Altered Volcanic Rocks
Altered Volcanic Rocks
Altered Volcanic Rocks
There are several instances of a typographic error in Figure 4.2 (page 79). The references to 'Y/Zr! in the caption and 'Y/Zr' in labels on the diagram are incorrect. They should be 'Zr/Y' in all cases.
AlteredVolcanicRocks
A guide to description and interpretation
Published by the Centre for Ore Deposit Research University of Tasmania, Australia
UTAS
Published by CODES Centre for Ore Deposit Research, University of Tasmania, Private Bag 79, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia 7001 An ARC Special Research Centre
National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication Data Gifkins, Cathryn. Altered volcanic rocks : a guide to description and interpretation. Bibliography. Includes index. ISBN 1 86295 219 1. 1. Rocks, Igneous. 2. Hydro thermal alteration. I. Herrmann, Walter, 1951- . II. Large, Ross R. III. University of Tasmania. Centre for Ore Deposit Research. IV. Title.
552.2
Copy editing: Im'press: clear communication Index: Word Wise and Im'press: clear communication Printed in Australia by the Printing Authority of Tasmania
Ill
I CONTENTS
PREFACE ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS INTRODUCTION 1 |
1.1
v.vii viii ix 1
1 1 2 2 2 4 4 6 7 9 10 11 11 12 12 13 14 14
1.2
1.3
1.4
|
2.1 2.2
15
15 19 19 20 20 20 22 23 24 25 25 26 33 36
2.6
|
3.1
37
37 37
iv |
CONTENTS
3.2
3.3 3.4
3.5
Infill textures Dissolution textures Static recrystallisation textures Dynamic recrystallisation textures Deformation textures Pseudotextures Pseudoclastic textures False polymictic texture False matrix-supported texture False coherent textures Alteration distribution Alteration zonation patterns Regional diagenetic zones Regional metamorphic zones Regional, deep, semi-conformable altered zones Local contact metamorphic or hydrothermally altered halos Local hydrothermally altered halos around ore deposits Vein and fracture altered halos Overprinting relationships and timing of alteration Method Overprinting textures
41 41 52 52 52 54 54 63 63 63 63 64 64 64 66 66 67 67 69 70 70
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4.1
73
73 73 78 79 81 87 87 87 88 92 92 92
4.2
4.3
|
5.1
97
97 98 98 98 99 100 102 102 105 108 115 115 115 115 115 116 116 118 118 119 120 122
5.2
5.3
5.4
5.5
CONTENTS | V
5.6
Diagenetic alteration in the Mount Read Volcanics Geological setting Alteration fades and zonation Genesis of alteration fades Data sheets
|
6.1 6.2
139
140 140 141 141 141 142 147 148 ' 148 148 149 149 153 154 155 155 156 157
6.3
6.4
6.5
163
163 164 164 166 167 168 169 170 174 174 174 176 178 178 179 179 180 181 182 182 183 184 194 194 195 195 196 202 202 202
7.1 7.2
7.3 7.4
7.5
7.6
7.7
Vi | CONTENTS
Ore genesis Data sheets 7.8 Henty: a volcanogenic gold deposit Geological setting Alteration fades and zonation Ore genesis Data sheets 7.9 Thalanga: a polymetallic sheet-style deposit Geological setting Alteration facies and zonation Ore genesis Data sheets 7.10 Highway-Reward: a pipe style Cu-Au VHMS deposit Geological setting Alteration facies and zonation Ore genesis Data sheets
203 204 212 212 212 213 214 221 221 222 222 223 232 232 232 232 233
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8.1
241
8.2
241 241 242 242 243 243 243 244 245 245 246
| |
REFERENCES INDEX
251 271
I vii
PREFACE
Altered volcanic rocks is principally for hands-on geologists, our fortunate colleagues who practise in mineral exploration and mining geology, and the students who may in the future play in those professional fields. We began designing and writing this book in mid 2001 after struggling for several decades to come to terms with a variety of alteration styles in ancient submarine volcanic successions. We realised that although a large number of company and research geologists were working on similar rocks there was no existing text to help guide us through the complexity of altered volcanic rocks. The so-called volcanic rocks we deal with in ancient volcanic successions and around ore deposits frequently bear little resemblance to their fresh counterparts, which are studied in undergraduate igneous petrology and volcanology courses. It is typically only with long experience that geologists develop the confidence and skills to be comfortable working with altered volcanic rocks, to interpret the original volcanic facies, unravel complex alteration histories and determine their significance in terms of mineral deposit prospectivity, particularly in ancient and deformed successions. The topic and content of the book were inspired by problems that we have faced, and in many cases overcome, while working on industry-related volcanic facies, alteration geochemistry and economic geology research projects, particularly in the Mount Read Volcanics. Many of the ideas presented in this book come from the results of CODES research projects, which have been run in collaboration with industry partners and the Australian Research Council (ARC) over the last 15 years. In particular, AMIRA-ARC Linkage project P439 (Studies of VHMS-related alteration: geochemical and mineralogical vectors to ore) provided an
enormous amount of data, case studies and expertise. Some of the results of this project have previously been published as a special issue in Economic Geology (Gemmell and Herrmann, eds., A special issue devoted to alteration associated with volcanichosted massive sulfide deposits, and its exploration significance, August 2001, v. 96, no. 5). We were encouraged by the wide acceptance and success of the CODES publication by Jocelyn McPhie, Mark Doyle and Rod Allen (1993) Volcanic textures: a guide to the interpretation of textures in volcanic rocks, which has been a major factor in improving the description and interpretation of volcanic facies over the last decade. The advance we have made in Altered volcanic rocks is to integrate observations and data on volcanic facies and textures with alteration mineralogy and geochemistry at both regional and local scales in order to provide a multidisciplinary method for the study and discrimination of different alteration types: diagenetic, metamorphic and hydrothermal alteration. We hope that this book will help to equip geologists working in altered and deformed successions with the skill and confidence to interpret the original volcanic facies and encourage the use of altered rocks as discriminants and vectors in mineral exploration. This book may not provide all the answers, but if it gives readers the courage to tackle the study of altered rocks, embrace the problems and pursue the answers it will have been worthwhile.
viii |
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
While preparing this book, we were fortunate to have valuable support, assistance and advice from many people. We extend our sincere thanks to those people whose discussions and/or reviews of various chapters have helped shape this book. Chapters were peer-reviewed by Stuart Bull, David Cooke, Mark Doyle, Kim Denwer, Allan Galley, Bruce Gemmell, Anthony Harris, Jocelyn McPhie, Andrew Rae, Mike Solomon and Fernando Tornos. Valuable discussions were also held with Ron Berry, Stuart Bull, Jocelyn McPhie, Phil Robinson and Mike Solomon. Although samples and photographs used herein are principally from the authors' collections, we also made use of hand specimens and thin sections from the School of Earth Sciences rock catalogue at the University of Tasmania, and samples and photographs from colleagues. Thank you to those people who contributed: Sharon Allen, Stuart Bull, Kate Bull, Tim Callaghan, Cari Deyell, Bruce Gemmell, George Hudak, Karin Orth and Jocelyn McPhie. We also thank Izzy von Lichtan, Curator at the School of Earth Sciences, for her help in finding and returning hundreds of catalogue samples.
Andrew McNeill very kindly provided a long projection of the Rosebery ore lenses. Tim Callaghan assisted with core specimens and whole-rock geochemical data from Mount Julia. Jon Huntington and Melissa Quigley at CSIRO provided HyMap images of the Mount Lyell field. We are infinitely grateful for the hard work of the production team. Karin Orth and Simon Stephens helped with sample preparation. Mike Blake and Karin Orth assisted with photography. Rose Pongratz and Izzy von Lichtan prepared the bibliography and checked references. June Pongratz provided expert drafting, design and desktop publishing, and was incredibly tolerant of the endless revisions. Final editing was by Impress: clear communication and indexing by Word Wise and Impress: clear communication. We also appreciate our families, friends and colleagues who have been very understanding of our commitment to this project over the last three years. Thank you for your support and patience.
I ix
INTRODUCTION
This book is about the processes and products of alteration in submarine volcanic successions, although many of the concepts presented here can be applied to altered volcanic rocks from almost any environment. Its emphasis is on hydrothermal alteration associated with volcanic hosted massive sulfide (VHMS) deposits. Few volcanic rocks in submarine settings are entirely unaltered, and in hydrothermal environments all rocks are altered to some degree. Recognising, describing and interpreting altered volcanic rocks is not always easy, but the results can have important implications for volcanology, petrology and ore deposit studies, and can improve and accelerate success in mineral exploration. Determining prealteration characteristics and discriminating between primary volcanic, magmatic and secondary alteration features requires knowledge of the alteration processes and their products. Valuable base-metal, gold and silver deposits exist in a variety of modern and ancient submarine volcanic successions. Many of these deposits are surrounded by, or spatially related to, extensive altered zones that record the passage of mineralising hydrothermal fluids and fluid-wall rock reactions. Research into the textural, mineralogical and compositional effects of alteration around VHMS deposits has shown that they can be quantified and used as effective exploration tools for discriminating deposit styles and guiding exploration towards mineralised zones.
Thus, alteration involves complex modification of a rock. Furthermore, a rock may undergo several episodes of syn- to post-depositional alteration, not all of which are related to mineralising hydrothermal systems. Each alteration episode is influenced by the existing texture and composition of the rock, and may also overprint and modify that texture and composition. As a result the characteristics of altered rocks are highly variable. In ancient volcanic rocks it is a challenge to determine host volcanic facies, unravel complex alteration processes and interpret their significance in terms of mineral prospectivity. That challenge is the focus of this book.
An introduction to alteration
Guilbert and Park (1986) defined alteration as any change in the mineralogical composition of a rock brought about by physical or chemical means, especially by the interaction with hot or cold aqueous solutions or gases. Alteration typically encompasses mineralogical changes and changes in the rock texture and composition. Components of rocks, including ore metals, can be dissolved, replaced or recrystallised. New minerals may precipitate and isotopic ratios may change. Porosity and permeability may be reduced or increased. Primary volcanic textures are overprinted, and may be destroyed and replaced by new 'false' textures, or enhanced. The resulting altered rock is described as the 'alteration fades' (e.g. Riverin and Hodgson, 1980).
X I INTRODUCTION
and Chapter 7 on hydrothermal alteration and mineralisation associated with VHMS deposits. We present short case studies for these different alteration styles, emphasising hydrothermal alteration associated with a variety of VHMS deposits including Rosebery, Hellyer, Henty and Thalanga. These case studies incorporate pictorial data sheets that present the mineralogical, textural and compositional characteristics of each of the main alteration facies. They combine volcanic facies analysis and alteration mineral assemblages, textures, intensity and geochemistry to interpret the features of different alteration styles. Chapter 8 outlines the methods for discriminating between the products of mineral deposit-related hydrothermal alteration and other alteration processes, and identifying favourable altered zones for mineral exploration. It also discusses geochemical vectors that may guide explorers towards mineralised rock within these altered zones.
