Frontiers in Earth Science (Jun 2025)

Genesis of the Zhilingtou gold deposit, Zhejiang Province, China: constraints from fluid inclusions and H–O–S–Pb isotope systematics

  • Hanlun Liu,
  • Hanlun Liu,
  • Xiaofei Yu,
  • Shigang Duan,
  • Yandong Sun,
  • Yingchao Wang,
  • Jingwen Mao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/feart.2025.1564600
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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The Zhilingtou gold deposit in Zhejiang Province, China, is located in the Qin-Hang metallogenic belt and hosted within Paleoproterozoic Badu Group gneiss. Geologic and isotopic analyses reveal that the gold mineralization is associated with a concealed biotite monzogranite (230 ± 1 Ma) and developed along the contact zone with gneiss. Ore-forming fluids, characterized by moderate—high temperatures (237–376°C) and low salinities (1.90–6.72 wt.% NaCl eqv), originated from a magmatic source and were later diluted by meteoric water, leading to gold precipitation. Pb isotopes indicate a crustal origin for lead, closely related to the Badu Group gneiss. The deposit likely formed in a late Triassic postcollisional extensional setting during the Indosinian orogeny involving the South China and North China blocks, suggesting an intrusion-related gold deposit (IRGD) model with excellent potential for further exploration.

Keywords