Zircon U-Pb Dating of Magmatism and Mineralizing Hydrothermal Activity in the Variscan Karkonosze Massif and Its Eastern Metamorphic Cover (SW Poland)

: SHRIMP (Sensitive high resolution ion microprobe) zircon U-Pb dating of the two main igneous rocks types in the Karkonosze Pluton, porphyritic and equigranular monzogranite, yield 206 Pb / 238 U ages between 312.0 ± 2.9 and 306.9 ± 3.0 Ma. These coincide, within uncertainty, with the majority of previous dates from the pluton, which indicate development of the main magmatic processes between ca. 315 and 303 Ma. They also coincide with molybdenite and sulﬁde Re-Os ages from ore deposits developed during magmatic and pneumatolitic-hydrothermal (e.g., Szklarska Por˛eba Huta and Michałowice) or / and metasomatic and hydrothermal (e.g., Kowary, Czarn ó w and Miedzianka) processes forming Mo-W-Sn-Fe-Cu-As-REE-Y-Nb-Th-U mineralization. The 206 Pb / 238 U zircon age of 300.7 ± 2.4 Ma from a rhyolite porphyry dyke (with disseminated base metal sulﬁde mineralization) in the Miedzianka Cu-(U) deposit coincides with the development of regional tectonic processes along the Intra-Sudetic Fault. Moreover, at the end-Carboniferous, transition from a collisional to within-plate tectonic setting in the central part of the European Variscides introduced volcanism in the Intra-Sudetic Basin. Together, these processes produced brecciation of older ore mineralization, as well as metal remobilization and deposition of younger medium-and low-temperature hydrothermal mineralization (mainly Cu-Fe-Zn-Pb-Ag-Au-Bi-Se, and Th-U), which became superimposed on earlier high-temperature Mo-W-Sn- Fe-As-Cu-REE mineralization. A few 206 Pb / 238 U ages > 320 Ma remain to be reconciled, but might be due to the high U and Th contents of the zircon and the strong inﬂuence of overprinting pneumatolitic-hydrothermal processes.


Introduction
U-Pb isotopic studies of zircon and monazite from Variscan granitoids that belong to the composite Karkonosze Pluton in the Sudetes have yielded 206 Pb/ 238 U ages ranging between 322 ± 3 and 302.2 ± 6.4 Ma [1]. This range of U-Pb ages from essentially the same intrusive body has been explained by the presence of inherited zircon grains, and disturbance of the U-Pb isotopic system due to zircon metamictization or late and post-magmatic and metamorphic alteration processes [1][2][3] [12,19,20]). The yellow rectangles on two insert maps show the area of the main map. Abbreviations: MO-Moldanubian Zone, MS-Moravo-Silesian Zone, RH-Rhenohercynian Zone, ST-Saxothuringian Zone, TB-Tepla-Barrandian Zone, TSS-Tepla-Saxothuringian Suture (inferred eastern continuation modified from [21]).
Two main textural types of granite can be distinguished. These are: (1) the "central granite", porphyritic coarse-and medium-grained granite occupying the main part of the pluton, and (2) the "ridge granite", equigranular fine-and medium-grained granite that forms the highest parts of the Karkonosze Mountains [18]. The porphyritic granites are mostly magnesian, whereas the equigranular granites are ferroan [22]. Both granite facies are calc-alkalic, with some alkali-calcic occurrences [1]. Pockets of biotite granite with granophyric texture are present in places within the equigranular granite. The porphyritic granite is rich in various types of hybrid enclaves, mostly MME (mafic microgranular enclaves), and in small isolated bodies of hybrid quartz diorite and granodiorite [17]. Subordinate varieties of KP granites include (a) aplogranite (the "granophyric granite") displaying a granophyric matrix and feldspar phenocrysts, which is poorly exposed within the porphyritic facies in the NE part of the pluton; (b) pale, medium-grained two-mica granite (the "Tanvald granite" type) of local extent at the SW margin of the pluton; and (c) fine-grained porphyritic granodiorite (the "Fojtka granite" type), forming a range of small bodies NE of Liberec ( Figure 1) [18,23].
Most ore mineralization is found in the northwestern part of the quarry, in quartz veins (with ores) from 1 to 25 mm thick. They mostly have a meridional strike and almost vertical dip.
The dominant ore minerals are chalcopyrite, pyrite and molybdenite, accompanied by wolframite, scheelite, cassiterite, native bismuth, bismuth sulfosalts as well as native Ag, Ti, Fe and Ti oxides (Figure 2A-C). Molybdenite occurs in quartz veinlets and as disseminations in aplogranite [49]. In addition, there is an association of U-Th minerals with rare minerals of REE, Y, Nb, Zr, and Li. The aplogranite hosting the quartz veinlets is silicified, sericitized, chloritized and albitized. Some elements are enriched in the altered granitoid (e.g., up to ca. 2500 ppm W, 50 ppm U, and/or 40 ppm Th) [16]. This ore mineralization is related to a long-lasting hydrothermal system in the KP spanning a narrow temperature range (405-375 °C) during the pneumatolitic stage. A subsequent hydrothermal stage records a wide range of temperatures from 375 to about 100 °C [50].

The Michałowice Quarry
The Michałowice quarry is located about 3 km east of Szklarska Poręba ( Figure 1). Extensive mineralization with sulfides of Mo, Fe, and Cu-As, as well as minerals bearing W, Sn, Th and REE, occurs in pegmatites and in quartz veins cutting coarse-grained porphyritic granite [41,43,46,[52][53][54]. Molybdenite and pyrite dominate in grey quartz veins with variable thickness, from a few mm to about 2 cm. These veins are almost vertical and mostly have a N-S strike. In addition, ore mineralization is present on fracture surfaces and within cataclastic parts of the porphyritic granite. Molybdenite occurs in quartz-feldspar pegmatite nests as single blades (<3 mm) or small aggregate crystals (up to 5 mm in diameter). Molybdenite is associated with wolframite (ferberite), scheelite, chalcopyrite, pyrite, native bismuth, bismuthinite, thorite, thucholite, gummite, galena, stolzite and tungstate minerals ( Figure 2D-F). Ilmenite in the porphyritic granite is commonly associated with rutile. Chalcopyrite and pyrite are rare and partially replaced by secondary Fe-hydroxides (goethite, malachite and other minerals). Biotite is strongly chloritized, especially along fractured surfaces.