11
For descriptive purposes, volcanic facies are divided into two main textural types: coherent and volcaniclastic. Coherent facies consist of solidified magma and are commonly characterised in volcanic rocks by aphyric (fine grained or glassy) or porphyritic textures, where porphyritic refers to evenly distributed euhedral crystals (phenocrysts) in a finegrained or glassy groundmass (McPhie et al., 1993). Volcaniclastic facies are those composed mainly of volcanic particles (Fisher, 1961). Volcanic particles are crystals, crystal fragments, shards, pumice clasts, scoria clasts and dense volcanic clasts, which may be produced by primary volcanic (pyroclastic and autoclastic) or sedimentary (weathering and erosion) processes. Volcaniclastic facies include a spectrum of facies: primary volcanic facies, syneruptive volcanic facies generated by coeval eruptions and deposited from sedimentary processes, and volcanogenic sedimentary facies that show evidence of temporary storage and reworking prior to deposition (McPhie et al., 1993). 1.1 | SUBMARINE VOLCANIC Primary volcaniclastic facies result from volcanic processes SUCCESSIONS of clast formation, transport and deposition and include Submarine volcanic successions are significantly different from hydroclastic, pyroclastic and autoclastic facies. Hydroclastic subaerial volcanic successions, as the processes of eruption, facies is a general term for facies, typically comprising blocky transport, emplacement, and post-emplacement alteration glassy particles, produced by magma-water interactions, may be strongly affected by the presence of water. Typically, whether by explosive steam generation or by non-explosive submarine volcanic successions comprise a wide variety of quench fragmentation of magma (Fisher and Schmincke, coherent and volcaniclastic facies intercalated with mixed 1984; Hanson, 1991). Pyroclastic facies comprise volcanic provenance and non-volcanic sedimentary facies (Fig. 1.1). particles (pyroclasts) that were generated by explosive The volcanic facies may be derived from intrabasinal, extra- eruptions and deposited by primary volcanic processes, by basinal or basin-margin eruptions in submarine or subaerial fallout, flow or surge. Autoclastic facies comprise volcanic settings. Eruption styles may be effusive or explosive and the particles generated by in situ non-explosive fragmentation of products may remain in situ or be redeposited or reworked lava or magma (autobrecciation and quench fragmentation).
This chapter describes submarine volcanic successions, the common processes of alteration that occur in these successions, and provides two examples of ancient submarine volcanic successions, that have been variably altered and mineralised: the Mount Read Volcanics and the Mount Windsor Subprovince. In submarine volcanic environments, the coincidence of magmatic fluids, heat and abundant seawater generates hydrothermal convection. As a consequence, submarine volcanic successions may host important hydrothermal mineral deposits, commonly referred to as volcanic-hosted massive sulfide (VHMS) deposits. VHMS deposits are a significant source of zinc, copper, lead, silver and gold, and continue to be a target for base-metal exploration. They range in size from less than one million tonnes to over 200 million tonnes, and commonly contain high metal grades. For example, the Hellyer deposit in western Tasmania produced 16.2 Mt at 13.9% Zn, 7.1% Pb, 0.4% Cu, 168 g/t Ag and 2.5 g/t Au in its nine years of operation. VHMS deposits occur mainly in submarine rift environments particularly back arc and mid ocean rifts; however, they can occur in a variety of other submarine environments including continental rifts, oceanic basins or plateaux, and arc-continent or continent-continent collision zones. They are one of the few classes of ore deposits that exist throughout the geological record from early Archaean to Recent.
by sedimentary processes. In addition, volcanic units may be emplaced into the succession as synvolcanic intrusions. This section summarises the main volcanic facies that occur in submarine volcanic successions. For a more detailed discussion of submarine volcanism, volcanic textures, facies and their interpretation, readers are referred to McPhie et al. (1993) Volcanic textures: a guide to the interpretation of textures in volcanic rocks.
Volcanic facies
2 | CHAPTER 1
Autobrecciation occurs when the more viscous parts of a moving lava respond in a brittle fashion to locally higher strain rates, and fragment into blocky clasts (Fisher, I960). Quench fragmentation occurs in situ where hot lava or magma comes into contact with water, ice or water-saturated sediment (Rittmann, 1962; Pichler, 1965; Yamagishi, 1987). The resulting autoclastic deposits - autobreccia, hyaloclastite or peperite - typically comprise dense blocky or splintery clasts, but they may be pumiceous and have fluidal shapes (Fisher, 1960; Pichler, 1965; Busby-Spera and White, 1987; Gifkins et al., 2002). Syneruptive volcaniclastic fades are composed dominantly of unmodified volcanic clasts that were fragmented by volcanic process such as explosive eruptions, autobrecciation or hydration, but were transported and deposited by sedimentary processes (McPhie et al., 1993; McPhie and Allen, 2003). They can occur directly from eruption when clasts bypass initial deposition as primary deposits and are delivered directly to sedimentary transport and deposition systems, such as subaqueous eruption-fed water-supported gravity currents or water-settled fall (e.g. White, 2000; McPhie and Allen, 2003). They may also occur indirectly by rapid remobilisation and redeposition during or shortly after the eruption (Fisher and Schmincke, 1984; Cas and Wright, 1987; McPhie et al., 1993). Unconsolidated volcanic debris may be remobilised by: the slumping and sliding of gravitationally unstable rapidly accumulated clastic debris; explosive eruptions; local uplift; syn-depositional faulting; and extrusion and intrusion of magma.
Volcanogenic sedimentary fades (epiclastic volcanic, Fisher,
1960) contain volcanic particles derived from the posteruptive erosion and reworking of pre-existing volcanic facies and may include a significant proportion of non-volcanic particles (McPhie et al., 1993). In submarine volcanic successions, volcaniclastic facies are dominated by in situ autoclastic and syneruptive volcaniclastic facies where the particles were derived from either autoclastic fragmentation or explosive eruption. Most volcanic and nonvolcanic clastic deposits were emplaced by water-supported density currents (i.e. high- and low-concentration turbidity currents, debris flows and grain flows) and as fallout from suspension in the water column.
FIGURE 1.1 | Facies model of a submarine basin in which a variety of coherent and clastic volcanic facies are intercalated with sedimentary facies. The volcanic facies include primary coherent and autoclastic facies, syneruptive and post-eruptive volcaniclastic facies derived from submarine and subaerial eruptions. Many of the volcanic facies associations are laterally discontinuous. Common facies associations represent (A) lavas and lava domes composed of coherent and autoclastic facies; (B) synvolcanic sills and cryptodomes; (C) syneruptive volcaniclastic facies derived from explosive and effusive submarine eruptions; (D) volcanogenic sedimentary or resedimented volcaniclastic facies derived from pre-existing deposits; (E) syneruptive volcaniclastic facies derived from subaerial explosive eruptions; (F) mixed provenance sedimentary facies; and (G) marine sedimentary facies.
FIGURE 1.2 | Facies model showing the distribution of different styles of altered zones in a submarine volcanic succession that hosts VHMS deposits. See Figure 1.1 legend for the patterns denoting volcanic and sedimentary facies.
4 | CHAPTER 1
Friedman and Long, 1984; Cerling et al., 1985). Alteration of volcanic glass involves not only devitrification, but changes in texture, composition, porosity and permeability, and may simultaneously affect both the chemistry and circulation of pore fluid in the volcanic succession (Noble, 1967; Dimroth and Lichtblau, 1979; Fisher and Schmincke, 1984; Noh and Boles, 1989; Torres et al., 1995). Understanding alteration requires a range of skills that include recognising alteration minerals, textures, paragenesis, distribution, zonation, intensity, mineralogical and chemical changes associated with alteration, pathways and mechanisms for fluid migration, and fluid origin. These characteristics are related to the alteration processes and to the characteristics of the host volcanic succession.
Devitrification
The cooling history of volcanic facies may involve primary crystallisation and later devitrification. Primary or hightemperature crystallisation refers to crystallisation of magma resulting in phenocrysts, microcrysts and microlites. In contrast, devitrification refers to crystallisation of glass at low temperatures (i.e. below the glass transition temperature: Lofgren, 1971a). High-temperature devitrification accompanying first cooling may produce spherulites, lithophysae and micropoikilitic or snowflake texture (e.g. Lipman, 1965; Anderson, 1969; Lofgren, 1971b; Bigger and Hanson, 1992; McArthur et al., 1998) and is not considered to be alteration. Low-temperature devitrification results in the gradual conversion of glass to fine-grained granular crystalline aggregates, which may happen over time as a result of alteration during changing physical conditions or in response to interaction with fluid. Devitrification may be accompanied by changes in whole-rock composition (Lipman, 1965; Lofgren, 1971a; Friedman and Long, 1984).
the presence of fluid (seawater, magmatic fluid or a mixture of both). There are gradations from isochemical metamorphism to metasomatism with increasing compositional changes. The different alteration processes, hydration, diagenesis, metamorphism and local hydrothermal alteration, are all part of this continuum in submarine volcanic successions (Fig. 1.3). The effects of each alteration process may be difficult to distinguish. Hydrothermal alteration, diagenesis and metamorphism can result in similar mineral assemblages and textures. In addition, in many cases, different alteration processes, such as diagenetic and hydrothermal alteration, are contemporaneous and their products may be inseparable (Iijima, 1974, 1978; Ohmoto, 1978; Reyes, 1990; Utada, 1991;Paradisetal., 1993). In Chapters 5, 6, and 7 of this book, the common alteration processes are grouped into those related to burial, intrusions and VHMS deposits (Fig. 1.4). Thus, burialrelated alteration styles include hydration, diagenesis and burial metamorphism. Alteration styles associated with intrusions are hydrothermal alteration within intrusions, contact metamorphism and hydrothermal alteration, and regional hydrothermal alteration. Included below is a brief introduction to each of the common alteration processes that operate in submarine volcanic settings.
Hydration of volcanic glass Hydration of glass involves the absorption of external water into glass and modification of the glass structure, either during cooling or at ambient temperatures (Ross and Smith, 1955; Friedman and Long, 1984). Hydration does not directly produce new minerals, but can form perlitic fractures or palagonite in basaltic glass and it can facilitate subsequent alteration (see Chapter 5). Compositional changes
Alteration processes
Alteration may result from regional or local processes. It can occur as a result of the interaction with hydrothermal fluid, as a result of changing physical (mainly temperature and pressure) conditions during burial, in association with the emplacement of intrusions, or a combination of all these processes. Submarine volcanic facies, especially glassy facies, are readily altered during hydration, diagenesis, hydrothermal alteration, metamorphism and tectonic deformation. Hydrothermal alteration is defined as the alteration of rocks or minerals by the reaction of hydrothermal fluid with pre-existing solid phases (Henley and Ellis, 1983). Hydrothermal fluid is a hot aqueous solution or gas, with or without demonstrable association with igneous processes. Hydrothermal alteration usually results in significant changes in rock texture, mineralogy and composition. Alteration is either metasomatic or isochemical. Metasomatism involves changes in mineralogy, texture and composition, whereas isochemical alteration (or metamorphism) involves mineralogical and textural changes only. In submarine volcanic successions, almost all alteration involves some degree of metasomatism, which is facilitated by
FIGURE 1.3 | This cartoon depicts the continuum between isochemical and hydrothermal alteration and shows the alteration processes common in submarine volcanic successions. They are positioned based on the relative degrees of chemical exchange for each process.
accompanying hydration include gains in H 2 O, and minor losses in silica and alkalis (Noble, 1967; Friedman and Long, 1984; Mungall and Martin, 1994).
Diagenesis Diagenesis encompasses the changes that occur in response to changing temperature and pressure during burial. During diagenesis of volcanic facies, significant textural and mineralogical changes can be produced by precipitation of cement, dissolution and replacement of original components, especially glass, and compaction (Fisher and Schmincke, 1984; Marsaglia and Tazaki, 1992; Torres et al., 1995). In theory, diagenesis in submarine volcanic successions is a metasomatic process involving minor chemical exchange between the host facies and trapped modified seawater at low temperatures (<250C). Transitions between diagenesis and metamorphism, and diagenesis and hydrothermal alteration have not been rigorously defined and are discussed in Sections 5.4 and 6.2.
intrusion, which may be accompanied by the circulation of heated pore fluids around and within the intrusion. Contact alteration can be isochemical (i.e. contact metamorphism) or metasomatic (i.e. hydrothermal alteration). Contact metamorphism typically results in recrystallisation of existing minerals or components and minor remobilisation of elements (Yardley, 1989). The effects of hydrothermal alteration may include major changes in texture, mineral assemblage and whole-rock composition on a scale of centimetres to kilometres.
