ORIGIN OF THE RUBIAN CARBONATE-HOSTED MAGNESITE DEPOSIT, GALICIA, NW SPAIN: MINERALOGICAL, REE, FLUID INCLUSION AND ISOTOPE EVIDENCE

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.author Kilias S.P.
dc.contributor.author Stamatakis M.G.
dc.contributor.author Pozo M.
dc.contributor.author Bustillo M.
dc.contributor.author Calvo J.P.
dc.date.accessioned 2025-01-18T06:27:37Z
dc.date.available 2025-01-18T06:27:37Z
dc.date.issued 2006
dc.identifier https://www.elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=14323070
dc.identifier.citation Mineralium Deposita, 2006, 41, 7, 713-733
dc.identifier.issn 0026-4598
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/47433
dc.description.abstract The Rubian magnesite deposit (West Asturian-Leonese Zone, Iberian Variscan belt) is hosted by a 100-m-thick folded and metamorphosed Lower Cambrian carbonate/siliciclastic metasedimentary sequence - the Cándana Limestone Formation. It comprises upper (20-m thickness) and lower (17-m thickness) lens-shaped ore bodies separated by 55 m of slates and micaceous schists. The main (lower) magnesite ore body comprises a package of magnesite beds with dolomite-rich intercalations, sandwiched between slates and micaceous schists. In the upper ore body, the magnesite beds are thinner (centimetre scale mainly) and occur between slate beds. Mafic dolerite dykes intrude the mineralisation. The mineralisation passes eastwards into sequence of bedded dolostone (Buxan) and laminated to banded calcitic marble (Mao). These show significant Variscan extensional shearing or fold-related deformation, whereas neither Rubian dolomite nor magnesite show evidence of tectonic disturbance. This suggests that the dolomitisation and magnesite formation postdate the main Variscan deformation. In addition, the morphology of magnesite crystals and primary fluid inclusions indicate that magnesite is a neoformed hydrothermal mineral. Magnesite contains irregularly distributed dolomite inclusions (<50 μm) and these are interpreted as relics of a metasomatically replaced dolostone precursor. the total rare earth element (ree) contents magnesite very similar to those buxan but depleted in light elements (lree); heavy concentrations comparable. however, ree chondrite normalised profiles lack any characteristic anomaly indicative marine environment. compared with mao calcite, is distinct terms both patterns. fluid inclusion studies show that mineralising fluids were mgcl2-NaCl-CaCl2-H2O aqueous brines exhibiting highly variable salinities (3.3 to 29.5 wt.% salts). This may be the result of a combination of fluid mixing, migration of pulses of variable-salinity brines and/or local dissolution and replacement processes of the host dolostone. Fluid inclusion data and comparison with other N Iberian dolostone-hosted metasomatic deposits suggest that Rubian magnesite probably formed at temperatures between 160 and 200°C. This corresponds, at hydrostatic pressure (500 bar), to a depth of formation of -5 km. Mineralisation-related Rubian dolomite yields δ18O values (δ18O:12.0 -15.4‰, mean: 14.4±1.1‰) depleted by around 5‰ compared with barren Buxan dolomite (δ18O: 17.1-20.2‰, mean: 19.4±1.0‰). This was interpreted to reflect an influx of 18O-depleted waters accompanied by a temperature increase in a fluid-dominated system. Overlapping calculated δ18Ofluid values (-+5‰ at 200°C) for fluids in equilibrium with Rubian dolomite and magnesite show that they were formed by the same hydrothermal system at different temperatures. In terms of δ13C values, Rubian dolomite (δ13C: -1.4 to 1.9‰, mean: 0.4±1.3‰) and magnesite (δ13C: -2.3 to 2.4‰, mean: 0.60±1.0‰) generally exhibit more negative δ13C values compared with Buxan dolomite (δ13C: -0.2 to 1.9‰, mean: 0.8±0.6‰) and Mao calcite (δ13C: -0.3 to 1.5‰, mean: 0.6±0.6‰), indicating progressive modification to lower δ13C values through interaction with hydrothermal fluids. 87Sr/86Sr ratios, calculated at 290 Ma, vary from 0.70849 to 0.70976 for the Mao calcite and from 0.70538 to 0.70880 for the Buxan dolostone. The 87Sr/ 86Sr ratios in Rubian magnesite are more radiogenic and range from 0.71123 to 0.71494. The combined 7delta;18 O-δ13C and 87Sr/86Sr data indicate that the magnesite-related fluids were modified basinal brines that have reacted and equilibrated with intercalated siliciclastic rocks. Magnesite formation is genetically linked to regional hydrothermal dolomitisation associated with lithospheric delamination, late-Variscan high heat flow and extensional tectonics in the NW Iberian Belt. A comparison with genetic models for the Puebla de Lillo talc deposits suggests that the formation of hydrothermal replacive magnesite at Rubian resulted from a metasomatic column with magnesite forming at higher fluid/rock ratios than dolomite. In this study, magnesite generation took place via the local reaction of hydrothermal dolostone with the same hydrothermal fluids in very high permeability zones at high fluid/rock ratios (e.g. faults). It was also possibly aided by additional heat from intrusive dykes or sub-cropping igneous bodies. This would locally raise isotherms enabling a transition from the dolomite stability field to that of magnesite.
dc.subject DOLOMITISATION
dc.subject MAGNESITE
dc.subject RUBIAN
dc.subject SPAIN
dc.subject Cambrian
dc.title ORIGIN OF THE RUBIAN CARBONATE-HOSTED MAGNESITE DEPOSIT, GALICIA, NW SPAIN: MINERALOGICAL, REE, FLUID INCLUSION AND ISOTOPE EVIDENCE
dc.type Статья
dc.identifier.doi 10.1007/s00126-006-0075-5
dc.subject.age Paleozoic::Cambrian
dc.subject.age Палеозой::Кембрийская


Files in this item

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

  • ELibrary
    Метаданные публикаций с сайта https://www.elibrary.ru

Show simple item record