The Michałowice Quarry
The Michałowice quarry is located about 3 km east of Szklarska Poręba ( Figure 1). Extensive mineralization with sulfides of Mo, Fe, and Cu-As, as well as minerals bearing W, Sn, Th and REE, occurs in pegmatites and in quartz veins cutting coarse-grained porphyritic granite [41,43,46,[52][53][54]. Molybdenite and pyrite dominate in grey quartz veins with variable thickness, from a few mm to about 2 cm. These veins are almost vertical and mostly have a N-S strike. In addition, ore mineralization is present on fracture surfaces and within cataclastic parts of the porphyritic granite. Molybdenite occurs in quartz-feldspar pegmatite nests as single blades (<3 mm) or small aggregate crystals (up to 5 mm in diameter). Molybdenite is associated with wolframite (ferberite), scheelite, chalcopyrite, pyrite, native bismuth, bismuthinite, thorite, thucholite, gummite, galena, stolzite and tungstate minerals ( Figure 2D-F). Ilmenite in the porphyritic granite is commonly associated with rutile. Chalcopyrite and pyrite are rare and partially replaced by secondary Fe-hydroxides (goethite, malachite and other minerals). Biotite is strongly chloritized, especially along fractured surfaces.
The rocks are strongly folded and cut by several faults that generally strike NE-SW, with dips of 65-75 • SE. These units originated in distant geotectonic environments, and were juxtaposed in a prism of nappes during the Variscan orogeny [11,58]. The supracrustal sequence in the Kowary-Czarnów unit [58] includes various mica slates and phyllonites, as well as marble inserts, calc-silicate rocks, and metavolcanics-various mafic amphibolites and felsic leptic rocks [59,60]. The upper age limit of the shale series is determined by the intrusion of the protolith of the Kowary gneisses (511-492 Ma; zircon U-Pb [13] and Pb-Pb [35,61]). The youngest (presumably Ordovician or Devonian) rocks of the Kowary-Czarnów Unit are biotite amphibolites that originated from the transformation of gabbros and diorites and now form lenses in the Kowary gneisses.
The Leszczyniec Unit consists exclusively of meta-igneous rocks of a spilite-keratophyre formation of Late Cambrian-Early Ordovician age (501.3 ± 3.1 Ma and 494 ± 2 Ma; zircon U-Pb [13,61]). They mostly have a geochemical signature typical of the N-MORB [62]. In the final phase of the Variscan orogeny, a post-kinematic intrusion of the Karkonosze granites was associated with the final phase of the D 2 extensional collapse [11]. Magma thermally affected the cover rocks, creating a hornfelsed zone. Further from the main body of the pluton, smaller granitoid, aplite or rhyolite veins were injected. During the D 3 deformation event, regional foliation steepened due to rotation around a NNE-SSW-trending axis of the so-called East Karkonosze Monocline [10]. The rotation post-dated emplacement of the KP and affected not only the metamorphic complexes at the eastern margin of the KIM, but also the adjacent Intra-Sudetic Basin. The rocks of the eastern margin units host several abandoned polymetallic ore deposits, especially along the contacts with the KP [31] The study area is located in the eastern part of the Karkonosze-Izera Massif (KIM), close to the Intra-Sudetic Fault [12] ( Figure 3A). This deposit belongs to the Miedzianka-Ciechanowice mining district, which was exploited from the Middle Ages until the 1950s. The bulk of the ore mineralization occurs in amphibolites, amphibolite or quartz-sericite schists, and skarns belonging to the Kowary-Czarnów Unit near its contact with the KP, but some underground workings in the easternmost part were cut into rocks of the Leszczyniec Unit [10,58,59]. These rocks, first metamorphosed to amphibolite grade, have a retrograde greenschist facies overprint [60]. The Western mining field is dominated by a magnetite-sphalerite-pyrite ore genetically connected with skarns, and by numerous small quartz-sulfide veins hosted by Early Palaeozoic volcanic-metasedimentary rocks [63][64][65]. Four main vein systems, dominated by W-E and NW-SE strikes and steep dips (70-80 • ) to the N or S-SE, have been distinguished ( Figure 3B). They have variable thickness (5-30 cm; maximum 3 m) and strike length (up to 200 m), and depth (100-120 m).
Minerals 2020, 10, x FOR PEER REVIEW 7 of 33 7 Figure 3. Geological sketch map with sampling sites (A) after [66] with mine workings and waste compiled from unpublished mining documents. (B) Geological cross-section of the Miedzianka deposit and its surroundings after [66].

The Czarnów As-Polymetallic Deposit
At the Czarnów deposit ( Figure 5), a steeply dipping (80°SE) quartz-ore vein is hosted by rocks belonging to the Kowary-Czarnów Unit [56]. They are bounded to the west by the KP, a mediumgrained phase, and to the east (along a dislocation) by the Leszczyniec unit ( Figure 5A). The unit has a local thickness of about 1 km, and extends NNE-SSW with a steep dip (65-80°) towards SE and S. A belt of orbicular and laminated Kowary gneiss 50-200 m wide is adjacent to the granite. The dominant lithology in the western (bottom) part of the unit is contact metamorphosed mica schist. There are intercalations of crystalline dolomites, calc-silicate rocks, skarns, biotite amphibolites and leptinites, and in the eastern (top) part, of diopside-hornblende amphibolites [60]. The quartz-ore vein is 0.5-3 m thick, about 500 m long and has a SW-NE strike. It was mined to a depth of ca. 200 m [31,[73][74][75][76]. The vein divides into 2 or 3 parts through the depth interval ca. 780-670 m a.s.l., giving the deposit a lenticular form ( Figure 5B). Numerous cracks and faults cross the vein, the most important of which are NW-SE directed (perpendicular to the foliation) sinistral and dextral strikeslip faults that dislocate the ore zone.

The Czarnów As-Polymetallic Deposit
At the Czarnów deposit ( Figure 5), a steeply dipping (80 • SE) quartz-ore vein is hosted by rocks belonging to the Kowary-Czarnów Unit [56]. They are bounded to the west by the KP, a medium-grained phase, and to the east (along a dislocation) by the Leszczyniec unit ( Figure 5A). The unit has a local thickness of about 1 km, and extends NNE-SSW with a steep dip (65-80 • ) towards SE and S. A belt of orbicular and laminated Kowary gneiss 50-200 m wide is adjacent to the granite. The dominant lithology in the western (bottom) part of the unit is contact metamorphosed mica schist. There are intercalations of crystalline dolomites, calc-silicate rocks, skarns, biotite amphibolites and leptinites, and in the eastern (top) part, of diopside-hornblende amphibolites [60]. The quartz-ore vein is 0.5-3 m thick, about 500 m long and has a SW-NE strike. It was mined to a depth of ca. 200 m [31,[73][74][75][76]. The vein divides into 2 or 3 parts through the depth interval ca. 780-670 m a.s.l., giving the deposit a lenticular form ( Figure 5B). Numerous cracks and faults cross the vein, the most important of which are NW-SE directed (perpendicular to the foliation) sinistral and dextral strike-slip faults that dislocate the ore zone. The ore mineralization is composed mostly of massive or coarse-grained euhedral crystals of arsenopyrite and pyrrhotite that form lens-like bodies within the main quartz vein, or semi-massive impregnations that form lens-like bodies in the country rocks ( Figure 6A,B). As a rule, massive arsenopyrite intergrowths with patches of fine-grained pyrrhotite, pyrite and chalcopyrite (up to 1.5 cm in size) were mined, as well as local enrichments of stibnite, cassiterite, magnetite or galena with sphalerite ( Figure 6C-E). Native gold occurs together with electrum ( Figure 6F), as well as Bi-and Ag-minerals as fine inclusions (up to 20 μm in size) and micro-veinlets within sulfides [75]. Other minerals present are: bornite, marcasite, tennantite, valleriite, cubanite, covellite, chalcocite, goethite, limonite, scorodite, digenite, rutile and leucoxene [73]. Gangue minerals are mainly quartz and to a lesser extent calcite, dolomite, feldspar, chlorite and amphibole. Crystallization temperatures of the quartz-sulfide (massive arsenopyrite-pyrrhotite-pyrite) ore veins were in the range ca. 550-200 °C (Mikulski, unpublished data). Two separate generations of early formed cassiterite crystallized at temperatures of 440-384 °C and 340-300 °C at a pressure of 1.2-1.1 kbar from a fluid with total salinity 24-16 wt.% of NaCl equivalent [74]. Several stages of ore crystallization have been identified, at least the main two of which were genetically associated with contact metasomatic and post-magmatic activity in the KP [31,[73][74][75][76]. The ore mineralization is composed mostly of massive or coarse-grained euhedral crystals of arsenopyrite and pyrrhotite that form lens-like bodies within the main quartz vein, or semi-massive impregnations that form lens-like bodies in the country rocks ( Figure 6A,B). As a rule, massive arsenopyrite intergrowths with patches of fine-grained pyrrhotite, pyrite and chalcopyrite (up to 1.5 cm in size) were mined, as well as local enrichments of stibnite, cassiterite, magnetite or galena with sphalerite ( Figure 6C-E). Native gold occurs together with electrum ( Figure 6F), as well as Bi-and Ag-minerals as fine inclusions (up to 20 µm in size) and micro-veinlets within sulfides [75]. Other minerals present are: bornite, marcasite, tennantite, valleriite, cubanite, covellite, chalcocite, goethite, limonite, scorodite, digenite, rutile and leucoxene [73]. Gangue minerals are mainly quartz and to a lesser extent calcite, dolomite, feldspar, chlorite and amphibole. Crystallization temperatures of the quartz-sulfide (massive arsenopyrite-pyrrhotite-pyrite) ore veins were in the range ca. 550-200 • C (Mikulski, unpublished data). Two separate generations of early formed cassiterite crystallized at temperatures of 440-384 • C and 340-300 • C at a pressure of 1.2-1.1 kbar from a fluid with total salinity 24-16 wt.% of NaCl equivalent [74]. Several stages of ore crystallization have been identified, at least the main two of which were genetically associated with contact metasomatic and post-magmatic activity in the KP [31,[73][74][75][76]. Minerals 2020, 10, x FOR PEER REVIEW 10 of 33

Samples for U-Pb Dating
Three samples of porphyritic ("central") granite, two of equigranular ("ridge") granite and one of rhyolite porphyry were collected for zircon U-Pb dating. The granite samples came from the central part of the KP, as well as from the eastern margin along the contact with the rocks of the eastern metamorphic cover (Figures 1, 3A and 5A, Appendix B). The rhyolite sample was collected from the mine waste of the abandoned underground workings of the Miedzianka Cu-polymetallic deposit ( Figure 3A).
The porphyritic monzogranite samples (M12, J14, C13) have a medium-to coarse-grained matrix composed of pink K-feldspar, whitish plagioclase, grey quartz and minor biotite ( Figure 7A). The matrix encloses large euhedral phenocrysts of K-feldspar, usually with Carlsbad twinning and whitish plagioclase rims (rapakivi-type), and much rarer, smaller plagioclase phenocrysts. The rocks are porphyritic to varying degrees. Feldspar phenocrysts commonly reach 10-30 mm diameter, and sporadically up to 70 mm. They are usually pink, but also white or white-beige. The granite contains anhedral quartz (30-40 vol. %), anhedral-subhedral K-feldspar (10-30 vol. %), subhedral-euhedral plagioclase (25-35 vol. %), biotite (5-10 vol. %) and accessory apatite, zircon, titanite, magnetite, ilmenite, monazite, leucoxene and epidote group minerals. Porphyritic granite from the Michałowice quarry contains K-feldspar phenocrysts filled with numerous thin, vein-like perthites and inclusions of plagioclase that are imbricated in places, as well as small inclusions of quartz and biotite. The plagioclase (An 0-39%) is zoned and displays albite and Carlsbad twinning ( Figure 7B), [18]. The plagioclase is sericitized, epidotized and myrmekitic. Biotite occurs as automorphic hexagonal plates that in places are partly chloritized, as is the rare hornblende. The biotite contains inclusions of zircon and apatite. Granite sample C13 is characterized by a uniform matrix with grain size of up to 2 mm, with larger hypautomorphic white and beige feldspar phenocrysts (5-20 mm) and automorphic quartz grains ( Figure 7C). Plagioclase (An 10-15%) forms myrmekite intercalations with quartz or is locally grow on potassium feldspar, in places replacing it. The plagioclase is sericitized and kaolinitized to varying degrees, and biotite is chloritized, with the appearance of the characteristic

Samples for U-Pb Dating
Three samples of porphyritic ("central") granite, two of equigranular ("ridge") granite and one of rhyolite porphyry were collected for zircon U-Pb dating. The granite samples came from the central part of the KP, as well as from the eastern margin along the contact with the rocks of the eastern metamorphic cover ( Figures 1, 3A and 5A, Appendix B). The rhyolite sample was collected from the mine waste of the abandoned underground workings of the Miedzianka Cu-polymetallic deposit ( Figure 3A).
The porphyritic monzogranite samples (M12, J14, C13) have a medium-to coarse-grained matrix composed of pink K-feldspar, whitish plagioclase, grey quartz and minor biotite ( Figure 7A). The matrix encloses large euhedral phenocrysts of K-feldspar, usually with Carlsbad twinning and whitish plagioclase rims (rapakivi-type), and much rarer, smaller plagioclase phenocrysts. The rocks are porphyritic to varying degrees. Feldspar phenocrysts commonly reach 10-30 mm diameter, and sporadically up to 70 mm. They are usually pink, but also white or white-beige. The granite contains anhedral quartz (30-40 vol. %), anhedral-subhedral K-feldspar (10-30 vol. %), subhedral-euhedral plagioclase (25-35 vol. %), biotite (5-10 vol. %) and accessory apatite, zircon, titanite, magnetite, ilmenite, monazite, leucoxene and epidote group minerals. Porphyritic granite from the Michałowice quarry contains K-feldspar phenocrysts filled with numerous thin, vein-like perthites and inclusions of plagioclase that are imbricated in places, as well as small inclusions of quartz and biotite. The plagioclase (An 0-39%) is zoned and displays albite and Carlsbad twinning ( Figure 7B), [18]. The plagioclase is sericitized, epidotized and myrmekitic. Biotite occurs as automorphic hexagonal plates that in places are partly chloritized, as is the rare hornblende. The biotite contains inclusions of zircon and apatite. Granite sample C13 is characterized by a uniform matrix with grain size of up to 2 mm, with larger hypautomorphic white and beige feldspar phenocrysts (5-20 mm) and automorphic quartz grains ( Figure 7C). Plagioclase (An 10-15%) forms myrmekite intercalations with quartz or is locally grow on potassium feldspar, in places replacing it. The plagioclase is sericitized and kaolinitized to varying degrees, and biotite is chloritized, with the appearance of the characteristic sagenite grid. Muscovite appears in the small aggregates, locally. Accessory minerals include zircon, monazite, titanite, magnetite leucoxene and apatite.
On Harker diagrams both granite facies display similar geochemical trends for the major oxides. They show a systematic decrease in Al 2 O 3 , Na 2 O, P 2 O 5 , TiO 2 , Fe 2 O 3 , CaO and MgO, as well as in Sr, V and Ba with increasing SiO 2 [17,18]. Only K 2 O correlates positively with SiO 2 . For SiO 2 contents from 69.3 to 77.9 wt.%, K 2 O and Na 2 O concentrations range from 2.9 to 6.1 wt.%, and from 2.8 to 4.2 wt.%, respectively ( Figure 8). The very homogeneous equigranular granite is SiO 2 -rich (73.01-78.50 wt.%) with low Mg-number (atomic Mg/(Mg + Fe)) values of 0.11-0.38, [17]. The equigranular granite is mostly peraluminous, with A/CNK (Al 2 O 3 /(CaO + Na 2 O + K 2 O)) ranging from 0.98 to 1.14 [16]. The porphyritic granite has the same characteristics, except that it ranges towards slightly lower SiO 2 contents and higher Mg-number (0.47). Some samples are significantly poorer in K 2 O than the equigranular granite ( Figure 8).

Analytical Methods
Approximately 3-5 kg of each rock sample were crushed and the heavy mineral fraction (<250 µm) separated using standard low-contamination heavy liquid and magnetic separation procedures. Zircon grains were handpicked, mounted in epoxy resin with reference zircon SL13 (U = 238 ppm) and TEMORA 2 ( 206 Pb*/ 238 U = 0.06683), sectioned, polished, imaged (SEM and optical microscope), cleaned and Au coated for SHRIMP analysis at the Research School of Earth Sciences, ANU, using well-established procedures [78,79]. The data were processed by linear time interpolation [78,79] using PRAWN and LEAD software written by T. Ireland, and where necessary corrected for high-U matrix effects [80]. Concordia plots were prepared using ISOPLOT software written by K. Ludwig [81], and weighted mean ages calculated from 206 Pb/ 238 U, corrected for late Carboniferous common Pb using 207 Pb. Individual analyses are plotted with 1σ error ellipses, and uncertainties in the weighted mean ages, which include the uncertainty in the standardization (0.3%), are quoted at the 95% confidence level (tσ where 't' is Student's t).
Detailed mineralogical and petrographic examinations of samples of six igneous rocks and ore mineralization from the sampled sites, together with photo-micrographic documentation, were carried out on a NIKON ECLIPSE LV100 POL microscope containing NIS-Elements software (Version 3.22). Selected ore minerals were investigated using a LEO-1430 (Obekochen, Germany,) electron microscope (ZEISS) with an EDS (energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscope) detector, then analyzed using a Cameca SX-100 EPMA (Gennevilliers, Cedex, France) equipped with five wavelength dispersive X-ray spectrometers (WDS). The operating parameters were: accelerating voltage 15 kV, beam current 20 nA, and focused beam (<1 µm diameter); acquisition times at the peak position 20 s, at the background position 10 s, and carbon sputtering; international (commercial) standards used were from the SPI-53 set from SPI and from the sulf-16 set from P&H. CAMECA software and procedures were used for a final correction of all measured elements.
Chemical analyses of the six igneous rock samples were carried out by wavelength dispersive X-ray fluorescence spectrometry (WD-XRF) using a Philips PW-2400 spectrometer at the Chemical The selected zircon grains from Michałowice porphyritic monzogranite sample M12 were medium to large (50-200 µm diameter), clear to slightly turbid, colorless to pale pink, euhedral crystals with simple crystal form and aspect ratios of 2-7:1. They had numerous fine mineral inclusions, and many were finely fractured. Concentric zoning was visible in many grains in transmitted light. Cathodoluminescence (CL) imaging showed mostly simple concentric or banded oscillatory zoning in all grains, most grains consisting of zircon with relatively strong luminescence surrounded by finely zoned, weakly luminescent zircon ( Figure 10A). About 25% of the grains contained a core with zoning discordant relative to that in the rim. The aim was to date the emplacement of the granite, so only simply zoned zircon near the margins or terminations of the grains was analyzed. The U contents of the analyzed zircon were consistently moderately high (~1080-2525 ppm) and Th/U was relatively uniform (most 0.18-0.34), (Appendix C). Except for one analysis (2.1), common Pb contents were low.
The U-Pb isotopic compositions were all concordant within analytical uncertainty but the radiogenic 206 Pb/ 238 U ratios were scattered ( Figure 10B). The analysis with high common Pb had very low 206 Pb/ 238 U, consistent with Pb migration both out of and into the analyzed spot. Omitting that analysis left a cluster of 12 analyses still with a small but significant scatter (MSWD (Mean Squared Weighted Deviation) = 2.5). The scatter was due to two analyses (6.1, 12.1) that were low, probably also due to radiogenic Pb loss. Omitting those left 10 analyses equal within analytical uncertainty (MSWD = 1.5), giving a weighted mean 206 Pb/ 238 U age of 308.4 ± 2.3 Ma (95% c.l.), ( Figure 10B). 6.2. Equigranular Granite (Samples S1, and J15) 6.2.1. Szklarska Poręba Huta Granite Quarry (Sample S1) The selected zircon grains from equigranular granite sample S1 collected at the Szklarska Poręba Huta quarry were small to medium (~50-150 μm diameter), clear to quite turbid, pale pink to The selected zircon grains from porphyritic monzogranite sample J14 were medium to large (~100-200 µm diameter), clear to slightly turbid, colorless to pale pink, euhedral crystals with simple crystal forms and aspect ratios of 2-7:1. The longest grains lacked terminations due to breakage, presumably during rock crushing. They contained numerous acicular inclusions (apatite?) and were mostly finely fractured. Concentric growth zoning was visible in some grains in transmitted light. CL imaging showed that most grains were relatively weakly luminescent, consisting of a center commonly with poorly developed zoning surrounded by zircon with fine concentric oscillatory zoning ( Figure 10C). The center of some grains was occupied by a large non-luminescent inclusion. Cores with zoning discordant to the rims were rare. U-Pb analyses of simply zoned zircon from 16 grains showed mostly moderate U contents (~400-1000 ppm), a range of Th/U (0.30-0.92) and consistently low common Pb contents. All the isotopic analyses were concordant within analytical uncertainty ( Figure 10D) but there was a range in radiogenic 206 Pb/ 238 U (MSWD = 3.4). One analysis (1.1), perhaps partially sampling a core, was much higher than the rest. Omitting it reduced the scatter but did not eliminate it (MSWD = 2.6). The scatter was due to two low analyses (5.1, 9.1) showing Pb loss, one of which had a high U content. Omitting those left 13 analyses with equal 206 Pb/ 238 U within analytical uncertainty (MSWD = 1.0), giving a weighted mean 206 Pb/ 238 U age of 310.8 ± 2.6 Ma (95% c.l.) ( Figure 10D).

