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21 pages, 18066 KB  
Article
Timing and Tectonic Setting of the Zhaguopu Pegmatite-Type Li-Be-Nb-Ta Deposit, Western Himalaya: Implications for Post-Collisional Rare-Metal Metallogeny
by Gen Chen, Haiquan Li, Hao Chen and Xingkai Huang
Minerals 2026, 16(2), 208; https://doi.org/10.3390/min16020208 - 19 Feb 2026
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 612
Abstract
The Himalayan metallogenic belt is a globally significant province for leucogranites and pegmatites. Recent exploration has yielded major breakthroughs in the exploration of pegmatite-type Li-Be-Nb-Ta rare-metal deposits within its eastern segment. Discoveries such as the Qiongjiagang and Lhozhag deposits underscore the region’s substantial [...] Read more.
The Himalayan metallogenic belt is a globally significant province for leucogranites and pegmatites. Recent exploration has yielded major breakthroughs in the exploration of pegmatite-type Li-Be-Nb-Ta rare-metal deposits within its eastern segment. Discoveries such as the Qiongjiagang and Lhozhag deposits underscore the region’s substantial mineralization potential. In contrast, the western Himalayan segment remains comparatively underexplored. This study presents the geology and geochronology of the newly identified Zhaguopu Li-Be-Nb-Ta deposit in the Gyirong area, providing critical new insights. The deposit is centered on the Gyirong granite dome, which features a core of tourmaline-bearing leucogranite surrounded by a peripheral zone of beryl-bearing pegmatites and vein- to lens-shaped spodumene pegmatites, all hosted within metamorphosed sandstone, slate, and marble. The largest individual spodumene pegmatite vein exceeds 400 m in length, with thicknesses ranging from 0.5 to 4 m and a cumulative thickness surpassing 50 m. Principal ore minerals include spodumene, beryl, and columbite-group minerals. U-Pb geochronology of zircon, monazite, and columbite-group minerals from the leucogranite and pegmatite units constrains the rare-metal mineralization to a tight interval of 25–23 Ma, contemporaneous with the Qiongjiagang and Lhozhag deposits. Whole-rock geochemical data define a coherent fractional crystallization sequence from tourmaline granite through beryl pegmatite to spodumene pegmatite, characterized by increasing SiO2 and peraluminosity, and extreme depletion in Ba, Sr, Eu and Nb/Ta ratios. This geochemical trend underscores the critical role of extreme magmatic differentiation in rare-metal enrichment. Field relationships and these coeval ages strongly support a genetic model in which the mineralized pegmatites originated from the extreme fractional crystallization of a common, cogenetic magmatic suite. The timing of this mineralization event correlates precisely with the post-collisional extension of the Himalayan orogen and the activity of the Southern Tibet Detachment System. We conclude that the interplay between this large-scale tectonism and magmatic differentiation is the fundamental driver for rare-metal enrichment. The discovery of the Zhaguopu deposit highlights the significant and previously underestimated potential for major pegmatite-type rare-metal deposits in the western Himalayan belt. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Mineral Deposits)
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37 pages, 34916 KB  
Article
The Submarine Trachytic Lobe–Hyaloclastite Complex of the Caldera of Taburiente (La Palma, Canary Islands): The Age and Meaning of the Oldest Geological Formation on the Island
by Ramón Casillas, Julio de la Nuez, Juan Ramón Colmenero, Carlos Fernández, Fred Jourdan, Szabolcs Harangi and Réka Lukács
Minerals 2025, 15(10), 1007; https://doi.org/10.3390/min15101007 - 23 Sep 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2452
Abstract
This paper describes for the first time a lobe–hyaloclastite felsic complex on an oceanic island of intraplate setting. In the submarine volcanic succession of the Basal Complex of La Palma (Canary Islands), two main units are identified: an older felsic formation and a [...] Read more.
