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Stable isotope evidence for magmatic fluid input during large‐scale Na–Ca alteration in the Cloncurry Fe oxide Cu–Au district, NW Queensland, Australia
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Citations
39
References
2004
Year
Stable Isotope EvidenceMagmatic ProcessVolcanologyEngineeringHydrothermal SystemsEarth ScienceMagmatic-hydrothermal SystemMineralized Hydrothermal SystemsGeochronologyMagmatismIgneous PetrogenesisGeologyO H2oTectonicsCu–au DistrictNw QueenslandGeochemistryIgneous PetrologyPetrology
Abstract Sodic–calcic alteration is common in mineralized hydrothermal systems, yet the relative importance of igneous vs. basinal fluid sources remains controversial. One of the most extensive volumes of sodic–calcic rocks occurs near Cloncurry, NW Queensland, and was formed by overlapping hydrothermal systems that were active synchronously with emplacement of mid‐crustal batholithic granitoids ( c. 1.55–1.50 Ga). Altered rocks contain albite–oligoclase, actinolite, diopside, titanite and magnetite. Alteration was localized by: (A) composite veins and breccias containing crystallized magma intimately intergrown with hydrothermal precipitates; (B) intrusions that host setting A veins and breccias; and (C) extensive breccia and vein systems linked to regional fault systems. Isotope analyses of actinolites in settings A and B indicate calculated δ 18 O H2O (+8.2 to +10.6‰) and variably depleted δD H2O (−130 to −54‰) compared with typical magmatic fluids, whereas those from setting C typically indicate calculated δ 18 O H2O (+8.0 to +12.8‰) and δD H2O (−29 to −99‰). The lowest δD H2O values are interpreted as representing residual fluids after significant (> 90%) open‐system magmatic degassing. Overall the stable isotope, field, geochronological and geobarometric data suggest that these sodic–calcic alteration systems were formed by the episodic incursion of magmatic fluids that underwent minor isotopic modification as a result of varying degrees of interaction with country rocks.
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