/am.2008.2812

Keywords

metal budgets; magma evolution; element partitioning; differentiation; crystal fractionation

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [EAR 0609550, EAR 0440226]
  2. EPMA [EAR 9810244]
  3. Division Of Earth Sciences
  4. Directorate For Geosciences [0738992] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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We have performed five separate sets of experiments to elucidate the effects of magnetite, ulvospinel-magnetite solid solution, and pyrrhotite crystallization oil the budgets of Au, Cu, and Ag at magmatic conditions. The experiments were done in both hydrous and anhydrous assemblages at temperatures between 800 and 1050 degrees C, pressures from ambient to 140 MPa, log f(o2) from NNO-0.25 to NNO, and log f(s2) from -1.5 to -3.0. Nernst-type partition coefficients (+/- 1 sigma) at 800 degrees C in a water-saturated assemblage are D-Ag(M1/melt) = 2 x 10(-4) +/- 2 x 10(-9), D-Cu(M1/melt) = 0.82 +/- 0.69, D-Cu(Usp/melt) = 26 +/- 17, D-Au(Usp/melt) = 50 +/- 31, D-Cu(Po/melt) = 174 +/- 25. Nernst-type partition coefficients (+/- sigma) at 1050 degrees C in an anhydrous assemblage are D-Cu(Po/melt) >= 200, D-Ag(Po/melt) = 58 +/- 8, D-Au(Po/melt) = 120 +/- 50. The calculated values for D-Au(Usp/melt) and D-Cu(Usp/melt) indicate that the addition of Ti to magnetite increases significantly the Au- and Cu-scavenging potential of ulvospinel relative to end-member magnetite. Partition coefficients for Cu and Au between pyrrhotite and melt indicate that a temperature change from 1050 to 800 degrees C in an anhydrous and hydrous assemblage, respectively, results in no observable change in Cu partitioning. The calculated partition coefficients are used to model the effect of crystal fractionation on the concentrations of Ag, Cu, and ALL. Model results suggest that the co-crystallization of magnetite and pyrrhotite sequester no more than 2% Ag, 7% Cu, and 37% Au from the melt over the first 25% solidification. If the melt reaches volatile saturation after 25% crystallization, the presence of end-member magnetite and pyrrhotite do not appear to inhibit the Cu-, Au-, and Ag-ore potential of the magma. Ulvospinel-magnetite, however, may reduce the Au concentration in the melt by approximately one-third relative to its initial value that decreases the overall Au available to partition into the volatile phase.

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