This paper describes for the first time a lobe–hyaloclastite felsic complex on an oceanic island of intraplate setting. In the submarine volcanic succession of the Basal Complex of La Palma (Canary Islands), two main units are identified: an older felsic formation and a conformable upper basaltic–trachybasaltic formation. The felsic formation comprises three facies associations: (1) coherent facies, represented by trachytic lobes with porphyritic, aphanitic, or glass trachytes; (2) autoclastic facies, including hyaloclastites and autobreccias; and (3) syn-eruptive resedimented facies, consisting of mono- and polymictic breccias (massive or graded), and of volcaniclastic sandstones and breccias. The internal architecture and facies relationships are consistent with sedimentation in a submarine trachytic lobe–hyaloclastite complex, which predates the basaltic–trachybasaltic formation. These felsic rocks are classified as trachytes, although they exhibit extensive hydrothermal alteration. The behavior of incompatible trace elements suggests that the variety of the trachytic rocks—porphyritic or aphanitic terms—can be attributed to fractional crystallization processes. However, the features of the incompatible trace elements and the rare earth elements indicate that these trachytes are not cogenetic with the submarine basaltic–trachybasaltic rocks of the Basal Complex of La Palma. Instead, the trachytic magmas responsible for the lobe–hyaloclastite complex formation likely represent the late evolution of a precursor basaltic magma that would have led to the formation of a basaltic submarine shield not exposed nowadays. This study also presents the first robust geochronological constraints for the submarine volcanic units of the La Palma Basal Complex, based on U–Pb on zircons and Ar–Ar on amphiboles. Given that the submarine trachytic lobe–hyaloclastite complex is the oldest lithostratigraphic unit exposed on La Palma, a minimum age of 3.10 Ma is proposed for the initiation of the island submarine growth stage. Full article
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44 pages, 19223 KB  
Article
Fluid Inclusion Evidence of Deep-Sourced Volatiles and Hydrocarbons Hosted in the F–Ba-Rich MVT Deposit Along the Zaghouan Fault (NE Tunisia)
by Chaima Somrani, Fouad Souissi, Giovanni De Giudici, Alexandra Guedes and Silvio Ferrero
Minerals 2025, 15(5), 489; https://doi.org/10.3390/min15050489 - 6 May 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1953
Abstract
The Hammam–Zriba F–Ba (Zn–Pb) stratabound deposit is located within the Zaghouan Fluorite Province (ZFP), which is the most important mineral sub-province in NE Tunisia, with several CaF2 deposits occurring mainly along the Zaghouan Fault and corresponding to an F-rich MVT mineral system [...] Read more.
The Hammam–Zriba F–Ba (Zn–Pb) stratabound deposit is located within the Zaghouan Fluorite Province (ZFP), which is the most important mineral sub-province in NE Tunisia, with several CaF2 deposits occurring mainly along the Zaghouan Fault and corresponding to an F-rich MVT mineral system developed along the unconformity surface between the uppermost Jurassic limestones and the late Cretaceous layers. Petrographic analysis, microthermometry, and Raman spectroscopy applied to fluid inclusions in fluorite revealed various types of inclusions containing brines, oil, CO2, and CH4 along with solid phases such as evenkite, graphite, kerogen and bitumen. Microthermometric data indicate homogenization temperatures ranging from 85 °C to 145 ± 5 °C and salinities of 13–22 wt.% NaCl equivalent. This study supports a model of heterogeneous trapping, where saline basinal brines, oil, and gases were simultaneously trapped within fluorite, which indicates fluid immiscibility. The Raman analysis identified previously undetected organic compounds, including the first documented occurrence of evenkite, a mineral hydrocarbon, co-genetically trapped with graphite. The identification of evenkite and graphite in fluid inclusions offers new insights into the composition of hydrocarbon-bearing fluids within the MVT deposits in Tunisia, contributing to an understanding of the mineralogical characteristics of these deposits. The identified hydrocarbons correspond to three oil families. Family I (aliphatic compounds) is attributed to the lower-Eocene Bou-Dabbous Formation, family II (aromatic compounds) is attributed to the Albian Fahdene Formation and the Cenomanian–Turonian Bahloul Formation, and family III is considered as a mixture of aliphatic and aromatic compounds generated by the three sources. The presence of graphite in fluid inclusions could suggest the involvement of a thermal effect from deep-seated sources through the reservoir to the site of fluorite precipitation. These findings suggest that the fluorite mineral system might have been linked with the interaction of multi-reservoir fluids, potentially linked to the neighboring petroleum system in northeastern Tunisia during the Miocene. This study aims to investigate the composition of fluid inclusions in fluorite from the Hammam–Zriba F–Ba (Zn–Pb) deposit, with a particular focus on the plausible sources of hydrocarbons and their implications for the genetic relationship between the mineralizing system and petroleum reservoirs. Full article
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36 pages, 5338 KB  
Article
Fluid and Solid Inclusions from Accessory Host Minerals of Permian Pegmatites of the Eastern Alps (Austria)—Tracing Permian Fluid, Its Entrapment Process and Its Role During Crustal Anatexis
by Kurt Krenn and Martina Husar
Minerals 2025, 15(4), 423; https://doi.org/10.3390/min15040423 - 18 Apr 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1184
Abstract
To understand the fluid evolution of Permian pegmatites, three pegmatite fields of the Austroalpine basement units located in the Rappold Complex at St. Radegund, the Millstatt Complex, and the Polinik Complex were investigated. To achieve this goal, fluid inclusions trapped in the magmatic [...] Read more.