Hydrothermal alteration related to VHMS deposits Two styles of hydrothermal alteration are commonly related to VHMS mineralisation: (1) local alteration halos around ore deposits; and (2) regional hydrothermally altered zones. Regional hydrothermally altered zones are commonly spatially and genetically associated with large intrusions and hence in this book are discussed in Chapter 6 - intrusion-related alteration styles. Local hydrothermally altered halos around VHMS deposits result from the reaction between the host facies and the mineralising hydrothermal fluid (Sangster, 1972; Franklin et al., 1975; Riverin and Hodgson, 1980; Green et al., 1983; Urabe.et al., 1983). These altered halos are commonly zoned, reflecting changes in the composition, pH and temperature of the hydrothermal fluid with time, or the extent of reaction with the host facies (Rose and Burt, 1979; Lydon and Galley, 1986; Schardt et al., 2001). The nature of altered halos around VHMS deposits depends on the host volcanic facies, host-rock composition, timing of the hydrothermal alteration relative to the emplacement or deposition of facies, structures, fluid pathways, distribution pattern of the ore, and chemical and physical conditions of the hydrothermal fluid (Large, 1992). Thus altered halos around VHMS deposits exhibit a wide variety of geometries, sizes,
Regional metamorphism Regional metamorphism involves pervasive, mainly isochemical, mineralogical and textural changes in response to increasing pressure and temperature (Yardley, 1989). During metamorphism, H 2 O and CO2-bearing fluids are generated by dehydration and decarbonation reactions (Rose and Burt, 1979).
Contact alteration associated with intrusions Contact alteration refers to the changes caused by the rise in temperature of the host rock immediately surrounding an
alteration mineral assemblages, intensities, compositions, and zones (Chapter 7). Thick, extensive (up to 20 km), pervasive sub-horizontal semi-conformable altered zones, referred to as regional hydrothermal alteration zones or deep semi-conformable alteration zones (Section 6.2), have been recognised in some volcanic successions hosting VHMS deposits (Gibson et al., 1983; Galley, 1993). Many of these regional hydrothermally altered zones are spatially associated with, and possibly genetically related to, intrusions (Galley, 1993; Brauhart et al., 1998). They are interpreted to result from large-scale convection of seawater through permeable volcanic successions at elevated geothermal gradients (Spooner and Fyfe, 1973; Munha and Kerrich, 1980; Baker, 1985). Reactions between the volcanic successions and modified seawater have involved Na-, Si-, Ca-Fe-, K-, or Mg-metasomatism, and the leaching of ore-forming metals (Munha and Kerrich, 1980; Gibson et al., 1983; Baker, 1985; Galley, 1993). Syntectonic hydrothermal alteration Hydrothermal alteration can also be synchronous with tectonic deformation: syntectonic hydrothermal alteration. In this case, the hydrothermal fluid may be modified seawater, magmatic water or volatiles released during metamorphism, or a combination of these, and migrates principally along faults and shear zones. Contemporaneous deformation may modify or destroy pre-existing textures and create new textures or foliations. Many VHMS deposits, such as Rosebery, Hercules and Mount Lyell (western Tasmania), have been affected by later tectonic deformation and modified by syntectonic hydrothermal fluids (Walshe and Solomon, 1981; Khin Zaw and Large, 1992). Although syntectonic hydrothermal fluids were not responsible for the formation of these VHMS ores, they can be critical to the subsequent formation of other styles of ore deposits in the submarine volcanic successions, such as mesothermal gold deposits. Detailed discussion of syntectonic hydrothermal alteration is not dealt with in this book.
and zircon (Browne, 1978; Reyes, 1990). Alteration rates for different minerals vary considerably because of mineral structure and composition. Silicate materials with an extensive cross-linked (e.g. tetrosilicate) structure react slowly; whereas those silicates with poorly connected fabric tend to react rapidly and uniformly (Casey and Bunker, 1990). Felsic volcanic facies typically have a higher proportion of glassy to crystalline facies than mafic facies. This is because the viscosity of silicic magmas (71-77% SiO2) inhibits diffusive crystal growth and thus produces thick bodies of glass, whereas the low viscosity of basaltic magmas favours crystallisation (Friedman and Long, 1984). Glassy facies or facies that contain glassy fragments are likely to be more rapidly altered, and to form different mineral assemblages, than those that are crystalline (Lee and Klein, 1986). In addition, mafic glasses are more rapidly altered than felsic glasses (e.g. Whetten and Hawkins, 1970; Fisher and Schmincke, 1984; Friedman and Long, 1984). The rate of alteration is related to the glass's viscosity, which in turn is a function of the composition (particularly SiO2 and H2O) and temperature (Friedman and Long, 1984). Increased SiO2 decreases the rate of alteration, whereas increased MgO, CaO and H 2 O increases the rate. Thus the higher SiO2 content of rhyolitic glasses retards reaction (Hawkins, 1981). The primary composition can influence the alteration mineralogy mainly because the dissolution of glass liberates alkalis and silica, which are consumed by subsequent reactions. Hence, highly silicic volcanic facies result in the crystallisation of Si- and Na-rich minerals, such as opal, quartz, tridymite, cristobalite and Na-zeolites (Sheppard et al., 1988). In contrast, mafic glasses, such as those on pillow rims, alter to Ca-, Fe-, Mg- and Mn-rich minerals such as smectites, phillipsite, oxides and chlorite. Volcaniclastic facies, particularly pumice-rich facies, initially have very high porosities. In volcaniclastic facies, the inter- and intra-particle pore space controls the porosity and permeability and thus grain size, type and sorting influence the distribution of early alteration facies. Early diagenetic alteration in well-sorted pumice breccias, although commonly patchy, is pervasive. In poorly sorted polymictic volcaniclastic facies the porosity and permeability are initially much more variable and diagenetic facies typically have complex distribution patterns. Coherent facies have much lower porosity and permeability, factors that are controlled by fractures produced by quenching, flowage and hydration. Alteration in coherent facies typically progresses as fronts that move outward from fractures into the less altered domains (e.g. the alteration of perlite, Noh and Boles, 1989). In addition, patchy or domainal alteration styles in volcaniclastic facies may also be related to variations in the quenching and hydration of glassy clasts (Surdam, 1973; Boles and Coombs, 1977; Marsaglia and Tazaki, 1992). Hydrothermal experiments on rhyolitic glass indicate that at high temperatures (>200C), rhyolitic glass does not recrystallise but instead acts as Na-K ion exchanger. Quenched glass fixes K+, whereas slowly cooled glass fixes Na+. Therefore variations in cooling history may explain why some glassy fragments alter more readily to particular minerals than others (Marsaglia and Tazaki, 1992).
the south through Queenstown and Rosebery to Deloraine in the north (Fig. 1.5). The volcanic succession was deposited in a series of troughs separated by areas of Proterozoic basement (Corbett and Lees, 1987; Corbett, 1992; Crawford and Berry, 1992). The Mount Read Volcanics host gold, silver and base-metal massive sulfide (VHMS) ore deposits at Hellyer, Que River, Rosebery, Hercules, Henty and Mount Lyell (Fig. 1.5). The mineral district is referred to as the Mount Read province. The Mount Read Volcanics have undergone diagenetic and hydrothermal alteration, metamorphism, at least two phases of deformation, and intrusion by Cambrian and Devonian granites (Corbett and Lees, 1987; Corbett, 1992).
FIGURE 1.5 | Distribution of the principal lithostratigraphic units and major massive sulfide deposits in the central Cambrian Mount Read Volcanics, western Tasmania. Modified after Corbett (1992,2002).
8 I CHAPTER 1
FIGURE 1.6 | Stratigraphic correlation diagram showing the major lithostratigraphic units in the Mount Read Volcanics to the west (A) and east (B) of the Henty fault. The sections are located at (1) Hellyer-Que River, (2) Pinnacles, (3) Hollway, (4) Mount Black, (5) Rosebery-Hercules, (6) White Spur, (7) Hall Rivulet Canal, (8) Murchison Gorge, (9) Henty, (10) South Henty, (11) Anthony Road, (12) Comstock-Lyell, (13) Lynchford, (14) Jukes-Darwin. Sections are modified after Fitzgerald (1974), Corbett (1979,1992, 2001), Cox (1981), Komyshan (1986), Coutts (1990), Allen (1991), Dugdale (1992), Waters and Wallace (1992), Jones (1993,1999), McKibben (1993), Herrmann and MacDonald (1996), McPhie (1996), White and McPhie (1996,1997), Callaghan (2001), Gifkins (2001) and Wyman (2001). (A) To the west of the Henty fault, the Central Volcanic Complex interfingers with, and is conformably and disconformably overlain by, the Dundas and Mount Charter Groups of the western volcano-sedimentary sequences (Corbett and Lees, 1987; Corbett, 1992). Immediately overlying the Central Volcanic Complex is a variety of small-volume sedimentary (Black Harry beds and Animal Creek greywacke) and volcanic units (rhyolite and pumice breccia). These units are overlain by the Que-Hellyer Volcanics, a succession of calc-alkaline to shoshonitic, intermediate to mafic lavas and volcaniclastic units (Corbett and Komyshan, 1989; Waters and Wallace, 1992). The Que-Hellyer Volcanics host the Que River and Hellyer ore deposits, and extend via Sock Creek to Burns Peak and Pinnacles (i.e. the Brown's tunnel sequence). The Que River Shale overlies the Que-Hellyer Volcanics and is similar to mudstone in other lithostratigraphic units of the Mount Read Volcanics. The Southwell Subgroup overlies the Que River Shale and is lithologically similar to the White Spur Formation and the Rosebery hanging-wall volcaniclastic units, comprising quartz-bearing volcaniclastic mass-flow units interbedded with black mudstone and Precambrian basement-derived turbidites (Corbett, 1992; McPhie and Allen, 1992). Overlying the Southwell Subgroup is the Mount Charter Group in which the upper Mount Cripps Subgroup is a correlate of the Tyndall Group (Corbett, 1992).
Although the primary textures, mineralogies and whole-rock compositions have been modified to various degrees, volcanic textures are generally well preserved. Locally, two regional tectonic cleavages have been recognised; however, the axial planar S2 Devonian cleavage is the dominant cleavage. S2 strikes north, dips steeply and varies from a weak, spaced cleavage to an intense, pervasive, anastomosing cleavage in the most strongly deformed rocks adjacent to faults and in phyllosilicate-rich altered zones.
The geology of the Mount Read Volcanics has been described in detail by Campana and King (1963), Corbett (1981, 1986, 1992, 1994), Corbett and Lees (1987), Corbett and Solomon (1989), Pemberton and Corbett (1992), McPhie and Allen (1992) and Crawford et al. (1992).
