Fluorite deposits in the Zhejiang Province, southeast China: The possible role of extension during the late stages in the subduction of the Paleo-Pacific oceanic plate, as indicated by the Gudongkeng fluorite deposit

2020 
Abstract Southeast China with its widespread occurrences of Mesozoic igneous rocks, is one of the largest magmatic provinces worldwide, containing a large variety of mineral types, including hypothermal W-Sn, porphyry Cu, epithermal Au deposits. The Gudongkeng deposit is an example consisting of fluorite mineralisation trending SE over a distance of about 6 km. The major minerals in the deposit include fluorite and calcite of a hydrothermal origin and interpreted as a vein-type deposit associated with the Linghou Granite that yields a zircon U–Pb date of 100 ± 1 Ma, but intriguingly the fluorite yields an Sm–Nd isochron age of 73 ± 3 Ma, placing the genesis of the fluorite as a post-magmatic event. Fluid inclusions in the fluorite have low homogenisation temperatures of 104–195° C, salinities of 0.5 to 2.24 wt% NaCl eqv., and densities of 0.67–0.94 g/cm3. The inclusions contain NaCl–H2O–CaF2 with δDV-SMOW values between −64.3 and-50.1‰ and δ18OV-SMOW values between −7.6 and −2‰. The initial 87Sr/86Sr ratios of the fluorite range from 0.709816 to 0.710165 are characteristic of a crustal contribution. The ore-forming fluids can be mainly attributed to a NaCl–H2O–CaF2 system of moderate to low temperature, low salinity, and low density. The ore-forming fluid has a meteoric water source, with the reaction between the fluid and wallrocks being the main mechanism for fluorite precipitation at relatively low temperatures. Gudongkeng is a low temperature epithermal deposit which was formed in an extensional setting within the Cathaysia Block during the Late Cretaceous.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    111
    References
    5
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []