Granite-Related Li-Sn-W Deposits—New Achievements, Ongoing Issue
A special issue of Minerals (ISSN 2075-163X). This special issue belongs to the section "Mineral Deposits".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 May 2023) | Viewed by 11782
Special Issue Editors
Interests: granite petrology; rock-forming minerals; granite-related mineral deposits
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: rare-metal deposit; in situ geochemistry; chronology; non-traditional isotope
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Lithium, tin and tungsten have a wide variety of uses in modern technologies and are becoming increasingly important to the global economy. The increasing price of commodities is creating renewed interest in reassessment of the known but low-grade deposit, and exploration of new deposits. A major part of the known Sn, W, Li, but also Nb, Ta and Rb resources is associated with fractionated granitoids of different geochemical types and geotectonic position.
In case of granite-related deposits, the relation between the “ore” and its “source” is more obvious than in many other types of deposits. Thus, genetic interpretations and metallogenic models, namely of Sn-W deposits, may be traced back to the very beginning of modern economic geology. Nevertheless, several issues such as the story of albitization, the significance of melt/melt or melt/fluid immiscibility, or involvement of mantle-related fluid rare-metal granite evolution continue to be revisited time and time again.
We present this Special Issue as a platform for discussion of all aspects of rare metals (in the broadest sense of this word including Sn, W, Nb, Ta, U, Th, REE, Sc, Li, Rb, Cs, etc.) enrichment in granitic lithologies and following concentration up to mineral deposits in an economic sense.
We invite all colleagues from academic institutions as well as exploration and mining companies to share their experience and fresh results. Contributions to the following topics are especially welcome:
- Sources of rare metals: preliminary source enrichment vs. strong fractionation of the melt?
- Albite-rich granites: a natural consequence of fractionation or large-scale fluid transfer?
- Primary or secondary crystallization of ore minerals: crystallized ore minerals dominantly directly from the melt (disseminated cassiterite or columbite) eventually from orthomagmatic fluid (wolframite), or were temporarily hosted in rock-forming minerals, typically micas, and only then released again to fluid and transported to hosting structures?
- Complex recovery of mineralized rocks: the benefits of complex usage traditional Sn-W ores that also contain Li, Rb, Cs, Nb, Ta, Sc and other minor components.
- Case-studies of rare-metal deposits: geology, mineralogy, genetic models.
- Resources of non-metallic raw materials (feldspar, kaolinite, fluorite, cryolite, etc.) genetically linked to rare-metal deposits as economic benefits for mining.
Dr. Karel Breiter
Prof. Dr. Zhenhua Zhou
Dr. Hilton Túlio Costi
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- Li-Sn-W-Nb-Ta-Rb mineral deposit
- rare-metal granites
- sources and transport of metals
- magmatic vs. metasomatic processes
- magmatic-hydrothermal transition
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