To understand the fluid evolution of Permian pegmatites, three pegmatite fields of the Austroalpine basement units located in the Rappold Complex at St. Radegund, the Millstatt Complex, and the Polinik Complex were investigated. To achieve this goal, fluid inclusions trapped in the magmatic accessories of garnet, tourmaline, spodumene, and beryl were studied using host mineral chemistry combined with fluid inclusion microthermometry and Raman spectrometry. Taking into account the previous work by the authors on pegmatite fields in the Koralpe and Texel Mountains, Permian fluid was determined to have evolved from two stages: Stage 1 is characterized by the homogeneous entrapment of two cogenetic immiscible fluid assemblages, a CO2-N2 ± CH4-rich and a low-saline H2O-rich fluid. Both fluids are restricted to inclusions in the early-magmatic-garnet-core domains of the Koralpe Mountains. Stage 2 is linked with the CO2-N2-CH4-H2O-NaCl-CaCl2 ± MgCl2 fluid preserved as an inclusion in all the pegmatite accessories of the KWNS. It represents the mechanical mixture of the stage 1 fluid caused by compositional changes along the solvus, which is typical for a hydrothermal vein environment process. Increasing XCH4±N2 proportions from the eastern toward the western pegmatite fields of the KWNS results in a tectonic model that includes magmatic redox-controlled fluid flow along deep crustal normal faults during the anatexis of metasediments in Permian asymmetric graben structures. Because of a high number of solids within the inclusions as well as their irregular shapes, post-entrapment modifications have caused density changes that have to be considered with caution. However, the conditions in the range of 6–8 kbar at >670 °C for stage 1 and ca. 4 kbar at <670 °C for stage 2 represent the best approximations to explain the uprise of a two-stage Permian fluid associated with accessory mineral crystallization in close relation to fractionating melt. Full article
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17 pages, 9066 KB  
Article
Genetic Variants Affecting FADS2 Enzyme Dynamics and Gene Expression in Cogenetic Oysters with Different PUFA Levels Provide New Tools to Improve Unsaturated Fatty Acids
by Qingyuan Li, Chaogang Wang, Ao Li, Haigang Qi, Wei Wang, Xinxing Wang, Guofan Zhang and Li Li
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2024, 25(24), 13551; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms252413551 - 18 Dec 2024
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 2146
Abstract
Long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids (LC-PUFAs) are crucial for human health and cannot be produced internally. Bivalves, such as oysters, serve as valuable sources of high-quality PUFAs. The enzyme fatty acid desaturase (FADS) plays a key role in the metabolism of LC-PUFAs. In this [...] Read more.
Long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids (LC-PUFAs) are crucial for human health and cannot be produced internally. Bivalves, such as oysters, serve as valuable sources of high-quality PUFAs. The enzyme fatty acid desaturase (FADS) plays a key role in the metabolism of LC-PUFAs. In this study, we conducted a thorough genome-wide analysis of the genes belong to the FADS family in Crassostrea gigas and Crassostrea angulata, with the objective of elucidating the function of the FADS2 and investigating the genetic variations that affect PUFA biosynthesis. We identified six FADS genes distributed across four chromosomes, categorized into three subfamilies. The coding region of FADS2 revealed five non-synonymous mutations that were shown to influence protein structure and stability through molecular dynamics simulations. The promoter region of FADS2 contains ten SNPs and three indels significantly correlated with PUFA content. These genetic variations may explain the differences in PUFA levels observed between the two oyster species and could have potential applications in enhancing PUFA content. This study improves the molecular understanding of PUFA metabolism in oysters and presents a potential strategy for selecting oysters with high PUFA levels. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Molecular Genetics and Genomics)
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19 pages, 9240 KB  
Article
Study on the Optimal Allocation of Water Resources Based on the Perspective of Water Rights Trading
by Guangyao Wang, Xinyue Zhang, Lijuan Du, Bo Lei and Zhenghe Xu
Sustainability 2023, 15(23), 16214; https://doi.org/10.3390/su152316214 - 22 Nov 2023
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 2189
Abstract
Water rights trading plays an important role in the market mechanism to optimize the allocation of water resources. This study takes Luxian county of Sichuan province as the research area. Based on the prediction of water supply and demand, this study aims to [...] Read more.