(B) To the east of the Henty fault, the Eastern quartz-phyric sequence overlies the Sticht Range Beds, interfingers with the Central Volcanic Complex and is conformably overlain by the western volcano-sedimentary sequences (Farrell Slates). The southern Central Volcanic Complex is flanked to the west by the Yolande River Sequence, part of the western volcano-sedimentary sequences. To the east, it interfingers with the Eastern quartz-phyric sequence and is overlain by the Tyndall Group (Corbett, 1992) and locally by andesite and basalt lenses that occur between Henty and Queenstown (Anthony Road andesite, Crown Hill andesite, Howards basalt, Spillway basalt, and Lynchford basalt). The Cambrian Murchison and Darwin granites intruded the succession in the Mount Murchison and Mount Darwin areas (Corbett and Lees, 1987; Corbett, 1992). The Tyndall Group is the youngest lithostratigraphic unit. It extends north-south along the eastern margin of the succession where it unconformably overlies Tyennan basement, Sticht Range Beds, southern Central Volcanic Complex, Eastern quartz-phyric sequence, western volcano-sedimentary sequences, and the Darwin Granite (Corbett and Lees, 1987; White and McPhie, 1997). The Owen Conglomerate overlies the Mount Read Volcanics both conformably and unconformably.
are predominantly calc-alkaline rhyolites and dacites with locally abundant andesites and basalts (Crawford et al., 1992). The volcaniclastic facies associations include a variety of primary and secondary volcaniclastic facies including thick extensive syneruptive pumice- and crystal-rich units and in situ and resedimented hyaloclastite (McPhie and Allen, 1992). Sedimentary facies include black mudstone, and graded, bedded sandstone of mixed volcanic and metasedimentary Precambrian basement provenance (McPhie and Allen, 1992). Regional stratigraphic relationships between the lithostratigraphic units are complex and laterally variable (Fig. 1.6). The Mount Read Volcanics are conformably and
10 | CHAPTER 1
unconformably overlain by the Owen Group, a thick sequence of Late Cambrian-Early Ordovician siliciclastic, shallow marine to fluvial conglomerate and sandstone (Corbett, 1992; White, 1996). VHMS deposits occur in a variety of volcanic facies in three of the main lithostratigraphic subdivisions of the Mount Read Volcanics (McPhie and Allen, 1992; Pemberton and Corbett, 1992; Waters and Wallace, 1992). In particular, VHMS deposits are interpreted to occur: (1) at the top of the Central Volcanic Complex, close to large felsic volcanic centres (Rosebery, Hercules and Mount Lyell); (2) associated with proximal facies of andesite-dacite volcanoes in the western volcano-sedimentary sequences (Hellyer and Que River); and (3) in the base of the Tyndall Group (Henty and Comstock) (Corbett and Solomon, 1989; Halley and Roberts, 1997).
range of clasts including quartz + feldspar porphyry, feldsparphyric rhyolite, pumice, granite and massive sulfide clasts.
Tyndall Group and correlates The Tyndall Group is the youngest lithostratigraphic unit in the Mount Read Volcanics. It extends along the eastern margin and locally along the western side of the succession (Fig. 1.5). The Tyndall Group varies in thickness from 350 to 1300 m and comprises distinctive quartz + feldspar crystalrich sandstone, volcanic breccia and volcanic conglomerate intercalated with minor rhyolitic welded ignimbrite, felsic to intermediate lavas and intrusions, and non-volcanic sedimentary rocks including limestone, mudstone and sandstone (White and McPhie, 1996, 1997).
Sticht Range Beds Cambrian granites The Sticht Range Beds are a thin (<500 m) basal succession of interbedded basement-derived sedimentary rocks and volcaniclastic rocks that occur along the eastern margin of the Mount Read Volcanics (Fig. 1.5: Baillie, 1989). Five Cambrian granitoids (commonly referred to as 'granites') have been recognised in western Tasmania: the Murchison, Darwin, Elliott Bay, Dove and Timber Tops granites (Leaman and Richardson, 1989). Cambrian granites may also occur at depth in a belt that extends along the eastern margin of the Mount Read Volcanics between Mount Darwin and Mount Murchison (Large et al., 1996). They are typically medium grained quartz + K-feldspar + plagioclase + biotite + hornblende + apatite + zircon rutile granite or granodiorite (McNeill and Corbett, 1992). They intrude the western volcano-sedimentary sequences, Central Volcanics Complex and Eastern quartz-phyric sequence and are unconformably overlain by the Tyndall Group in the Murchison and Darwin areas (Corbett, 1992). They are interpreted to be subvolcanic intrusions genetically related to the host volcanic succession (Solomon, 1981).
Eastern quartz-phyric sequence The Eastern quartz-phyric sequence is a 2.5 km-thick succession of quartz + feldspar-phyric lavas, synvolcanic intrusions and volcaniclastic units limited to the eastern margin of the Mount Read Volcanics (Fig. 1.5: Polya, 1981; Polya et al., 1986; Pemberton et al., 1991; Corbett, 1992).
Central Volcanic Complex The 3 km-thick Central Volcanic Complex dominates the central part of the Mount Read Volcanics between Mount Darwin and Mount Block (Fig. 1.5: Corbett, 1979). It consists of feldspar-phyric rhyolitic and dacitic lavas, synvolcanic intrusions and pumiceous volcaniclastic units (Corbett, 1979, 1992; Corbett and Lees, 1987; Corbett and Solomon, 1989; Pemberton and Corbett, 1992; Gifkins, 2001). Andesites and basalts are locally intercalated with the felsic succession (Crawford et al., 1992). Quartz + feldspar-phyric intrusions and tholeiitic basalt and dolerite dykes (Henty dyke swarm) occur throughout the northern Central Volcanic Complex (Corbett and Solomon, 1989; Crawford et al., 1992).
Western volcano-sedimentary sequences The western volcano-sedimentary sequences include the Yolande River Sequence, Dundas Group, Mount Charter Group and Henty fault wedge sequence (Corbett, 1992). These sequences are thick (>3 km) mainly sedimentary successions of quartz + feldspar-phyric volcaniclastic facies, mixed provenance sandstone and mudstone intercalated with rhyolitic, andesitic and basaltic lavas and synvolcanic intrusions, (Corbett and Lees, 1987; Corbett, 1989; McPhie and Allen, 1992). The volcaniclastic facies contain a diverse
to diffusely stratified units of crystal-rich (feldspar, quartz, clinopyroxene) sandstone; (3) thick to very thick, massive to graded beds of polymictic volcanic conglomerate or breccia; and (4) massive or laminated shard-rich siltstone (McPhie and Allen, 1992). Many of these volcaniclastic facies contain a high proportion of crystals, crystal fragments, shards and pumice clasts, which are interpreted to be juvenile pyroclasts transported by water-supported gravity flows (McPhie and Allen, 1992). The sedimentary facies association comprises conglomerate, sandstone, interbedded turbiditic sandstone and mudstone, mudstone, and fossiliferous carbonate (Selley, 1997; Large et al., 2001a; McPhie and Allen, 2003). These facies are of non-volcanic and mixed provenance, and include pelagic marine sediment, meta-sedimentary and ultramafic (bonninite, gabbro, peridote) rock fragments derived from the Precambrian basement, and volcanic clasts and crystals. There are regional variations in the proportion of volcanic versus sedimentary facies, the types of volcanic facies and the dominant magma composition. Volcanic facies associations locally dominate the stratigraphy (e.g. at Rosebery) whereas, elsewhere, volcanic facies are intercalated with, or subordinate to, sedimentary facies (e.g. in the hanging wall at Hellyer). Parts of the volcanic succession are dominated by the products of effusive, intrabasinal eruptions, such as the andesitic lavas and domes in the footwall of the Hellyer deposit (McPhie and Allen, 1992). In contrast, other areas are dominated by volcanic facies generated by explosive eruptions, such as the crystal and pumice-rich volcaniclastic units of the White Spur Formation (McPhie and Allen, 1992; McPhie and Allen, 2003). The volcanic facies associations also display marked regional variations in composition. Rhyolite and dacite dominate much of the succession (^90% of the mapped area of the central Mount Read Volcanics: Gifkins and Kimber, 2004); however, intermediate to mafic volcanic facies are locally important at Hellyer and between Henty and Queenstown (Corbett, 1992; Crawford et al., 1992; Large et al., 2001a).
Two regional Cambrian diagenetic zones (albite zone and epidote zone, Section 5.6) are preserved in the northern Central Volcanic Complex (Gifkins, 2001). Locally, hydrothermal alteration and mineralisation was synchronous with diagenesis. In addition, altered halos developed around thick synvolcanic intrusions and Cambrian granites (Eastoe et al., 1987; Large et al., 1996; Gifkins, 2001). The Mount Read Volcanics were faulted during the Middle to Late Cambrian and more extensively deformed, folded and faulted during the Early to Middle Devonian (Corbett and Lees, 1987; Crawford and Berry, 1992). Regional metamorphism to lower greenschist facies produced assemblages of quartz, albite, sericite, calcite, chlorite, tremolite-actinolite, K-feldspar, epidote and biotite, and was contemporaneous with the Devonian deformation (Corbett, 1981; Green et al., 1981; Walshe and Solomon, 1981; Corbett and Solomon, 1989). During the Late Devonian to Early Carboniferous, contact metamorphism was associated with the intrusion of I- and S- type granites (Corbett and Lees, 1987; Williams et al., 1989; Corbett, 1992).
Table 1.1 | Tonnages and grades of massive sulfide deposits in the Mount Read province (Data from Mineral Resources Tasmania, Pasminco Mining and Exploration Goldfields P/L, and Gemmell and Fulton, 2001: in situ values based on average metal prices in 2000). Zn wt% 13.9 13.5 14.7 15.9 Pb wt% Cu wt% Ag g/t Au g/t In situ value USS billion 3.99 0.81 7.76 0.71 0.23 6.83
Deposit Hellyer Que River Rosebery Hercules Henty-Mount Julia Mount Lyell field
tx10 6 16.2
0.4 0.6
0.58
3.1
32.1
Stratabound sheets Current mine Stratabound sheets Past producer Sheet-like Disseminated Current mine Current mine
0.4 0.97
0.04
in stratigraphic order, the Puddler Creek, Mount Windsor, Trooper Creek and Rollston Range formations (Henderson, 1986; Paulick and McPhie, 1999). These have a total thickness of at least 14 km (Henderson, 1986) and generally young to the south. The four formations respectively represent initial continent-derived sedimentation and minor rift-related mafic volcanism, succeeded by voluminous eruptions of crustally derived rhyolitic magmas, abruptly followed by mixed maficfelsic volcanism derived from subduction-modified mantle, and culminating in deep-water fine-grained sedimentation (Stolz, 1995). The stratigraphic relationships and lithologies are summarised in Figure 1.8.
Rollston Range Formation The uppermost formation of the Seventy Mile Range Group, the Rollston Range Formation, is poorly exposed, except in the southern central part of the belt where it has a minimum thickness of 1 km. It consists of Early Ordovician, fossiliferous, thinly bedded sandstone and siltstone of largely volcanic provenance. Minor intervals of felsic lava and volcaniclastic units exist locally (Berry et al., 1992).
Puddler Creek Formation The Puddler Creek Formation is the oldest formation in the Seventy Mile Range Group and consists mainly of massive to laminated lithic sandstone, greywacke and siltstone of mixed continental and volcanic derivation. Minor altered trachyandesitic to trachytic coherent volcanic rocks are intercalated with clastic rocks in the upper few hundred metres. The volcanic rocks have geochemical signatures indicating an alkali intraplate association related to lithospheric thinning and incipient back-arc basin development (Stolz, 1995). The formation is up to 9 km thick in the western part of the belt and is partly stoped out by the Ravenswood Batholith in the east.
Mount Windsor Formation The Mount Windsor Formation is a 0.4 to 5 km-thick succession of subaqueous rhyolitic volcanic rocks dominated by thick lavas, domes and high-level intrusions with subordinate volcaniclastic breccias. Isotopic evidence (Stolz, 1995) suggested the magmas were derived from the melting of continental crust.
Trooper Creek Formation The Trooper Creek Formation is a 0.5 to 2 km-thick succession of highly variable basaltic-andesitic, dacitic and rhyolitic coherent and brecciated volcanic rocks intercalated with abundant volcanogenic siltstone, and minor calcareous meta-sedimentary rocks. It is internally heterogenous and there are major lateral variations in the proportion of volcanic and sedimentary facies. Base-metal sulfide deposits and exhalative siliceous ironstones occur at various stratigraphic levels (Fig. 1.8: Duhig et al., 1992). Stolz (1995) suggested that the Trooper Creek Formation volcanic rocks were derived from a melted subduction-modified, sub-arc mantle wedge that was erupted during back-arc extension. Decreased volcanic activity, or an increase in clastic sedimentation, appears to have coincided with the change from exclusively rhyolitic volcanism in the preceding Mount Windsor Formation.
