地质学
地球化学
矿化(土壤科学)
放射性核素
元古代
下位基因
铀
铀矿
超大陆
矿产资源分类
辐射定年
构造学
岩浆作用
古生物学
地幔(地质学)
黄铁矿
闪锌矿
冶金
材料科学
土壤水分
土壤科学
作者
Kathy Ehrig,Vadim S. Kamenetsky,Jocelyn McPhie,Edeltraud Macmillan,J. M. Thompson,Maya Kamenetsky,Roland Maas
出处
期刊:Geology
[Geological Society of America]
日期:2021-07-15
卷期号:49 (11): 1312-1316
被引量:31
摘要
Abstract The origins of many supergiant ore deposits remain unresolved because the factors responsible for such extreme metal enrichments are not understood. One factor of critical importance is the timing of mineralization. However, timing information is commonly confounded by the difficulty of dating ore minerals. The world's largest uranium resource at Olympic Dam, South Australia, is exceptional because the high abundance of U allows U-Pb dating of ore minerals. The Olympic Dam U(-Cu-Au-Ag) ore deposit is hosted in ca. 1.59 Ga rocks, and the consensus has been that the supergiant deposit formed at the same time. We argue that, in fact, two stages of mineralization were involved. Paired in situ U-Pb and trace element analyses of texturally distinct uraninite populations show that the supergiant size and highest-U-grade zones are the result of U addition at 0.7–0.5 Ga, at least one billion years after initial formation. This conclusion is supported by a remarkable clustering of thousands of radiogenic 207Pb/206Pb model ages of Cu sulfide grains at this time. Upgrading of the original ca. 1.59 Ga U deposit to its present size at 0.7–0.5 Ga may have resulted from perturbation of regional fluid flow triggered by global climatic (deglaciation) and tectonic (breakup of Rodinia) events.
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