Water rights trading plays an important role in the market mechanism to optimize the allocation of water resources. This study takes Luxian county of Sichuan province as the research area. Based on the prediction of water supply and demand, this study aims to achieve minimum water shortage and maximum economic benefits for regional water distribution, and introduces a water-saving reward and water price punishment mechanism to construct a two-layer collaborative regulation model of water rights trading for water users. The self-improved elite strategy and cogenetic algorithm (NSGA II-S) are used to solve the optimization model, and the optimal allocation of water resources and water rights trading in different towns in the planning year (2025 and 2030) under different flat and dry scenarios is studied. The results show that there would be an obvious problem in the uneven distribution of water resources between supply and demand in 2025 and 2030. The overall water shortage rates in the flat and dry scenario areas in 2025 are 13.71% and 31.99%, respectively, and the overall water shortage rates in the flat and dry scenario areas in 2030 are 11.55% and 31.94%, respectively. Water rights trading can increase the economic benefit value, with the economic benefit increasing by an average of CNY 614 million in all scenarios, an average increase of 8.68%. The research results could be helpful in alleviating the contradiction between the supply and demand of regional water resources and provide a theoretical basis for optimizing water resource allocation by means of water rights trading in the region. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Hydrology and Water Resources Management)
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26 pages, 10180 KB  
Article
Major and Trace-Element Composition of Minerals in the Paleoproterozoic Tiksheozero Ultramafic–Alkaline–Carbonatite Complex, Russia: Insight into Magma Evolution
by Maria Bogina, Alexey Chistyakov, Evgenii Sharkov, Elena Kovalchuk and Tatiana Golovanova
Minerals 2023, 13(10), 1318; https://doi.org/10.3390/min13101318 - 11 Oct 2023
Viewed by 2339
Abstract
The Middle Paleoproterozoic (1.99 Ga) Tiksheozero ultramafic‒alkaline‒carbonatite complex in Northern Karelia is one of the Earth’s oldest alkaline complexes. The major and trace-element compositions of minerals were used to decipher the genetic relations between ultramafic cumulates, alkaline rocks, and carbonatites. Based on detailed [...] Read more.
The Middle Paleoproterozoic (1.99 Ga) Tiksheozero ultramafic‒alkaline‒carbonatite complex in Northern Karelia is one of the Earth’s oldest alkaline complexes. The major and trace-element compositions of minerals were used to decipher the genetic relations between ultramafic cumulates, alkaline rocks, and carbonatites. Based on detailed analysis of clinopyroxenes from ultramafic cumulates, it was assumed that they were derived from an alkaline melt. It was estimated that ultramafic cumulates and alkaline rocks were formed at close moderate pressure, which in combination with the above facts, is consistent with their cogenetic origin. The REE patterns of clinopyroxenes are characterized by the high LREE/HREE fractionation, with slightly convex-upward LREE patterns (La/Nd < 1), which are typical of deep-seated cumulates formed in an equilibrium with an alkaline basaltic melt. Two types of REE zoning were distinguished in apatite using cathodoluminescence imaging. The first type with an outward LREE decrease was found in apatite from silicate rocks of the complex and was likely produced by the closed-system overgrowth of apatite from a residual melt at the late magmatic stage. In contrast, apatite from carbonatite is characterized by a slight outward LREE increase, which is likely related to the re-equilibration of apatite with fresh batches of REE-enriched carbonatite magma. Precipitation of monazite along fractures and margins of apatite in complex with essential HREE and Y enrichment observed in syenite is indicative of the metasomatic interaction of this rock with fluid. Apatites from alkaline rocks and carbonatites define a common trend in the Y–Ho diagram, with a decrease in the Y/Ho ratio from foidolites to carbonatites. This fact together with the absence of signs of liquid immiscibility, and compositional variations in apatite in silicate rocks and carbonatites, are consistent with their origin through fractional crystallization rather than liquid immiscibility. Full article
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16 pages, 9097 KB  
Article
Petrogenesis of Late Cretaceous Muscovite-Bearing Peraluminous Granites in the Youjiang Basin, South China Block: Implications for Tin Mineralization
by Ping Li, Xijun Liu and Lei Liu
Minerals 2023, 13(9), 1206; https://doi.org/10.3390/min13091206 - 13 Sep 2023
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 2617
Abstract
Most primary Sn deposits worldwide are associated with muscovite-bearing peraluminous granites, commonly believed to originate from the partial melting of metasedimentary rocks. We studied the whole-rock geochemistry and Sm–Nd isotopes of Late Cretaceous (~90 Ma) Laojunshan muscovite-bearing peraluminous granites in the Youjiang Basin, [...] Read more.