FIGURE 1.8 | Simplified stratigraphic column for the Seventy Mile Range Group. Modified after Large (1992) and Paulick and McPhie (1999).
14 I CHAPTER 1 Table 1.2 | Tonnages and grades of massive sulfide deposits in the Mount Windsor Subprovince (data from Berry et al., 1992; Large, 1992: in situ values based on average metal prices in 2000). Zn wt% Pb wt% Cu wt% Ag g/t Au g/t In situ value US$ billion 1.02 0.47 0.18 0.13 0.13 0.06
tx10 6
Form Stratabound sheet Subvertical pipes Stratabound sheet Stratabound sheet Stratabound sheet Stratabound sheet
8.4
2.6
69 29 8 94 30
6.2
1
0.4 0.3
10
19.7
2 1
15
existence of resistant primary components such as quartz phenocrysts allow volcanic facies interpretation (e.g. Paulick and McPhie, 1999).
I 15
This chapter addresses some of the common problems that we face when studying altered volcanic rocks. Recognising and describing the characteristics of the altered rocks is an important step towards understanding the processes of alteration. Alteration involves complex modifications of the pre-existing rock and can encompass mineralogical, textural and compositional changes. Resolving these complex relationships is dependent on a systematic multidisciplinary descriptive approach incorporating aspects of volcanology, ore deposit geology, petrology and geochemistry. Unfortunately relatively few studies adequately integrate these datasets. Studies of ore deposits generally describe the characteristics of the host rocks (i.e. lithology, petrology, geochemistry and alteration) in separate sections of manuscripts. In many cases, particularly in unpublished company reports, the geochemical data and petrographic descriptions are in appendices, discouraging integration and interpretation. The integration of physical or textural observations and geochemical data is a powerful tool in the study of altered rocks. The physical characteristics and immobile element concentrations of altered volcanic rocks can help to identify the original rocks, where relict primary minerals and textures are inconclusive (e.g. Paulick and McPhie, 1999; Barrett et al., 2001). Physical and chemical changes that occurred during alteration may help to determine the degree of alteration (i.e. alteration intensity), the style of alteration (i.e. isochemical versus metasomatic), and to discriminate between alteration processes such as diagenesis, metamorphism and hydrothermal alteration (e.g. Offler and Whitford, 1992; Gifkins and Allen, 2001). In addition, this integrated approach can lead to the development of vectors to guide explorers toward ore deposits (e.g. Large et al., 2001c). This chapter compares alternative schemes of alteration nomenclature and presents a multi-variable system for describing and naming alteration facies. The different elements of this descriptive approach to nomenclature are explained in detail in subsequent sections and chapters (i.e. alteration mineral assemblage in Section 2.4, alteration intensity in Section 2.5, alteration textures in Section 3.1 and 3.2, distribution and zonation in Section 3.3, and timing in Section 3.5). It also explains alteration indices, and the physical and geochemical techniques for determining the intensity of alteration. Alteration data sheets, which visually
combine mineralogical, textural and chemical data for altered volcanic rocks, are introduced. These alteration data sheets are used in Chapters 5, 6 and 7 to present examples of alteration facies associated with various alteration processes and different VHMS deposits.
16 | CHAPTER 2
tourmaline, apatite, alunite, epidote, carbonates and quartz association between a distinctive mineral assemblage and sulfides presence of halos around veins, faults, intrusions and mineralised rock lack of, or only partial preservation of, primary textures hardness of the rock: if not silicified, altered volcanic rocks tend to be softer than unaltered volcanic rocks, which are typically glassy or crystalline, hard and brittle degree of deformation: clay- or phyllosilicate-altered rocks are commonly more deformed than unaltered or leastaltered rocks because deformation-related strain is typically partitioned into softer altered rocks.
What was the original rock? Outcrops and hand specimens of ancient volcanic rocks rarely exhibit clear evidence of their modes of eruption and emplacement. In many cases, the best we may hope for is to recognise features that help distinguish coherent volcanic facies from volcaniclastic facies. The simplest approach to recognising the primary rock is to move out of the altered zone and examine unaltered rock. However, ancient volcanic successions rarely contain unaltered rocks. As a result we rely on the preservation of relict textures and minerals in altered rocks to provide a guide to the interpretation of the primary volcanic facies. Relict textures are original pre-alteration features that have not been destroyed by alteration. Relict textures are most likely to be visible in polished hand specimens with the aid of a hand lens and in thin sections cut parallel to the tectonic foliation. There are a small number of volcanic, devitrification and hydration textures, and components or structures that usually survive diagenesis, moderate hydrothermal alteration, low-grade metamorphism and deformation - these are particularly helpful in deciphering the primary volcanic facies. For example, porphyritic texture, spherulites, lithophysae, micropoikilitic texture, perlite, flow banding, columnar joints and pillows are all characteristic of coherent volcanic facies. Volcanic components such as pumice and scoria clasts, glass shards, accretionary lapilli and non-vesicular volcanic bombs or blocks, as well as bedding and cross stratification, are characteristics of volcaniclastic facies. For a more detailed discussion of volcanic, devitrification and hydration textures, components and structures that help to determine the host volcanic facies, readers are referred to McPhie et al. (1993)
Volcanic Textures: a guide to the interpretation of textures in volcanic rocks.
What was the nature of the alteration? Characterising the nature of the alteration can be challenging. Nevertheless, systematic descriptions of alteration mineral assemblages, alteration textures, preservation of relict minerals and textures, patterns of distribution and overprinting relationships combined with interpretations of alteration indices and compositional changes provide important information for subsequent classification and genetic interpretation. To ensure that the data are meaningful, systematic schemes for core logging and sample description should be employed. Figures 2.1 and 2.2 are examples where detailed observations in drill core and hand specimen have established the characteristics of the altered rocks. Was the rock hydrothermally altered? Hydrothermal alteration can be discriminated from metamorphism and diagenesis, which are typically regionally extensive processes that result in weakly altered rocks and preserve delicate volcanic textures. In contrast, hydrothermal alteration styles, especially those associated with mineralisation, are local in their distribution, have variable intensity (from weak to intense) and generally destroy primary textures. Discriminating accurately between different alteration styles (Section 8.1) requires knowledge of: the host rock; alteration intensity; distribution; timing; mineralogical, textural and chemical changes; and comparison with changes related to diagenesis, metamorphism and hydrothermal alteration, which have been documented in well-preserved, geologically young, submarine volcanic successions.
How do we name the altered rock? Typically, rocks that are only weakly to moderately altered, in which primary textures and minerals can be easily recognised, are given precursor names (e.g. quartz-phyric pumice breccia). In contrast, rocks that are intensely altered, in which few primary textures or minerals are recognisable, are given alteration names (e.g. quartz-augen schist or massive chlorite rock). This is similar to metamorphic rocks where low-grade rocks are given precursor names the prefix 'meta-' is assumed and pervasively deformed and metamorphosed rocks are given metamorphic names.
Primary crystals and crystal fragments are found in a wide variety of volcanic facies and can also be helpful indicators of the host volcanic facies. Whole crystals and crystal fragments in volcanic facies are mainly derived from porphyritic magmas. Crystals may be liberated from magmas during volcanic processes (explosive eruption or auto fragmentation) or by surface sedimentary processes. The shape and distribution of crystals in an altered volcanic rock can be used as a guide to whether the primary facies was coherent or clastic. In pyroclastic facies, angular and broken crystal fragments are much more common than whole euhedral crystals. In autoclastic facies, whole crystals and clusters of jigsaw-fit crystal fragments are common. In contrast, coherent volcanic facies typically, but not necessarily, contain very few broken crystal fragments. The distribution of crystals and crystal fragments in volcaniclastic facies may be random, related to size or density sorting, or concentrated in particular clasts, clusters or lenses. Crystal-bearing coherent facies are porphyritic; they contain evenly distributed euhedral crystals in a fine-grained or glassy groundmass. Although relict textures and primary crystals can be used as a guide, the discrimination of coherent and volcaniclastic facies in altered volcanic rocks is not trivial. In originally glassy volcanic rocks, alteration may produce convincing pseudotextures such as pseudobreccia, false polymictic texture, false thin-bedded texture and pseudomassive texture (Section 3.2: Allen, 1988).
FIGURE 2.1 | Part of a drill core graphic log using a modified standard logging sheet, which incorporates volcanic and alteration fades descriptions. This drill core, EHP319, is from western Tasmania and includes a thick interval of Central Volcanic Complex rocks. Abbreviations: So = bedding, S, and S2 = tectonic foliations, LCA = long core axis, cc = calcite, chl = chlorite, fsp = feldspar, qtz = quartz, ser = sericite and gb = graded bedding.
18 | CHAPTER 2
FIGURE 2.2 I This sample description - for a rock sample from 245.2 m depth in drill core EHP319 - shows the main descriptive fields for alteration studies. Abbreviations: S2 = regional cleavage, chl = chlorite, fg = fine grained, fsp = feldspar, hem = hematite, plag = plagioclase, py = pyrite, qtz = quartz and ser = sericite.
19
Crystal assemblages may reflect the primary volcanic composition; they are relicts of original magmatic mineral assemblages. For example, a rock containing abundant quartz crystals was probably derived from a quartz-phyric magma, which was likely of rhyolitic composition (Table 2.1). In cases of low temperature (<200C), weak to moderate intensity alteration, the alteration mineral assemblage may also be a guide to the primary composition of the volcanic fades. Alteration minerals rich in Fe, Mg and Ca are common in mafic volcanic rocks; K- and Na-rich minerals in felsic rocks. Typical alteration minerals in mafic rocks are chlorite, epidote, calcite, palagonite, zeolites, albite, micas, actinolitetremolite and clays (Table 2.2). In contrast, common alteration minerals in felsic rocks are quartz, micas, feldspars, zeolites, cristobalite, opal and clays, especially montmorillonite and kaolinite (Table 2.2). At temperatures above 200C and at high water-rock ratios, the alteration mineral assemblage formed is less dependent on primary host composition and more on the fluid composition, temperature, permeability and pressure (Browne, 1978; Henley and Ellis, 1983; Reyes, 1990). Generally, consideration of a combination of field relationships, relict textures and mineral assemblages will enable interpretation of coherent versus clastic, and felsic versus mafic volcanic facies, in all but the most intensely altered volcanic rocks. Beyond that we must resort to lithogeochemical techniques (Chapter 4).
TABLE 2.1 | Summary of the common volcanic rock compositions, their chemical classification (SiO2 content) and likely phenocryst minerals. SiO2 contents for unaltered modern subduction-related volcanic rocks are from Ewart (1979).
K-feldspar (orthoclase) Na-plagioclase Na- or Ca-plagioclase + biotite or amphibole or pyroxene Ca-plagioclase + pyroxene
quartz plagioclase biotite muscovite amphibole pyroxene fayalite quartz biotite amphibole pyroxene quartz K-feldspar olivine olivine hornblende
TABLE 2.2 | Common alteration minerals that replace glass and magmatic minerals in volcanic rocks. Alteration minerals are from Schwartz (1959), White and Sigvaldason (1962), lijima (1978), Hay (1978), Honnorez (1978), Brey and Schmincke (1980), Tucker (1987) and Utada (1991).