Czarnów Au-As-Polymetallic Deposit (Sample C13)
The selected zircon grains from Czarnów porphyritic granite sample C13 were medium to large (~100-200 µm diameter), clear, colorless to pale pink, euhedral crystals with simple crystal forms and aspect ratios of 2-5:1. They contained both mineral and fluid inclusions, many grains having axial cavities. Fractures were rare. Some grains were partly discolored by rusty iron staining. CL imaging showed that most of the grains had fine concentric or banded oscillatory zoning ( Figure 10E). About 10% of the grains contained a core with zoning discordant to the rim. Analyses of 13 grains, avoiding cores, showed moderate U contents (most 200-560 ppm) and Th/U ratios (0.28-0.72). The U-Pb isotopic analyses, only one of which had a moderate common Pb content, formed a single concordant cluster with no significant scatter in radiogenic 206 Pb/ 238 U (MSWD = 0.9). The weighted mean 206 Pb/ 238 U age from 14 analyses was 312.0 ± 2.9 Ma (95% c.l.), ( Figure 10F).

Equigranular
Granite (Samples S1, and J15) 6.2.1. Szklarska Poręba Huta Granite Quarry (Sample S1) The selected zircon grains from equigranular granite sample S1 collected at the Szklarska Poręba Huta quarry were small to medium (~50-150 µm diameter), clear to quite turbid, pale pink to brownish, euhedral to subhedral crystals with mostly simple crystal forms and low aspect ratios of 1-3:1. Most grains were finely fractured and contained few inclusions. Rarely, concentric zoning was visible in transmitted light. There was a large contrast in CL. About 40% of the grains consisted of a brightly luminescent center with indistinct to weak zoning surrounded by very weakly luminescent zircon with simple, fine concentric oscillatory zoning ( Figure 11A). The remaining grains consisted entirely of very weakly luminescent zircon with simple fine zoning. Texturally distinct cores were rare. Sixteen U-Pb analyses, mostly of weakly luminescent, finely zoned zircon, showed consistently high U contents (1070-3335 ppm), a narrow range of Th/U (0.19-0.48), and many high common Pb contents, up to 435 ppb 204 Pb. The isotopic compositions were nevertheless concordant within analytical uncertainty ( Figure 11B), but scattered in radiogenic 206 Pb/ 238 U (MSWD = 22). Much of the scatter was due to one very low analysis affected by Pb loss (10.1), omitting which reduced the MSWD to 13.1. Three other analyses (3.1, 5.1, 12.1), all with moderate to high common Pb contents, fell below the main group. Omitting those, assuming radiogenic Pb loss, reduced the MSWD to 4.3, but significant scatter still remained. This could be eliminated in two ways: by omitting high and low analyses from the group in order of the size of their deviation from the mean, or by taking only those analyses with low common Pb contents, all of which gave relatively high 206 Pb/ 238 U. The first process resulted in the omission of one additional low analysis and three high ones, leaving nine analyses equal within analytical uncertainty, giving a weighted mean age 301.9 ± 2.5 Ma (95% c.l.). The second process left only five analyses equal within analytical uncertainty (MSWD = 0.96), resulting in a weighted mean age of 306.9 ± 3.0 Ma (95% c.l.). Despite the lower number of analyses retained in the latter case, that result is preferred because the presence of common Pb is indicative of open system behavior and Pb isotopic exchange, which commonly results in reduced radiogenic 206 Pb/ 238 U. The best age estimate is therefore that based on those grains in which the isotopic system is most likely to have remained closed, 306.9 ± 3.0 Ma (95% c.l.), ( Figure 11B). complex pyramidal terminations. CL imaging showed that the two zircon types had different zoning textures ( Figure 11E). The stubby euhedral grains had very weak luminescence and broad sector zoning; the more elongate grains had stronger luminescence and a range of textures from fine concentric to broad banded oscillatory zoning. Several of the elongate grains had features indicative of partial recrystallization. Of the 14 grains analyzed, 10 were stubby and weakly luminescent, 4 were elongate with banded zoning. The two zircon types had contrasting U contents (~1450-2100 ppm in the stubby grains, ~110-1250 ppm in the elongate grains) and Th/U (~0.4-0.6 and ~0.35-0.88, respectively). Isotopic analyses of all except two grains with high common Pb contents formed a nearconcordant cluster at about 300 Ma ( Figure 11F), but there was nevertheless a significant range in radiogenic 206 Pb/ 238 U (MSWD = 5.0). The scatter was mainly due to the analyses of two stubby grains (1.1, 3.1), which had significantly lower and higher 206 Pb/ 238 U respectively than the main group.
Omitting those analyses reduced the scatter significantly but did not eliminate it (MSWD = 2.2). That could only be done by also omitting one other low analysis (2.1). Doing so left nine analyses with equal radiogenic 206 Pb/ 238 U within uncertainty (MSWD = 1.1), giving a weighted mean age of 300.7 ± 2.4 Ma (95% c.l.), ( Figure 11F). Both types of zircon are the same age within analytical uncertainty.

Janowice Wielkie (Sample J15)
The selected zircon grains from equigranular granite sample J15 were medium to large (~100-200 µm diameter), clear to quite turbid, colorless to pale pink, euhedral to subhedral crystals with mostly simple crystal forms and aspect ratios of 2-5:1 ( Figure 11C). They contained numerous acicular inclusions, were finely fractured, and some concentric zoning was visible in transmitted light. A few grains showed signs of weak partial dissolution. CL imaging showed a range of textures. Some grains (~20%) had fine concentric oscillatory zoning throughout. In most grains the zoning in the center was indistinct or irregular and associated with large, non-luminescent inclusions. The centers mostly had somewhat brighter luminescence than the weakly luminescent zoned zircon surrounding them. Twelve U-Pb analyses of mostly simply zoned zircon showed a wide range of moderate to high U contents (~250-4950 ppm), a limited range of Th/U (most 0.28-0.43) and, with one exception (5.1, the highest-U grain), low common Pb contents. The U-Pb isotopic analyses were all concordant within analytical uncertainty ( Figure 11D), but with a large range in radiogenic 206 Pb/ 238 U (MSWD = 155). Much of the scatter was due to the grain with high U and high common Pb (5.1), which had very low 206 Pb/ 238 U. Omitting that analysis, assuming an open system, the MSWD fell to 11.4. Even omitting four other analyses (4.1, 6.12, 7.1, 11.1) that plotted significantly below the main group because of Pb loss did not eliminate the scatter entirely (MSWD = 2.5), but there remained no other obvious outliers. Accepting that the remaining 7 analyzed spots are not the same isotopic composition within analytical uncertainty and probably isotopically disturbed, the weighted mean 206 Pb/ 238 U age is 309.5 ± 4.5 Ma (95% c.l.), the larger uncertainty reflecting the presence of excess scatter ( Figure 11D).