Most primary Sn deposits worldwide are associated with muscovite-bearing peraluminous granites, commonly believed to originate from the partial melting of metasedimentary rocks. We studied the whole-rock geochemistry and Sm–Nd isotopes of Late Cretaceous (~90 Ma) Laojunshan muscovite-bearing peraluminous granites in the Youjiang Basin, South China Block. The globally significant Dulong tin mineralization was co-genetic with the Laojunshan muscovite-bearing monzogranites. The Laojunshan granites exhibit slightly higher εNd(t) values than the Precambrian basement, indicating a hybrid crustal source comprising both Precambrian rock and juvenile components. Characterized by weakly peraluminous compositions, these granites display highly evolved geochemical features: notably low levels of Ca, P, Mg, Fe, and Ti contents, elevated Si content, a high FeOT/MgO ratio, and a low Zr/Hf ratio. These distinctive geochemical features can be attributed to the differentiation of plagioclase, biotite, and zircons, with the remarkably low Nb/Ta and K/Rb ratios further suggesting a fluid exsolution process. The geochemical data propose that tin-enriched Laojunshan granites originate from mineral differentiation and fluid exsolution of crust-derived melts during magmatic evolution. By integrating these novel findings with existing data on coeval muscovite-bearing granites co-genetic with tin mineralization in the Youjiang Basin, it is deduced that these granites share a unified origin. Their genesis can be attributed to mineral differentiation and fluid exsolution of crust-derived melts rather than a direct melting of metasedimentary rocks. Full article
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20 pages, 8764 KB  
Article
Cogenetic Origin of Magmatic Enclaves in Peralkaline Felsic Volcanic Rocks from the Sanshui Basin, South China
by Peijia Chen, Bo Qian, Zhiwei Zhou and Nianqiao Fang
Minerals 2023, 13(5), 590; https://doi.org/10.3390/min13050590 - 24 Apr 2023
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 3080
Abstract
Centimeter-scale magmatic enclaves are abundant in peralkaline felsic volcanic rocks in the Sanshui Basin. Their lithology is mainly syenite and syenitic porphyry, and they mainly comprise alkali feldspar and amphibole, which is similar to the mineral assemblage of the host trachyte and comendite. [...] Read more.
Centimeter-scale magmatic enclaves are abundant in peralkaline felsic volcanic rocks in the Sanshui Basin. Their lithology is mainly syenite and syenitic porphyry, and they mainly comprise alkali feldspar and amphibole, which is similar to the mineral assemblage of the host trachyte and comendite. The SiO2 content in the syenitic enclaves is ~63 wt%, which is similar to that of the host trachyte but lower than that of the comendite. Thermobarometric calculations showed that the syenitic enclaves crystallized at similar temperature and pressure conditions as their host trachyte. The results of mass-balance modeling and MCS modeling indicate that the syenitic enclaves likely experienced an approximately 74% fractional crystallization from the basaltic parental magma. Combined with the similar mineral assemblages and geochemical characteristics of the host trachyte, we think that the enclaves resulted from the in situ crystallization of trachytic magma in the shallow crust and that they had a cogenetic origin with their host volcanic rocks, which means that they were likely to derived from the identical magma chamber which was formed from different batches of magma mixing/mingling. The recharge and mixing of basaltic magma triggered the eruption of trachytic magma eruption. The syenitic crust may have been disaggregated by the ascending trachytic magma and brought to the surface as syenitic enclaves. The syenitic enclaves in volcanic rocks provide unique information on the magmatism of the shallow crust as evidence of magma mixing/mingling. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Mineral Geochemistry and Geochronology)
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30 pages, 15637 KB  
Article
Volcano–Plutonic Complex of the Tumrok Range (Eastern Kamchatka): An Example of the Ural-Alaskan Type Intrusion and Related Volcanic Series
by Ivan F. Chayka, Nikolay I. Baykov, Vadim S. Kamenetsky, Anton V. Kutyrev, Evgenii V. Pushkarev, Adam Abersteiner and Vasily D. Shcherbakov
Minerals 2023, 13(1), 126; https://doi.org/10.3390/min13010126 - 15 Jan 2023
Cited by 10 | Viewed by 4802
Abstract
Zoned plutons, composed of dunites, pyroxenites, and gabbroic rocks, have been referred to as the Ural-Alaskan type complexes (UA-complexes) and occur in numerous paleo-arc settings worldwide. Many of these complexes are source rocks for economic placers of platinum-group metals. Thus, it is important [...] Read more.