Zeolites (mordenite, clinoptilolite, laumonite, analcime, heulandite), cristobalite, opaline silica, quartz, calcite, clays (montmorillonite, smectite, mixed-layer clays) Palagonite, nontronitic clays, smectite, calcite, chlorite, epidote, Ca-rich zeolites, Fe/Ti/Mn-oxides Pyrite, leucoxene, titanite, pyrrhotite, hematite Chlorite, illite, quartz, calcite, pyrite, anhydrite Calcite, albite, adularia, wairakite, quartz, anydrite, chlorite, illite, kaolin, montmorillonite, epidote, sericite Adularia, albite, sericite Microcrystalline quartz
Mafic volcanic glass Magnetite, ilmenite and titano-magnetite Pyroxene, amphibole, olivine and biotite Plagioclase Anorthoclase, sanidine and orthoclase Quartz
20 | CHAPTER 2
mineral; and (2) the use of the complete or abbreviated alteration mineral assemblage. Some authors also use negative mineral-based names, such as K-feldspar-destructive alteration (e.g. Gustafson and Hunt, 1975). The simplest method of alteration nomenclature uses the dominant or most recognisable mineral phase in the altered rock. Examples of this are albitic, which is dominated by albite; silicic, dominated by quartz; chloritic, dominated by chlorite; and sericitic, dominated by sericite. In addition, the terms chloritisation, sericitsation, silicification and carbonitisation are common in VHMS literature in reference to the processes of alteration (e.g. Sangster, 1972; Paradis et al., 1993). They, like the terms alteration and mineralisation, are widely misused (Solomon, 1999). Deciding which mineral is dominant in an altered zone is not always a straightforward task. Several minerals may be obvious and their proportions may vary. In addition, common alteration minerals, such as sericite, can occur as the dominant mineral in several different mineral assemblages that have different origins, timing and economic significance. In fact, sericitic assemblages are probably the most abundant and widespread of all alteration assemblages. They are present in aluminous rocks in nearly all types of hypogene alteration associated with ore deposits (Meyer and Hemley, 1967). Along with sericite, carbonates, chlorite and quartz are among the most widespread alteration minerals (Meyer and Hemley, 1967). Alternatively, more detailed alteration mineral assemblages can be used; either complete assemblages of all the visible alteration minerals, or abbreviated assemblages of the most abundant and distinctive minerals. Minerals are usually listed in order of decreasing abundance; thus a mixture of 60% sericite, 35% quartz and 5% pyrite becomes the sericite + quartz + pyrite alteration assemblage. This nomenclature has the advantage of clearly defining the alteration assemblage. However, some confusion may exist where mineral assemblages contain identical or similar minerals in different abundances. For example, sericite + quartz + pyrite is easily confused with sericite + chlorite + quartz + pyrite. Dana's Textbook of Mineralogy (Dana, 1957) defined sericite as 'fine scaly muscovite united in fibrous aggregates and characterized by its silky lustre'. The term has since been widely used to refer to all fine-grained pale-coloured micas, and indeed almost any fine-grained aggregates of pale-coloured layer-lattice minerals (Whitten and Brooks, 1972), particularly in hydro thermally altered and low-grade metamorphic rocks. White mica is the preferred term to avoid the ambiguity in sericite where compositional differences such as sodic muscovite, muscovite and phengite, may be important (e.g. Yang, 1998). In this book, we always use sericite in the loose sense, referring to fine-grained pale-coloured micas of undetermined composition. We use the non-specific alternative term: white mica, where compositions are known (e.g. in discussions of mineral chemistry in Sections 4.2 and 8.2).
exploration, especially around VHMS and porphyry Cu deposits, leading to the classification of alteration by compositional changes that occurred during alteration (Hemley and Jones, 1964). Examples of this include Nametasomatism or soda-metasomatism, Mg-metasomatism and K-metasomatism (e.g. Hemley and Jones, 1964) or Kenriched alteration, Ca-enriched alteration and Mg-enriched alteration (e.g. Elliott-Meadows and Appleyard, 1991), and Na-depleted alteration (e.g. Date et al., 1979, 1983). There are several problems with compositional alteration nomenclature: (1) it becomes increasingly complicated where more than one element is mobilised during alteration, which is almost always the case in the alteration of volcanic rocks; (2) it cannot be applied in the field, as it requires a detailed knowledge of the addition and removal of elements; and (3) the character of the chemical alteration can only be accurately determined if a least-altered protolith can be unequivocally identified (Section 4.1).
DESCRIBING ALTERED VOLCANIC ROCKS | 21 TABLE 2.3 | Generic alteration terms based on common alteration mineral assemblages. Modified after Creasey (1959), Meyer and Hemley (1967), Lowell and Guilbert (1970), Rose (1970), Gustafson and Hunt (1975), Rose and Burt (1979), Beane and Titley (1981), Guilbert and Park (1986), Beane (1982), and Thompson and Thompson (1996). Forsimplic,*, skarn implies a limestone or dolomite host rock.
Argillic
Kaolinite (or halloysite, metahalloysite or dickite) + montmorillonite sericite (or muscovite) chlorite Pyrophyllite + kaolinite (or dickite) quartz sericite andalusite diaspore alunite topaz zunyite enargite tourmaline pyrite chalcopyrite hematite Chlorite + sericite kaolinite montmorillonite illitesmectite calcite epidote biotite pyrite Sericite + quartz + pyrite biotite chlorite rutile leucoxene chalcopyrite illite (Note: K-feldspar absent) Sericite + quartz + pyrite K-feldspar biotite calcite dolomite chlorite andalusite chloritoid albite pyrrhotite Epidote (or zoisite or clinozoisite) + chlorite + albite carbonate sericite montmorillonite septachlorite apatite anhydrite ankerite hematite pyrite chalcopyrite K-feldspar (orthoclase) + biotite + quartz magnetite sericite (or muscovite) albite chlorite anhydrite apatite rutile epidote chalcopyrite bornite pyrite Muscovite (or sericite) + quartz + topaz tourmaline fluorite rutile cassiterite wolfranite magnetite zunyite K-feldspar
Porphyry Cu, high-sulfidation epithermal, lowsulfidation epithermal, geothermal Porphyry Cu, high-sulfidation epithermal, lowsulfidation epithermal, geothermal
Advanced argillic
Intermediate argillic
Porphyry Cu
Porphyry Cu, low-sulfidation epithermal, geothermal, VHMS , sediment hosted massive sulfide Porphyry Cu, high-sulfidation epithermal, lowsulfidation epithermal, geothermal
Potassic
Porphyry Cu
Greisen
Skarn Calcic skarn (or tactite) Pyroxene + garnet + wollastonite epidote (or zoisite) actinolite-termolite vesuvianite pyrite chalcopyrite sphalerite Forsterite + diopside + serpentine + talc actinolitetremolite calcite magnetite hematite chalcopyrite pyrite sphalerite Calcite + chlorite hematite pyrite Quartz + pyrite + hematite Porphyry, skarn
Magnesian skarn
Porphyry, skarn
fades propylitic, argillic and potassium silicate facies was abandoned for a wide variety of generic and non-generic terms. Subsequently, Riverin and Hodgson (1980) proposed that alteration facies be used as a descriptive term to refer simply to altered rocks that could be identified during the course of mapping or in hand specimen. They described a 'spotted facies' characterised by a well-developed spotted texture due to large, strongly altered, cordierite porphyroblasts, and a 'silicified facies' that lacked spots and was typically grey in colour and siliceous in appearance. More recently, the concept of alteration facies has been expanded to incorporate other descriptive elements, particularly alteration mineral assemblages (e.g. Gibson et al., 1983; Elliott-Meadows and Appleyard, 1991; Paradis et al., 1993; Tiwary and Deb, 1997; Brauhart et al., 1998; Gifkins and Allen, 2001). Examples are 'mottled quartz-epidote' and
'silicifi cation alteration facies' described by Gibson et al. (1983) in the Amulet Rhyolite of Noranda, Canada, and 'domainal feldspar-quartz-sericite', 'fracture-controlled chlorite-sericite' and 'stylolitic chlorite-sericite-hematite alteration facies' described by Gifkins and Allen (2001) in a regional study of alteration in the Mount Read Volcanics, western Tasmania. The advantage of characterising alteration in terms of alteration facies is that it is a purely descriptive scheme in which the basic criteria used to classify the alteration can be recognised and established in the field or in hand specimen. More importantly, by using a combination of textural and mineralogical terms, alteration facies convey the general appearance of an altered rock. Also, the descriptive variables in the alteration facies provide information that is critical to subsequent genetic interpretations of the alteration process (e.g. diagenetic, metamorphic, or hydro thermal).
22 | CHAPTER 2 TABLE 2.4 | Examples of different alteration nomenclature (i.e. dominant mineral, abbreviated mineral assemblage, compositional and generic terminology) applied to altered rocks in a variety of ore deposit environments.
Quartz + sericite + pyrite chlorite K-feldspar Chlorite + pyrite + sericite quartz Sericite quartz chlorite pyrite Albite + sericite quartz Dolomite/siderite/ankerite quartz sericite chlorite pyrite
Kaolinite + montmorillonite sericite + chlorite Pyrophyllite + kaolinite quartz sericite Kaolinite + chlorite + sericite montmorillonite illitesmectite calcite epidote biotite Sericite + quartz + pyrite chlorite biotite K-feldspar biotite quartz sericite albite anhydrite epidote Biotite + K-feldspar + magnetite quartz albite anhydrite Chlorite + epidote + albite carbonate + sericite montmorillonite pyrite
K, Ca, Mg-metasomatism K, Ca, Mg-metasomatism K, Ca, Mg-metasomatism Na, Ca, Mg-metasomatism K-metasomatism K-metasomatism Ca-Mg-metasomatism
Epithermal deposits Silicic Al unite K-mica or kaolinite Chloritic Sericitic Sediment-hosted deposits Silicic Silicic Tourmaline Carbonate Sericitic Albitic
Quartz chalcedony alunite barite pyrite Alunite + kaolinite/dickite + quartz/cristobalite pyrophyllite diaspore pyrite topaz andulusite Kaolinite/dickite + illite-smectite quartz pyrite Chlorite + calcite + epidote + albite pyrite Sericite + illite-smectite quartz calcite dolomite pyrite Quartz + pyrite + hematite Quartz muscovite carbonate + pyrite + pyrrhotite Tourmaline muscovite quartz pyrrhotite Ankerite/siderite/calcite + quartz muscovite pyrrhotite Sericite + chlorite + quartz pyrrhotite pyrite albite Albite + chlorite + muscovite biotite
Si-enrichment Ca, Mg, Na-depletion K, Ca, Mg, Na-metasomatism Ca, Mg-metasomatism K-metasomatism
Jasperiod Tourmalinite
modification (i.e. subtle, weak, moderate, strong or intense). It is determined from petrographic descriptions in combination with compositional data (e.g. Na2O) and alteration indices. The distribution variable (Sections 3.3 and 3.4) refers to the mappable extent of the alteration facies and its relationship to host facies or components, structures, mineralised rock, veins and other alteration assemblages (i.e. local or regional; footwall or hanging wall; stratabound, pipe or plume). The texture variable (Sections 3.1 and 3.2) refers to the alteration texture that is superimposed on the rock, and is typically described in hand specimen and/or thin section. It may incorporate the shape, form, grainsize or fabric in the altered rock (e.g. pervasive, selective or vein halo). The alteration mineral assemblage (Section 2.4) is expressed as an abbreviated alteration mineral assemblage in which the minerals are listed in order of decreasing abundance (e.g. the assemblage feldspar > quartz > sericite becomes feldspar + quartz + sericite). This approach produces alteration facies names such as weak, regional, selective, chlorite + sericite alteration facies or strong, massive, footwall, quartz + sericite alteration facies.
and under the same fluid-rock conditions (Hemley and Jones, 1964). Disequilibrium or metastable mineral assemblages are common and caution must be exercised in equating coexistence with stable equilibrium (Meyer and Hemley, 1967; Rose and Burt, 1979). In general, alteration is a process of re-equilibration. The pre-existing mineral constituents in a rock become unstable under changed physicochemical conditions (e.g. the addition of hydrothermal fluid) and progressively alter to a new stable mineral assemblage, with or without
24 | CHAPTER 2
metasomatic chemical changes. The alteration process may be only partially completed and may result in a disequilibrium assemblage containing a mixture of the pre-existing and new alteration minerals. Indeed, disequilibrium assemblages are typical of altered volcanic rocks. Common examples, at low metamorphic grade, are domainal devitrification of felsic glass and incipient sericitisation of feldspar crystals. Subsequent overprinting alteration may complicate disequilibrium assemblages. Volcanic rocks commonly retain relicts of primary minerals (especially as phenocrysts) and alteration minerals from several stages of diagenetic, metamorphic and/or hydrothermal alteration (e.g. Fig. 2.4). Equilibrium assemblages may be attained in zones of intense hydrothermal alteration or metamorphism, but primary equilibrium assemblages are rarely preserved in ancient volcanic rocks. This is true even in least-altered rocks. When mapping altered rocks it is important to recognise disequilibrium assemblages and correctly attribute minerals to the various processes of formation. Equally important is an understanding of the effects and constraints that earlier alteration facies, at various scales, may impose on subsequent processes.
