METAL SOURCES OF THE NAVAN CARBONATE-HOSTED BASE METAL DEPOSIT, IRELAND: ND AND SR ISOTOPE EVIDENCE FOR DEEP HYDROTHERMAL CONVECTION

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dc.contributor.author Walshaw R.D.
dc.contributor.author Menuge J.F.
dc.contributor.author Tyrrell S.
dc.date.accessioned 2025-02-22T06:18:23Z
dc.date.available 2025-02-22T06:18:23Z
dc.date.issued 2006
dc.identifier https://www.elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=53184573
dc.identifier.citation Mineralium Deposita, 2006, 41, 8, 803-819
dc.identifier.issn 0026-4598
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/48153
dc.description.abstract Nd and Sr isotope analyses are presented for gangue mineral samples from the giant carbonate-hosted Navan Zn–Pb deposit, Ireland, and for rocks from which Navan metals may have been derived. Analysis of gangue minerals spanning the Navan paragenetic sequence reveals systematic evolution in the composition of the mineralising fluid. Early fluid represented by replacive dolomite exhibits the lowest initial 87Sr/86Sr ratio (0.7083–0.7086), closest to that of the host limestone and to Lower Carboniferous seawater, and the highest 143Nd/144Nd ratio (0.51161–0.51176). Later generations of dolomite, barite and calcite, which encompass sulphide precipitation, have higher initial 87Sr/86Sr ratios (maximum 0.7105) and lower initial 143Nd/144Nd ratios (minimum 0.51157). All samples have initial Nd isotope ratios that are too low to have been acquired only from the host limestone. Drill core samples of presumed Ordovician volcanic and sedimentary rocks from beneath the Navan orebody have 143Nd/144Nd and 87Sr/86Sr ratios at the time of mineralisation of 0.51184–0.51217 and 0.7086–0.7138, respectively. The data are interpreted to indicate mixing of sulphide-rich, limestone-buffered brine, with a metal-bearing hydrothermal fluid, which had passed through sub-Carboniferous rocks, consistent with published fluid inclusion and S isotope data. The 143Nd/144Nd ratio of this basement-derived fluid is too low to have been imparted by flow through the Devonian Old Red Sandstone, as required in models of regional fluid flow in response to Hercynian uplift. Irrespective of whether such regional fluid flow occurred, the hydrothermal Nd must have been derived from sub-Devonian rocks. These conclusions broadly support the hydrothermal convection cell model in which brines, ultimately of surface origin, penetrated to a depth of several kilometres, leaching metals from the rocks through which they passed. The data also support increasing depth of penetration of convection cells with time. Metals were subsequently precipitated in carbonate rocks at sites of mixing with cooler, sulphide-rich fluids. However, comparison of the Navan hydrothermal gangue Nd–Sr isotope data with data from Lower Palaeozoic rocks strongly suggests that the latter cannot alone account for the “basement” signature. As the Navan deposit lies immediately north of the Iapetus Suture, this suggests that the Laurentian margin includes Precambrian basement.
dc.subject ZN-PB MINERALISATION
dc.subject IRISH-TYPE
dc.subject ND-SR ISOTOPES
dc.subject NAVAN
dc.subject IRELAND
dc.subject Carboniferous
dc.subject Devonian
dc.subject Ordovician
dc.subject Cambrian
dc.title METAL SOURCES OF THE NAVAN CARBONATE-HOSTED BASE METAL DEPOSIT, IRELAND: ND AND SR ISOTOPE EVIDENCE FOR DEEP HYDROTHERMAL CONVECTION
dc.type Статья
dc.identifier.doi 10.1007/s00126-006-0100-8
dc.subject.age Paleozoic::Carboniferous
dc.subject.age Палеозой::Каменноугольная
dc.subject.age Paleozoic::Devonian
dc.subject.age Палеозой::Девонская
dc.subject.age Paleozoic::Ordovician
dc.subject.age Палеозой::Ордовикская
dc.subject.age Paleozoic::Cambrian
dc.subject.age Палеозой::Кембрийская


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