Zoned plutons, composed of dunites, pyroxenites, and gabbroic rocks, have been referred to as the Ural-Alaskan type complexes (UA-complexes) and occur in numerous paleo-arc settings worldwide. Many of these complexes are source rocks for economic placers of platinum-group metals. Thus, it is important to understand how UA-complexes form and the origin and behavior of platinum-group elements (PGEs). It is widely assumed that the UA-complexes result from differentiation of supra-subduction high-Ca high-Mg sub-alkaline magmas. However, there is a lack of direct evidence for the existence and differentiation of such magmas, mainly because cases of UA-complexes being spatially and temporally linked to co-genetic volcanics are unknown. We studied an UA-complex from the Tumrok range (Eastern Kamchatka) where a dunite-clinopyroxenite-gabbro assemblage is spatially and temporary related to high-Ca volcanics (i.e., picrites and basalts). Based on the mineral and chemical composition of the rocks, mineral chemistry, and composition of melt inclusions hosted within rock-forming minerals, we conclude that the intrusive assemblage and the volcanics are co-genetic and share the same parental magma of ankaramitic composition. Furthermore, the compositions of the plutonic rocks are typical of UA-complexes worldwide. Finally, the rocks studied exhibit a full differentiation sequence from olivine-only liquidus in picrites and dunites to eutectic crystallization of diopside or hornblende, plagioclase, and K-Na feldspar in plagio-wehrlites and gabbroic rocks. All these results make the considered volcano–plutonic complex a promising case for petrological studies and modelling of UA-complex formation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Precious Metals vs. Base Metals: Nature and Experiment)
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32 pages, 29862 KB  
Article
A New Alpine Metallogenic Model for the Pb-Ag Orogenic Deposits of Macôt-la Plagne and Peisey-Nancroix (Western Alps, France)
by Maxime Bertauts, Emilie Janots, Magali Rossi, Isabelle Duhamel-Achin, Marie-Christine Boiron, Laura Airaghi, Pierre Lanari, Philippe Lach, Chantal Peiffert and Valérie Magnin
Geosciences 2022, 12(9), 331; https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences12090331 - 31 Aug 2022
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 5049
Abstract
Understanding mass transfer associated with fluids circulation and deformation in the Alpine orogeny is often complex due to common multistage crystallization. For example, in two emblematic and historic Pb-Ag deposits of the French Alps, Macôt-la Plagne (MP) and Peisey-Nancroix (PN), a sedimentary or [...] Read more.