Stage 1: Hydration Glassy plagioclase-phyric coherent rhyolite with perlitic fractures. Fracture surfaces are coated with clay minerals.
Stage 2: Diagenetic alteration Partly clay + zeolite-altered plagioclase-phyric coherent rhyolite. The alteration facies distribution is controlled by the perlitic fracture pattern.
Moderately sericite + quartzaltered plagioclase-phyric coherent rhyolite. Pervasively developed sericite + quartz has replaced all glass and previously altered domains. Some clay-altered relicts have been altered to sericite. Plagioclase phenocrysts are partly altered to sericite.
Stage 4: Hydrothermal alteration Intense chlorite + pyritealtered plagioclase-phyric coherent rhyolite. Vein-halo chlorite + pyrite associated with cross-cutting chlorite + carbonate veins has overprinted and destroyed earlier clay and sericite + quartz alteration assemblages and textures.
FIGURE 2.4 | Cartoons of the microscopic textural and mineralogical evolution of an originally glassy plagioclase-phyric coherent rhyolite. Overprinting hydration, diagenesis and two stages of hydrothermal alteration are visible in the final rock.
buff the sawn surface with wet sandpaper. Steel wool can be used to clean tarnished sulfides. Polished slabs are the cheapest and most readily available tools for the field geologist. Petrography Examination of standard 75 x 25 mm thin sections or polished thin sections with a polarising microscope is an excellent and relatively inexpensive method of mineral identification. It is the best way of resolving small-scale spatial relationships between minerals to assist determination of alteration reactions, paragenesis and likely processes.
Petrography is most effective if carried out by the person who maps and samples the rocks. This requires access to preparation facilities and a polarising microscope. This is not a practical solution for mineral explorers, but is still widely applicable in academia. The alternative is to send selected samples to a consultant petrographer with complete details of the geological context and the underlying objectives. Many professional petrographers are unapologetic petrologists, principally interested in petrogenesis and not enthusiastic about the obscuring effect of alteration. Therefore, it is imperative that the client informs the petrographer of the importance of alteration mineral assemblages. Short-wavelength infrared spectroscopy The development of portable field instruments like the PIMA (portable infrared mineral analyser), has increased the use of short-wavelength infrared (SWIR) spectroscopy in mineral exploration and related research (Thompson et al., 1999). The technique identifies phyllosilicates, hydroxylated silicates, carbonates and sulfates in most types of dry geological samples and can also provide information on crystallinity and compositional variations in some minerals, such as clays, white mica and chlorite. These minerals, particularly phyllosilicates, are common constituents of alteration mineral assemblages and may be difficult to discriminate by other field or optical methods. Portable SWIR analysis has significant limitations in resolving complex mineral assemblages, analysing dark samples with significant opaque components and in identifying aspectral anhydrous minerals, such as quartz. It is an empirical method and does not supersede precise determinative methods such as X-ray diffraction. Nevertheless, portable SWIR has practical advantages including rapid infield analyses of up to 30 samples per hour and no sample preparation other than drying. It has many applications in the recognition and mapping of altered zones in a variety of mineral deposit styles. Thompson et al. (1999) listed recently published SWIR studies in epithermal, Archaean greenstone, VHMS, uranium, evaporite and regolith environments. Electron microprobe Micro-analysis of mineral grains by electron microprobe has become the standard tool for studies of mineral chemistry over the past few decades. It has fine resolution, down to a few microns diameter, and provides quantitative analyses of elements with atomic numbers greater than four (Be) at concentrations of greater than about 0.01 wt% (Berry et al., 1983). Major element data can be used to estimate the molecular formulae of unidentified minerals and investigate spatial variations in mineral composition. Non-destructive analyses are made on standard polished petrographic thin sections or polished grain mounts. However, the electron microprobe is an expensive laboratory instrument; it requires a skilled operator and the sample throughput is low. Consequently, it is essentially a research tool. It is rarely applied in alteration studies, mineral exploration or mapping, but is potentially useful for the verification of mineral identification and spatial compositional variations interpreted by other means.
X-ray diffraction X-ray diffraction (XRD) is the definitive method for the identification of all crystalline minerals, including opaque minerals and structural polymorphs with similar chemical compositions. Modern powder diffractometers can provide semi-automated analysis and computerised semi-quantitative mineral identifications from a small amount of powdered sample (Berry et al., 1983). Like the electron microprobe, these machines are mainly used as research tools. Commercial quantitative XRD is not widely available and is relatively expensive, currently around $75-95 per sample (AMDEL) in Australia.
26 [ CHAPTER 2
which alteration minerals permeate the entire rock, PIP10 (vol%). Despite these attempts to quantify alteration intensity, it is still applied subjectively by most geologists. For this reason we prefer to avoid a numerical system and retain the descriptive terms subtle, weak, moderate, strong and intense. The term least altered is reserved for rocks that are less altered than their counterparts in the same environment. Leastaltered rocks may be weakly to moderately altered, especially in hydrothermal environments where all rocks are altered to some degree. Here we define subtle, weak, moderate, strong and intense alteration based on the extent of growth of new alteration minerals, the destruction of primary minerals and textures, and pervasiveness of alteration textures (Table 2.5). Typically with increasing intensity of alteration, primary minerals are progressively replaced, new minerals are more pervasively distributed, primary textures are less consistently preserved, and new textures are developed (Fig. 2.5). For example, Gustafson and Hunt (1975) noted that with increasing intensity of hydrothermal K-silicate alteration at the El Salvador porphyry deposit in Chile, there is an increasing degree of replacement of plagioclase phenocrysts by Kbearing phases until the phenocrysts are obliterated. With progressively more intense alteration, the mafic phenocrysts are replaced, the groundmass becomes coarser grained with K-feldspar overgrowths, magnetite and hematite disappear, and the abundance of veins increases. Estimates of alteration intensity that incorporate textural changes are biased towards texturally destructive alteration styles such as feldspar-destructive hydrothermal alteration. It is important to recognise that under some circumstances alteration, particularly carbonate alteration and some forms of silicification, can enhance some primary or pre-existing textures (e.g. Fig. 2.6: Titley, 1982; Allen, 1988). For example, carbonate nodules preserve delicate shard textures in the Hercules footwall, western Tasmania (Fig. 2.6A: Allen, 1997), and shards are preserved in quartz nodules and quartz + chlorite ( muscovite) altered zones in the Gossan Hill footwall, Western Australia (Fig. 2.6B and C: Sharpe and Gemmell, 2001). Although these alteration styles preserve pre-existing textures, they may still be recognised as intensely altered because of the pervasiveness of the new mineral assemblage. Colour contrasts related to overprinting alteration assemblages or different mineral habits within an assemblage can enhance textures, such as clast margins, whereas another alteration assemblage with lower colour contrast and of equal intensity may preserve textures just as well but textures may be less discernable. The pervasiveness of alteration textures and the degree of preservation of pre-existing textures are dependent on the resilience of the pre-existing textures, the intensity and style of alteration (Doyle, 2001; Gifkins and Allen, 2001).
DESCRIBING ALTERED VOLCANIC ROCKS | 27 TABLE 2.5 | Descriptive alteration intensity terms (subtle, weak, moderate, strong and intense) defined on the extent of growth of new alteration minerals, the destruction of primary minerals and textures, and pervasiveness of alteration textures.
Subtle
Phenocrysts and free crystals of feldspar, quartz, and mafic minerals (amphiboles, pyroxenes etc.) were unaffected by alteration, Plagioclase may have been dusted with sericite, carbonate or hematite. Feldspar has been partly replaced by albite, sericite, carbonate, hematite and/or epidote. Mafic minerals have been partly replaced by Mg- and Fe-rich minerals, such as chlorite, epidote and Fe-oxides. Feldspar has been partly to completely replaced by feldspar, sericite, carbonate, epidote, quartz and/or magnetite, with outlines still visible. Mafic minerals commonly completely pseudomorphed. Minor recrystallisation or replacement of quartz. Feldspar has been completely replaced by chlorite, sericite, carbonate and/or opaques (although outlines still partly visible) and quartz partly replaced or recrystallised. No primary minerals remain. Sparse outlines after primary minerals may still be visible.
New minerals have coated the surfaces of existing phenocrysts, fractures and clasts, and infilled open space (fractures, vesicles, pore space, etc.). Glass has been devitrified.
Primary volcanic, devitrification and hydration textures are clearly visible with little or no modification,
Minor replacement/recyrstailisation (micro- or cryptocrystalline, overgrowths, poikilitic, microlitic, spherulitic, variolitic and perlitic) and infill textures,
Weak
Patchy or domainal and disseminated selective alteration styles. Alteration commonly nucleated on existing minerals, clasts or fractures and interstitial in glomerocrysts.
Good preservation of most textures (original groundmass, matrix textures and phenocrysts). Delicate textures such as shards, pumice clasts, perlite and the fine fibrous textures in spherulites show some modification. J Most textures modified and/or destroyed by alteration. Delicate textures commonly destroyed or substantially modified. Coarser groundmass textures (perlite, spherulites, amygdales and flow banding) and clasts partially to completely recrystallised but still clearly visible in domains.
Replacement, dissolution, recrystallisation, deformation and infill textures. Most common textures include: pseudomorphs, cleavage and rim texture, core and zonal texture, core and rim texture, skeletal texture, overgrowths, micro- or cryptocrystalline, dissolution vugs, stylolites, poikilitic, foliations, fiamme, and infill textures. Replacement, dissolution, recrystallisation, deformation, infill and pseudotextures. In particular: pseudomorphs, partial pseudomorphs, overgrowths, disseminated nodules, spheriods, micro- or cryptocrystalline, dissolution vugs, stylolites, fiamme, porphyroblasts, poikiloblasts, poikilitic, hornfelsic and augen textures, and foliations and lineations.
Moderate
Patchy or domainal and disseminated alteration styles. Individual domains may have been texturally destructive (i.e. chlorite alteration of pumice clasts). Selective alteration of individual clasts, groups of clasts or minerals. Vein-halo alteration. Domainal selective to pervasive. Vein-halo alteration. ,
Strong
Primary volcanic, devitrification and hydration textures almost completely destroyed (regardless of grainsize). Pervasive replacement of groundmass, matrix and phenocrysts. Sparse relict fiamme, amygdales and clast outlines preserved.
Replacement, dissolution, recrystallisation, deformation, infill and pseudo textures. Including: pseudomorphs, nodules, spheroids, micro-or cryptocrystalline, dissolution vugs, stylolites, fiamme, porphyroblasts, poikiloblasts, poikilitic, granoblastic, decussate, hornfelsic and augen textures, and foliations and lineations. Replacement, dissolution, recrystallisation, deformation, infill and pseudo textures. Including: nodules, spheriods, micro- or cryptocrystalline, rare stylolites, granoblastic, decussate and hornfelsic textures, and foliations and lineations.
