4.6 Article

Pyrite deformation and connections to gold mobility: Insight from micro-structural analysis and trace element mapping

期刊

LITHOS
卷 310, 期 -, 页码 86-104

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.lithos.2018.03.024

关键词

Pyrite deformation; Gold; Electron backscatter diffraction; Chemical map; Abitibi Subprovince

资金

  1. Detour Gold Corp.
  2. SEGF student research grant
  3. NSERC
  4. NRCan's Targeted Geoscience Initiative (TGI)-5 program [20170359]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The metamorphic transition of pyrite to pyrrhotite results in the liberation of lattice-bound and nano-particulate metals initially hosted within early sulphide minerals. This process forms the basis for the metamorphic-driven Au-upgrading model applied to many orogenic Au deposits, however the role of syn-metamorphic pyrite deformation in controlling the retention and release of Au and related pathfinder elements is poorly understood. The lower amphibolite facies metamorphic mineral assemblage (Act-Bt-PI-Ep-Alm +/- Cal +/- Qz +/- Ilm; 550 degrees C) of Canada's giant Detour Lake deposit falls within the range of pressure-temperature conditions (450 degrees C) for crystal plastic deformation of pyrite. We have applied a complementary approach of electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) mapping and laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) 2D element mapping on pyrite from the Detour Lake deposit. Chemical element maps document an early generation of Au rich sieve textured pyrite domains and a later stage of syn-metamorphic oscillatory-zoned Au-poor pyrite. Both pyrite types are cut by Au-rich fractures as a consequence of remobilization of Au with trace element enrichment of first-row transition elements, post-transition metals, chalcogens and metalloids during a late brittle deformation stage. However, similar enrichment in trace elements and Au can be observed along low-angle grain boundaries within otherwise Au-poor pyrite, indicating that heterogeneous microstructural misorientation patterns and higher strain domains are also relatively Au-rich. We therefore propose that the close spatial relationship between pyrite and Au at the microscale, features typical of orogenic Au deposits, reflects the entrapment of Au within deformation-induced microstructures in pyrite rather than the release of Au during the metamorphic transition from pyrite to pyrrhotite. Moreover, mass balance calculations at the deposit scale suggest that only a small percentage of Au could have been sourced from pyrite and instead point to the role of substructures in pyrite as depositional traps for Au during syn-metamorphic deformation and fluid-assisted diffusion Au-upgrading. Crown Copyright (C) 2018 Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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