Understanding mass transfer associated with fluids circulation and deformation in the Alpine orogeny is often complex due to common multistage crystallization. For example, in two emblematic and historic Pb-Ag deposits of the French Alps, Macôt-la Plagne (MP) and Peisey-Nancroix (PN), a sedimentary or orogenic origin is still debated. To discriminate between the metallogenic models of the two deposits, an integrative methodology combining field, microstructural, mineralogical, thermobarometrical, and geochronological data was here applied for establishing detailed Pressure–Temperature–Time–Deformation (P-T-t-d) mineralization conditions. Both deposits are located in Permo-Triassic quartzite of the External Briançonnais domain along the Internal Briançonnais Front (Internal Western Alps). The ore mainly occurs as veins and disseminated textures containing galena, pyrite, and variable content of tetrahedrite–tennantite and chalcopyrite. Quartz porphyroclasts and sulfide microstructures indicate a dynamic recrystallization of the quartzite during the main fluid mineralization episode. Chlorites and K-white micas (phengite) chemical analysis and thermodynamic modeling from compositional maps indicate an onset of the mineralization at 280 °C, with a main precipitation stage at 315 ± 35 °C and 6.25 ± 0.75 kbar. In situ U-Pb dating on monazite, cogenetic with sulfides, gives ages around 35 Ma for both deposits. The integrative dataset converges for a cogenetic MP-PN Alpine Pb-Ag mineralization during deformation in relation to the thrusting of the “Nappe des Gypses” and the Internal Briançonnais at the metamorphic peak. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue The Making of the Alps)
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21 pages, 16015 KB  
Article
Geochemical Insights from Clinopyroxene Phenocrysts into the Magma Evolution of an Alkaline Magmatic System from the Sanshui Basin, South China
by Peijia Chen, Nianqiao Fang and Xiaobo Yuan
Minerals 2021, 11(11), 1295; https://doi.org/10.3390/min11111295 - 22 Nov 2021
Cited by 13 | Viewed by 4799
Abstract
The Sanshui Basin is located at the northern continental margin of the South China Sea and characterized by a continental rift basin. The bimodal volcanic rocks in Sanshui Basin record the early Cenozoic magmatic activity in the South China Block, but the magmatic [...] Read more.
The Sanshui Basin is located at the northern continental margin of the South China Sea and characterized by a continental rift basin. The bimodal volcanic rocks in Sanshui Basin record the early Cenozoic magmatic activity in the South China Block, but the magmatic evolution that produced the bimodal volcanic rocks is poorly understood. Clinopyroxenes in bimodal volcanic rocks in the Sanshui Basin provide an opportunity to investigate magma during magma ascent. In this work, we classified nine types of clinopyroxene phenocrysts according to composition and texture in cogenetic basalt-trachyandesite-comenditic trachyte, while the composition of unzoned clinopyroxene have an evolution sequence of diopside-hedenbergite-aegirine along with an increase in trace element contents with a decrease of Mg#, indicating that the genesis of clinopyroxene was dominated by fractional crystallization in a closed magma system. However, the clinopyroxenes with reversed zoning and multiple zoning record the process of magma mixing and recharge indicating an open magma system. While fractional crystallization is the dominant process, magma mixing, recharge, and crystal settling were also found to influence magma evolution. Thermobarometric calculations showed that clinopyroxene crystallized a several structural levels in the crust during magma ascent. In this study, we established a magma plumbing system that provides new constraints for the magma evolution in the Sanshui Basin. Full article
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14 pages, 4901 KB  
Article
Genesis of Megacrystalline Uraninite: A Case Study of the Haita Area of the Western Margin of the Yangtze Block, China
by Zhengqi Xu, Minghui Yin, Youliang Chen, Lu Xiang, Hao Song, Chengjiang Zhang, Jian Yao and Hu Guo
Minerals 2021, 11(11), 1173; https://doi.org/10.3390/min11111173 - 22 Oct 2021
Cited by 9 | Viewed by 3127
Abstract
Megacrystalline uraninite (up to one centimeter in size) represents one of the most important discoveries in uranium mineralogy in the western margin of the Yangtze Block and even in China in recent years. However, the genesis of megacrystalline uraninite remains controversial. In this [...] Read more.
Megacrystalline uraninite (up to one centimeter in size) represents one of the most important discoveries in uranium mineralogy in the western margin of the Yangtze Block and even in China in recent years. However, the genesis of megacrystalline uraninite remains controversial. In this study, the megacrystalline uraninite found in the felsic and quartz veins in the Haita area is examined for the first time. The study examined the geochemical characteristics of uraninite in the two veins and resulted in two primary findings. (1) The genesis of the uraninite was likely intrusive and was closely related to partial melting. (2) The quartz vein and feldspar vein are cogenetic and have a simple differentiation evolution relationship. Therefore, the partial melting of felsic materials during migmatization may be the most important mechanism of uranium mineralization in the study area. Furthermore, further simple fractional crystallization may be another important mechanism for the formation of megacrystalline uraninite. This study enriches the REE database of uraninite in uranium deposits worldwide, which is meaningful for studying the genesis of megacrystalline uraninite. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Geochemistry, Mineral Chemistry and Geochronology of Uranium Deposits)
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27 pages, 9246 KB  
Article
Tungsten Ores of the Dzhida W-Mo Ore Field (Southwestern Transbaikalia, Russia): Mineral Composition and Physical-Chemical Conditions of Formation
by Ludmila B. Damdinova and Bulat B. Damdinov
Minerals 2021, 11(7), 725; https://doi.org/10.3390/min11070725 - 5 Jul 2021
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 4326
Abstract
This article discusses the peculiarities of mineral composition and a fluid inclusions (FIs further in the text) study of the Kholtoson W and Inkur W deposits located within the Dzhida W-Mo ore field (Southwestern Transbaikalia, Russia). The Mo mineralization spatially coincides with the [...] Read more.