Rhyolite Porphyry (Sample M2)
The mix of zircon types in the Miedzianka rhyolite porphyry sample M2 resembled that in the rhyolite porphyry from Wielisławka (sample W4, [82]), but with more fracturing. There were two zircon subpopulations: 1) stubby euhedral grains 20-100 µm diameter with low aspect ratios (≤ 2:1) and 2) finer (≤ 50 µm diameter) more elongate (aspect ratio 2-4:1) subhedral grains, some with more complex pyramidal terminations. CL imaging showed that the two zircon types had different zoning textures ( Figure 11E). The stubby euhedral grains had very weak luminescence and broad sector zoning; the more elongate grains had stronger luminescence and a range of textures from fine concentric to broad banded oscillatory zoning. Several of the elongate grains had features indicative of partial recrystallization. Of the 14 grains analyzed, 10 were stubby and weakly luminescent, 4 were elongate with banded zoning. The two zircon types had contrasting U contents (~1450-2100 ppm in the stubby grains,~110-1250 ppm in the elongate grains) and Th/U (~0.4-0.6 and~0.35-0.88, respectively). Isotopic analyses of all except two grains with high common Pb contents formed a near-concordant cluster at about 300 Ma ( Figure 11F), but there was nevertheless a significant range in radiogenic 206 Pb/ 238 U (MSWD = 5.0). The scatter was mainly due to the analyses of two stubby grains (1.1, 3.1), which had significantly lower and higher 206 Pb/ 238 U respectively than the main group. Omitting those analyses reduced the scatter significantly but did not eliminate it (MSWD = 2.2). That could only be done by also omitting one other low analysis (2.1). Doing so left nine analyses with equal radiogenic 206 Pb/ 238 U within uncertainty (MSWD = 1.1), giving a weighted mean age of 300.7 ± 2.4 Ma (95% c.l.), ( Figure 11F). Both types of zircon are the same age within analytical uncertainty.

U-Pb Geochronology
Zircon U-Pb dating of five granitoids from the central region and eastern margin of the Variscan Karkonosze Pluton, and a rhyolite dyke cutting the metamorphosed cover sequence at the Miedzianka Cu -(U) deposit, yields 206 Pb/ 238 U ages in the range from 312.0 ± 2.9 to 300.7 ± 2.4 Ma (Figure 12). All the igneous rocks investigated came from zones containing a variety of ore mineralization, the genesis of which was associated mainly with the development of pneumatolitic-hydrothermal and contact-metasomatic processes connected with magmatic evolution of the KP [31]. The oldest dated rocks were two monzogranite porphyries from the direct contact zone between the granitoids and mineral deposits at Czarnów (312.0 ± 2.9 Ma) and Miedzianka (310.8 ± 2.6 Ma). A third sample of coarse monzogranite porphyry from the granite quarry at Michałowice yielded 206 Pb/ 238 U age of 308.4 ± 2.3 Ma. The ages of equigranular monzogranite samples collected from the area close to the Miedzianka deposit and from the granite quarry at Szklarska Poręba Huta were 309.5 ± 4.5 and 306.9 ± 3.0 Ma, respectively.  The zircon 206 Pb/ 238 U age of 300.7 ± 2.4 Ma for rhyolite porphyry from the Miedzianka deposit also constrains the timing of tectonic movements along the major Intra Sudetic Fault Zone (ISF). If the rhyolite porphyry is syntectonic the U-Pb age is a minimum age constraint on shear zone activity. The dated rhyolite dyke strikes parallel to the ISF. It intruded after granite emplacement during regional movement along the ISF and the on lap of the Leszczyniec Unit ( Figure 3A) [10]. At the end of the Carboniferous, the geotectonic setting of the central European Variscides changed from postcollisional to within-plate [12], accompanied by tectonic and volcanic activity. Relatively late sinistral movement along the ISF has cut off part of the contact aureole of the KP against the Kaczawa Complex to the NE (Figure 1), providing evidence that the movement post-dated the emplacement All samples contained zircon with abnormally high U and Th contents (Appendix C), a feature noted in several previous studies of zircon from the KP [1,2,39,40]. U contents of the analyzed zircon from the porphyritic monzogranite were up to 2525 ppm, from the equigranular monzogranite up to 4950 ppm, and from the rhyolite up to 2100 ppm. Those are underestimates of the maximum U contents in the zircon populations as the analyzed spots were carefully selected so as to avoid high-U areas and minimize the effects of metamictization and hydrothermal alteration-Radiogenic Pb loss and high common Pb. Such effects are one of the major difficulties in zircon dating the various phases of the KP [38], and result from the abnormally high U and Th contents of many of the KP granites (U 1-49 ppm, Th 8-54 ppm, Th/U 1-10) [16], and the postmagmatic hydrothermal activity that produced the small mineral deposits and numerous manifestations of uranium mineralization in the KP itself and in its immediate vicinity [16,31,47,63,64].
Most of the zircon U-Pb ages previously reported from the two main rock types in the KP are in the range ca. 315-306 Ma (Figure 13). The range of results from the present study is similar, 312.0 ± 2.9 to 306.9 ± 3.0 Ma (Figure 12). Although this range is not significant given the analytical uncertainties, the fact that the age of the equigranular monzogranite from the Szklarska Poręba Huta quarry is at the younger end of the range is consistent with the field relationships between porphyritic and equigranular monzogranite at that site. There are several other sites where equigranular granite has intruded older porphyritic granite [24], although according to some petrological [17] and geochronological studies [39], the age relationship between those two main facies remains unresolved ( Figure 13).  The zircon 206 Pb/ 238 U age of 300.7 ± 2.4 Ma for rhyolite porphyry from the Miedzianka deposit also constrains the timing of tectonic movements along the major Intra Sudetic Fault Zone (ISF). If the rhyolite porphyry is syntectonic the U-Pb age is a minimum age constraint on shear zone activity. The dated rhyolite dyke strikes parallel to the ISF. It intruded after granite emplacement during regional movement along the ISF and the on lap of the Leszczyniec Unit ( Figure 3A) [10]. At the end of the Carboniferous, the geotectonic setting of the central European Variscides changed from postcollisional to within-plate [12], accompanied by tectonic and volcanic activity. Relatively late sinistral movement along the ISF has cut off part of the contact aureole of the KP against the Kaczawa Complex to the NE (Figure 1), providing evidence that the movement post-dated the emplacement of the KP [86]. The youngest result, 300.7 ± 2.4 Ma, came from zircon from the rhyolite porphyry dyke cutting metamorphic rocks in the area of the Miedzianka deposit. This is similar to the zircon age previously measured on KP microgranular dykes, 303.8 ± 2.2 Ma [3], and is about 8.8 Ma younger than the weighted mean age for the five monzogranites dated for the present study. It is also similar to the age of magmatic-volcanic processes in the Intra-Sudetic Basin adjacent to the eastern KP. Regional Permo-Carboniferous extension in that within-plate basin was accompanied by extensive bimodal sub-volcanic and volcanic magmatism over the period 306 ± 3 Ma to 299 ± 4 Ma [82][83][84][85]. That volcanism was accompanied by hydrothermal activity responsible for base metal sulfide mineralization which, in several places in the Western Sudetes, and especially in the Eastern Karkonosze, fractured and overprinted earlier high-temperature ore mineralization (Mo-W-Sn-REE-Fe-Cu-As).
The zircon 206 Pb/ 238 U age of 300.7 ± 2.4 Ma for rhyolite porphyry from the Miedzianka deposit also constrains the timing of tectonic movements along the major Intra Sudetic Fault Zone (ISF). If the rhyolite porphyry is syntectonic the U-Pb age is a minimum age constraint on shear zone activity. The dated rhyolite dyke strikes parallel to the ISF. It intruded after granite emplacement during regional movement along the ISF and the on lap of the Leszczyniec Unit ( Figure 3A) [10]. At the end of the Carboniferous, the geotectonic setting of the central European Variscides changed from post-collisional to within-plate [12], accompanied by tectonic and volcanic activity. Relatively late sinistral movement along the ISF has cut off part of the contact aureole of the KP against the Kaczawa Complex to the NE (Figure 1), providing evidence that the movement post-dated the emplacement of the KP [86].

