Journal of Asian Earth Sciences: X (Jun 2023)
Fluid inclusion and stable isotope (H–O–S–Pb) constraints on the genesis of the Haxi gold deposit, west Junggar, China
Abstract
The Haxi gold deposit located in the Hatu–Saertuohai metallogenic belt of the west Junggar region, China, is a newly discovered gold deposit with proven reserves of ∼10 tons of gold and an average grade of 6.70 g/t. Primarily, the deposit is hosted in the early Carboniferous Tailegula Formation, controlled by the NEE-trending Anqi fault. The gold ore bodies contain gold-bearing quartz veins and altered basalt. The ore mineral is dominated by abundant sulfides, such as pyrite, arsenopyrite, chalcopyrite, and a little gersdorffite. To date, three types of fluid inclusion in quartz veins have been identified: liquid–gas (V-type), CO2–H2O (C-type), and liquid–rich (L-type). The ore-forming fluids exhibit medium homogenization temperatures (Th) of 226 °C–325 °C with low salinities of 2.24–9.34 wt% NaCl equivalent and low densities from 0.72 to 0.88 g/cm3. The δD values range from −115.3‰ to −100.7‰, with an average value of −109.1‰; the δ18O values range from 11.3‰ to 12.2‰, with an average value of 11.8‰; and the δ34S values in sulfide range from 0.3‰ to 1.8‰, with an average of 1.2‰. The average values of 206Pb/204Pb, 207Pb/204Pb, and 208Pb/204Pb in sulfide are 18.059, 15.547, and 37.996, respectively. To summarize, the metallogenic fluids were derived not from a single source but from late magmatic–hydrothermal fluid mixed with paleo-atmospheric water; furthermore, the ore-forming materials principally originated from a crust–mantle mixed source. The Pb model age calculated using Hautman’s formula is 347–365 Ma, leading to the speculation that the metallogenic period may be Devonian–Carboniferous.