This article discusses the peculiarities of mineral composition and a fluid inclusions (FIs further in the text) study of the Kholtoson W and Inkur W deposits located within the Dzhida W-Mo ore field (Southwestern Transbaikalia, Russia). The Mo mineralization spatially coincides with the apical part of the Pervomaisky stock (Pervomaisky deposit), and the W mineralization forms numerous quartz veins in the western part of the ore field (Kholtoson vein deposit) and the stockwork in the central part (Inkur stockwork deposit). The ore mineral composition is similar at both deposits. Quartz is the main gangue mineral; there are also present muscovite, K-feldspar, and carbonates. The main ore mineral of both deposits is hubnerite. In addition to hubnerite, at both deposits, more than 20 mineral species were identified; they include sulfides (pyrite, chalcopyrite, galena, sphalerite, bornite, etc.), sulfosalts (tetrahedrite, aikinite, stannite, etc.), oxides (scheelite, cassiterite), and tellurides (hessite). The results of mineralogical and fluid inclusions studies allowed us to conclude that the Inkur W and the Kholtoson W deposits were formed by the same hydrothermal fluids, related to the same ore-forming system. For both deposits, the fluid inclusion homogenization temperatures varied within the range ~195–344 °C. The presence of cogenetic liquid- and vapor-dominated inclusions in the quartz from the ores of the Kholtoson deposit allowed us to estimate the true temperature range of mineral formation as 413–350 °C. Ore deposition occurred under similar physical-chemical conditions, differing only in pressures of mineral formation. The main factors of hubnerite deposition from hydrothermal fluids were decreases in temperature. Full article
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14 pages, 4410 KB  
Article
Variety of Iron Oxide Inclusions in Sapphire from Southern Vietnam: Indication of Environmental Change during Crystallization
by Doan Thi Anh Vu, Alongkot Fanka, Abhisit Salam and Chakkaphan Sutthirat
Minerals 2021, 11(3), 241; https://doi.org/10.3390/min11030241 - 26 Feb 2021
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 4737
Abstract
Sapphires from alluvial deposits associated with Cenozoic basalts in Southern Vietnam were collected for investigation of mineral inclusions. In this report, primary iron oxide inclusions were focused on, with detailed mineral chemistry using a Raman spectroscope and electron probe micro-analyzer. Consequently, a variety [...] Read more.
Sapphires from alluvial deposits associated with Cenozoic basalts in Southern Vietnam were collected for investigation of mineral inclusions. In this report, primary iron oxide inclusions were focused on, with detailed mineral chemistry using a Raman spectroscope and electron probe micro-analyzer. Consequently, a variety of iron oxide inclusions were recognized as wüstite, hercynite, and ilmenite. Ilmenite falling within an ilmenite–hematite series ranged in composition between Il24-30He36-38Mt35-40 and Il49-54He34-40Mt7-10, classified as titanomagnetite and titanohematite, respectively. Wüstite with non-stoichiometry, (Fe2+0.3-0.9)(Ti3+<0.179Al3+≤0.6Cr3+<0.1Fe3+≤0.46)☐≤0.23O, was associated with hercynite inclusions, clearly indicating cogenetic sapphire formation. Wüstite and sapphire appear to have been formed from the breakdown reaction of hercynite (hercynite = sapphire+wüstite) within a reduction magma chamber. Titanohematite and titanomagnetite series might have crystallized during iron–titanium reequilibration via subsolidus exsolution under a slightly oxidized cooling process. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Fluid, Melt and Solid Inclusions as a Petrogenetic Indicators)
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