Re-Os Geochronology of Ore Mineralization
Comparison of the U-Pb data with Re-Os dating of sulfides (mainly molybdenites) from the same sites in the Karkonosze massif and in the Eastern Karkonosze [5,6,87,88] (Figure 12) provides insights into the mineralization process. Comparison with the molybdenite data reveals both age similarities and small differences, recognizing that two different radiometric clocks, U-Pb and Re-Os, are recording the timing of crystallization of two different minerals in a complex magmatic setting.
Dating of molybdenite from the Szklarska Poręba Huta (SPH) quarry identified two different age groups-older (323 ± 1 Ma) and younger (310 ± 1 to 307 ± 2 Ma) [5,6,88]. The younger results are consistent with our U-Pb dating of equigranular monzogranite (306.9 ± 3.0 Ma), and also with all other U-Pb dating of both types of monzogranite (porphyritic and equigranular) from the SPH quarry (ca. 314-304 Ma) [1,2,[36][37][38][39]. The molybdenite occurs with other sulfides, sulfosalts, oxides and REE, Th and U minerals within coarse-grained pegmatite quartz-feldspar intergrowths in aplogranite ( Figure 14A). Both types have low concentrations of Re (ca. 0.32 and 0.12 ppm, respectively), [6]. The molybdenite ages are consistent with our zircon ages, and also with previously determined Rb-Sr ages of equigranular granite (310 ± 14 Ma [32] and 309 ± 3 Ma [33]) and the Sm-Nd age of a porphyritic granite enclave from Mały Staw (309 ± 17 Ma [25]). They are also consistent with a refined 206 Pb/ 238 U age (306 ± 4 Ma) of zircon from the SPH porphyritic granite [1]. These Re-Os molybdenite ages from the Szklarska Poręba Huta quarry are comparable to molybdenite ages from quartz-feldspar veins in the Paszowice quarry, Strzegom-Sobótka Massif, Fore-Sudetic Block, 309 ± 1 to 304 ± 1 Ma [89]. The older molybdenite age (323 ± 1 Ma, Re = 0.18 ppm with 187 Os = 0.6141 ppb) has no equigranular monzogranite age equivalent, though a SIMS age of chemically treated zircon from the porphyritic granite is similar [38]. Cu deposit located directly to the north in the Kaczawa Mountains, and with the Re-Os age of LLHR Co-rich arsenopyrite from the Klecza-Radomice Au deposit (316.6 ± 0.4 Ma) [91,92]. These were the first Re-Os ages for Co-As sulfide minerals, establishing the utility of Co-As-rich sulfides for Re-Os dating fifteen years ago. The ages of ∼315 Ma are close to Re-Os molybdenite data (313-312 Ma) reported for the Fe-Cu-As Obří důl skarn mineralization from the exocontact of the Krkonoše-Jizera Plutonic Complex [93]. Some older molybdenite has been reported from the KP area, including samples from the Szklarska Poręba Huta and Łomnica Górna quarries. The older molybdenite from Szklarska Poręba occurs as rosette aggregates overgrowing vein quartz ( Figure 14H). Concentrations of Re (0.18 ppm) and 187 Os (0.6 ppb) yielded an age of 323.0 ± 1.0 Ma [51]. Molybdenite from Łomnica yielded a slightly older Re-Os age of 326.0 ± 1.0 Ma from the KP ( Figure 14I) [87]. Significantly, both these molybdenites were hosted by quartz veins and occur in the form of different size aggregates associated with Fe and Cu sulfides, ilmenite and Bi minerals. The molybdenite from Łomnica, however, formed somewhat larger rosette aggregates and had higher concentrations of Re (36 ppm). These older molybdenites from the KP correlate with molybdenite ages obtained for Sn-W-(Li) deposits in the Erzgebirge metallogenetic province which indicate the predominance of one and/or multiple short-time mineralization events taking place between ∼319 and 323 Ma [94].  At 315.0 ± 1.0 Ma [5], molybdenite from a pegmatitic quartz-feldspar intergrowth in porphyritic monzogranite from the Michałowice quarry is about 7 Ma older than the zircon age of the monzogranite measured in this study (308.4 ± 2.3 Ma). Re and Os concentrations are 8.5 ppm and 28 ppb. Molybdenite occurs as separate coarse-grained aggregates of hexagonal plates, accompanied by chalcopyrite, pyrite, wolframite, cassiterite, scheelite and arsenopyrite ( Figure 14B) and minor superimposed galena, sphalerite, and Au-and U-mineralization [16]. Both ages are within uncertainty of previously reported U-Pb zircon ages for porphyritic monzogranite from the Michałowice quarry (311.4 ± 3.6 Ma, [39] and 312.4 ± 0.3 Ma [2]), but younger than the result obtained from chemically abraded zircon at 319 ± 3 Ma [38]. They are also within uncertainty of the U-Pb ages measured here on porphyritic and equigranular monzogranites from the area of the Miedzianka and Czarnów deposits, 312.0 ± 2.9 Ma to 309.5 ± 4.5 Ma.
The Re-Os ages of molybdenite from deposits in the eastern cover of the KP are in the same range, especially those of two molybdenite samples from the Kowary Fe-U deposit. That deposit is located a few kilometers south of the Czarnów deposit along the contact with the KP. The two samples have Re contents of 22.4 ppm and 2.97 ppm with respective 187 Os contents of 73.4 ppb and 9.7 ppb, and both yield the same age of 312.0 ± 1.0 Ma ( Figure 14C-E). These ages are also close to a Re-Os age from molybdenite from Miedzianka and arsenopyrite from Czarnów. Molybdenite from Miedzianka occurs as tiny blades (<0.5 mm) which form an aggregate (up to 50 mm) intergrown with quartz ( Figure 14F). This gangue quartz may also contain K-feldspar and fine-grained pyrite. The concentrations of Re and Os in molybdenite from Miedzianka are very low (Re 0.22 ppm and Os 0.5-0.7 ppb). Consequently, two very different ages were obtained, one which may be compromised and one with a larger than desired uncertainty (305 ± 15 Ma) [51].
A similar Re-Os age (312 ± 3 Ma) has been measured on Co-bearing arsenopyrite ( Figure 14G) from the contact-metasomatic and hydrothermal quartz/lode type As-polymetallic Czarnów deposit [51]. Only one of the five analyzed sulfides, however, had a high enough 187 Re/ 188 Os (>18,000) to calculate a reliable model age [51]. Ages calculated using a range of possible initial 187 Os/ 188 Os ratios show that the Re-Os age for this Low Level Highly Radiogenic (LLHR; [90]) massive arsenopyrite is almost certainly between 315 and 309 Ma. This result is in broad agreement with the previously published Re-Os isochron age of Co-rich arsenopyrite (317 ± 17 Ma) from the Radzimowice Au-As-Cu deposit located directly to the north in the Kaczawa Mountains, and with the Re-Os age of LLHR Co-rich arsenopyrite from the Klecza-Radomice Au deposit (316.6 ± 0.4 Ma) [91,92]. These were the first Re-Os ages for Co-As sulfide minerals, establishing the utility of Co-As-rich sulfides for Re-Os dating fifteen years ago. The ages of ∼315 Ma are close to Re-Os molybdenite data (313-312 Ma) reported for the Fe-Cu-As Obří důl skarn mineralization from the exocontact of the Krkonoše-Jizera Plutonic Complex [93].
Some older molybdenite has been reported from the KP area, including samples from the Szklarska Poręba Huta and Łomnica Górna quarries. The older molybdenite from Szklarska Poręba occurs as rosette aggregates overgrowing vein quartz ( Figure 14H). Concentrations of Re (0.18 ppm) and 187 Os (0.6 ppb) yielded an age of 323.0 ± 1.0 Ma [51]. Molybdenite from Łomnica yielded a slightly older Re-Os age of 326.0 ± 1.0 Ma from the KP ( Figure 14I) [87]. Significantly, both these molybdenites were hosted by quartz veins and occur in the form of different size aggregates associated with Fe and Cu sulfides, ilmenite and Bi minerals. The molybdenite from Łomnica, however, formed somewhat larger rosette aggregates and had higher concentrations of Re (36 ppm). These older molybdenites from the KP correlate with molybdenite ages obtained for Sn-W-(Li) deposits in the Erzgebirge metallogenetic province which indicate the predominance of one and/or multiple short-time mineralization events taking place between ∼319 and 323 Ma [94].
The formation of the few older molybdenites may have been associated with an early episode of pneumatolitic-hydrothermal processes in the KP, which is also supported by 40 Ar/ 39 Ar (320 ± 2 Ma [34]) and Rb-Sr (328 ± 12 Ma [25]) dates, as well as the chemically abraded zircon age of one porphyritic granite (322 ± 3 Ma [1]). They are, however, about 10 Ma older than U-Pb zircon ages measured in the present study on porphyritic and equigranular monzogranite host rocks from the same areas. The few older zircon 206 Pb/ 238 U ages, e.g., the CA zircon date from Michałowice (319 ± 3 Ma [1]), the zircon U-Pb dates from the Szklarska Poręba Huta (322 ± 3 Ma) and the southern part of the KP (320.1 ± 3.0 to 319.5 ± 2.3 Ma) [28], would benefit from further examination. Pneumatolitic and hydrothermal activity in the KP may have lasted for >30 million years, but additional Re-Os and U-Pb dating is required before the full duration is realized.

1.
SHRIMP zircon U-Pb dating of five igneous rocks from the Karkonosze Pluton yields 206 Pb/ 238 U ages in the range 312 ± 3 to 308 ± 2 Ma, identical within uncertainty with U-Pb results from the Variscan younger magmatic event in the Sudetes. The U-Pb ages are also consistent with Re-Os ages (315 ± 1 to 307 ± 2 Ma) for the younger generation of molybdenites from pegmatites and veins hosted by the Karkonosze Pluton, as well as from polymetallic deposits (Kowary, Miedzianka and Czarnów) located along its contact with metamorphic cover in the Eastern Karkonosze.
Molybdenite belongs to the Mo-W-Sn-Fe-Cu-As-REE-Nb-Y-U-Th mineral paragenesis related to precipitation from pneumatolitic and hydrothermal fluids of magmatic origin that are likely to have been circulating, and in some places post-dating that process by a few millions of years.

2.
The younger 206 Pb/ 238 U age of 300.7 ± 2.4 Ma obtained from a rhyolite dyke which cuts the metamorphic rocks in the Cu-(U) Miedzianka deposit correlates well with the series of sub-volcanic-volcanic processes in the nearby Intra Sudetic Basin and with regional tectonic movements on the Intra-Sudetic Fault after the Karkonosze Pluton was emplaced. The appearance of rhyolite dykes is evidence for the development of sub-volcanic processes that were responsible for development of younger (ca. 301 Ma) Cu-polymetallic ore mineralization in the study area. This stage of ore mineralization, known from the eastern metamorphic cover of the KP, was superimposed on older, high-temperature Fe-Cu-As-Sn mineralization (molybdenite age 312 ± 1 Ma, Kowary deposit; Co-arsenopyrite age 312-307 Ma, Czarnów deposit). This older ore mineralization was fractured, brecciated and overprinted by a younger generation of base metal sulfides, with visible Au (remobilized from the primary sulfides) and Bi-Ag-Te-Se sulfosalt mineralization. The U-Pb age of the rhyolite dyke from the Miedzianka deposit also puts a constraint of ca. 301 Ma on the timing of tectonic movements along major suture and strike slip shear zones and hence the formation of terrane boundaries, and of the transitions between various tectonic regimes within the eastern segment of the central European Variscides.

3.
Previously reported U-Pb ages in the range 325 ± 2 to 320 ± 1 Ma from the Karkonosze Pluton were not confirmed by our research. Additionally, older molybdenite Re-Os ages (325 ± 1 and 323 ± 3Ma) could be reconciled with the younger zircon U-Pb ages of their igneous host rocks. It should be emphasized, however, that the strong development of pneumatolitic-hydrothermal processes in the KP, the metamictization of zircon caused by its high U and Th contents, and the likely presence of inherited zircon can impact the accuracy of zircon U-Pb dates.

Conflicts of Interest:
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
Appendix A