Intense
Transgresses textural facies and unit contacts and primary textures. Pervasive, typically homogenous, alteration on a local scale. Veinhalo alteration.
All original rock textures including phenocrysts have been destroyed, Weak pseudomorphs or outlines of coarse phenocrysts may be visible. Primary rock type indeterminate.
28 | CHAPTER 2
A. Bubble-wall shards Delicate bubble-wall and platy shards (S) have been preserved within a carbonate nodule in the proximal, carbonate zone beneath the Hercules VHMS deposit. The carbonate nodule comprises quartz + calcite + chlorite-altered pumice breccia. Plane polarised light. Sample MR96-57, Cambrian Hercules Pumice Formation, Central Volcanic Complex, Mount Read Volcanics, Hercules footwall, western Tasmania.
B. Pumice shards
Delicate tube pumice clasts (P) have beeen preserved in intensely quartz + chlorite ( muscovite)-altered pumice breccia from the footwall to the Gossan Hill VHMS deposit. The tube vesicles have been coated in thin films of chlorite and filled with quartz, and vesicle walls have been altered to quartz. Plane polarised light.
Sample 138752, Archaean Golden Grove Formation, Gossan Hill footwall, Western Australia.
C. Shards This quartz nodule (Q) from the footwall, quartz + chlorite ( muscovite) zone contains delicate shard textures. Plane polarised light. Sample 138795, Archaean Golden Grove Formation, Gossan Hill footwall, Western Australia.
FIGURE 2.6 | Photographs of intensely altered pumice breccias with delicate primary textures.
FIGURE 2.5 | Pairs of hand-specimen and thin-section photographs of increasing intensity of alteration in rhyolitic feldspar-phyric pumice breccia in the Hercules footwall, northern Central Volcanic Complex, western Tasmania. (A) Hand-specimen and (B) thin-section photographs of subtle, domainal, albite + sericite- and sericite + chlorite-altered pumice breccia (sample MR96-63) showing excellent preservation of volcanic textures. Plagioclase crystals are partly replaced by albite. In albite-rich domains, tube vesicles and clast margins are lined with sericite and albite + quartz altered. In contrast, pumice clasts and shards in the chlorite-rich domains are pervasively sericite + chlorite altered. The Al = 40 and CCPI = 26. (C) Hand-specimen and (D) thin-section photographs of weak, domainal, albite + sericite- and sericite + chlorite-altered pumice breccia (sample MR96-54). Volcanic textures are well preserved in the albite-rich domains and poorly preserved in the chlorite-rich domains. Plagioclase crystals (P) are sericite albite opaques altered and have albite overgrowths or nodules (alb), which locally preserve delicate vesicular textures. Elsewhere vesicles are coated in sericite and filled with albite. Pumice walls are albite + quartz altered and sericite chlorite + hematite fiamme and stylolites are abundant. The Al = 58 and CCPI = 37. (E) Hand-specimen and (F) thin-section photographs of moderate, pervasive, albite + sericite-altered pumice breccia (sample MR96-48) with partly preserved pumice textures and plagioclase crystals. Sericite fiamme (F) and sericite + hematite stylolites are abundant. Nodules or overgrowths of albite occur around calcite and albite + hematite-altered plagioclase crystals (P). The Al = 70 and CCPI = 38. (G) Hand-specimen and (H) thin-section photographs of strong, pervasive, quartz + sericite + pyrite-altered pumice breccia (sample MR96-50). Primary volcanic textures are faint, with sparse sericite-altered pumice clasts or fiamme (F). Plagioclase crystals (P) are polycrystalline-quartz pyrite altered. The Al = 98 and CCPI = 64. (I) Hand-specimen and (J) thin-section photographs of intense, schistose, quartz + sericite + pyrite-altered pumice breccia (sample MR96-46). No relict plagioclase or volcanic textures are preserved in thin section: in hand specimen irregular lenses of sericite resemble fiamme (F). This alteration facies is pervasive and strongly foliated. The Al = 99 and CCPI = 30.
30 | CHAPTER 2
FIGURE 2.7 | West-east 1700mN section through the K-lens of the Rosebery VHMS deposit, western Tasmania, showing geology and contoured S/Na2O data.
produce a potential range from zero to one hundred, which is convenient for quantification of alteration intensity. The classic example is the Alteration Index (AI) of Ishikawa et al. (1976): AI = 100(MgO + K2O) MgO K2O CaO + Na 2 O
AI mark 4 =
Originally devised as a measure of intensity of sericite and chlorite alteration associated with the Kuroko-VHMS deposits, it is useful in many types of plagioclase-destructive hydrothermal alteration systems. In some cases where there are large differences in magnitudes between components, some components are multiplied by appropriate factors to adjust their effect in the index. An example is the AI mark 4 index,
which quantifies alteration in siliciclastic dolomites (Large et al., 2000). Molar proportion alteration indices are said to be more easily related to the stoichiometry of alteration reactions and hence to alteration assemblages (e.g. Eilu et al., 1997). The extra step in converting composition data to molar proportions of oxides or elements is easily achieved in computer spreadsheets but it significantly complicates manual calculations. Some examples of molar indices are the 3K/A1 sericitisation index and the CO 2 /CaO carbonation index used in exploration for lode Au deposits (Davies et al., 1990). The ACNK index of Hodges and Manojlovic (1993) used the molecular proportions of Al 2 O 3 /(CaO + Na 2 O + K2O) to quantify intensity of alteration related to metamorphosed massive sulfide deposits at Snow Lake, Manitoba.
The AI-CCPI alteration indices and box plot The well-known Alteration Index (AI) was developed in the Kuroko VHMS deposits, Japan, to represent the principal components gained (MgO and K2O) during chlorite and sericite alteration, and those lost (Na2O and CaO) during the breakdown of Na-plagioclase and volcanic glass (Ishikawa et al., 1976). The AI has since been widely used in VHMS mineral exploration to provide quantitative estimates of the intensity of alteration. It typically increases to maximum values in the proximal hydrothermal zones beneath massive sulfide lenses (e.g. Saeki and Date, 1980). The AI ranges from 0 to 100. High (> 60) values reflect high MgO and K2O contents relative to CaO and Na 2 O, and may be related to intense hydrothermal sericite and chlorite alteration. In contrast, low (< 30) AI values reflect high CaO or Na 2 O contents that may be due to intense albite or calcite alteration more typical of regional diagenetic alteration or metamorphism. For example, at Hellyer AI increases from 35 to 95 from the margin to the centre of the alteration pipe directly below the ore deposit (Fig. 2.8A and B: Gemmell and Large, 1992; Large et al., 2001a). There is a strong inverse relationship between AI and Na concentration (e.g. Fig. 2.8A and D) because loss of Na, and sometimes loss of Ca, is the major chemical change involved in the breakdown of plagioclase. In many studies Na depletion is used instead of AI as the principal measure of alteration intensity (Date et al., 1983). The Ishikawa alteration index has two major limitations (Large et al., 2001a). Firstly, it does not take carbonate alteration into account, even though this type of alteration can be significant in some VHMS alteration systems. Where Ca-carbonates are present they cause a decrease in AI, even where plagioclase destruction is extreme, because CaO is in the denominator. Secondly, the AI effectively measures plagioclase destruction but does not differentiate chloritefrom sericite-altered rocks. Variations in relative proportions of chlorite and sericite or spatial relationships between chlorite and sericite zones may be important guides to exploration in some VHMS alteration systems. A geochemical index to quantify the variation would be an improvement on subjective visual estimates. The chlorite-carbonate-pyrite index, CCPI = 100(FeO +MgO) FeO+MgO+Na2O+K2O
FIGURE 2.8 | Alteration intensity in the altered footwall zones at the Hellyer VHMS deposit, western Tasmania. (A) Schematic cross-section of the altered footwall zones and variations in alteration intensity in these zones as measured by (B) Alteration Index (Al), (C) Chlorite-carbonate-pyrite index (CCPI), and (D) Na2O. Modified after Gemmell and Large (1992) and Large et al. (2001a).
was developed to reflect the prominence of chlorite, FeMg carbonates, and pyrite, which are common minerals in the proximal altered zones of many VHMS deposits (Large et al., 2001a). High values of CCPI reflect high FeO and MgO contents, suggesting intense alteration to Fe- or Mgrich minerals such as chlorite, Fe-Mg-bearing carbonates (dolomite, ankerite or siderite), pyrite, magnetite or hematite. However, the CCPI of least-altered rocks is dependent on primary composition and magmatic fractionation. Mafic rocks with high primary FeO and MgO contents typically have CCPI values greater than 50, whereas more evolved felsic rocks have lower CCPI values between 10 and 50. Thus the CCPI is not well suited to the study of altered mafic rocks.
Used in conjunction with the AI, particularly graphically on x-y bivariate plots with AI as the x-axis, the CCPI provides an effective means of discriminating sericite-, chlorite- and carbonate-rich altered zones. Furthermore, the AI-CCPI bivariate plot, termed the Alteration box plot by Large et al. (2001a), discriminates these VHMS-related hydrothermal alteration assemblages from diagenetic albite- or albite + Kfeldspar-bearing assemblages. Feldspar, phyllosilicate, carbonate and several other alteration mineral compositions plot around the margins of the Alteration box plot (Fig. 2.9). Albite plots at the lower left, K-feldspar and pure muscovite at the lower right, chlorite at the top right, and carbonates along the upper margin et cetera. Calcite plots at the top left corner (although CCPI is indeterminate for pure calcite, the merest trace of Fe or Mg will result in CCPI = 100), magnesite at the top right and the Ca-Mg carbonates spread between them according to AI
32 | CHAPTER 2
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FIGURE 2.9 | Al - CCPI Alteration box plot for least-altered samples from the Mount Read Volcanics, western Tasmania (modified after Large et al., 2001a). The data are classified according to Ti/Zr ratios, where rhyolites have Ti/Zr <10, dacites 10-20 and andesites and basalts >20, and show the effect of magmatic fractionation on the CCPI.
determined by Mg/Ca ratios. Similarly, Mn-carbonates (except pure rhodochrosite, which is indeterminate in both indices) plot along the top margin of the Alteration box plot; their positions determined by the inevitable minor concentrations of Ca, Mg and Fe. Siderite, pyrite and Fe-oxides have CCPI values of 100, but are indeterminate for Al and thus plot as a line, rather than a point, along the top. Large et al. (2001a) found that least-altered rocks in the Mount Read Volcanics have an Al range of 20 to 65 and a CCPI range of 15 to 85 (Fig. 2.9). A compilation of 1734 geochemical analyses for unaltered volcanic rocks from various modern volcanic arcs shows a slightly smaller Al range of 20 to 60 and a slightly greater CCPI range of 10 to 90 (Fig. 2.10). Hence, least-altered volcanic rocks plot within a rectangle near the middle (somewhat left of centre) of the AI-CCPI bivariate plot. This is the least-altered 'box' that inspired the term box plot. The extent and position of the least-altered box may vary for data from different districts, according to the diversity of primary compositions. Fluid-dominated pervasive hydrothermal alteration tends to produce simple equilibrium assemblages of only a few phases. Therefore, intensely altered samples tend to plot outside the least-altered box and towards the positions of the dominant alteration minerals. For example, unaltered calc-alkaline rhyolites plot in a box towards the centre of the Alteration box plot; with increasing intensity of alteration, altered samples plot progressively further away from the unaltered box (Fig. 2.11). The relative direction of movement away from the unaltered box is controlled by the alteration assemblage and hence by the alteration process (Large et al., 2001a). Large et al. (2001a) defined 10 different mineralogical trends on the Alteration box plot. Six of these trends relate to common VHMS hydrothermal alteration styles and four are associated mainly with diagenetic alteration (Fig. 2.12).
FIGURE 2.10 | AI-CCPI Alteration box plot for 1734 analyses of rocks from modern volcanic arcs; most are assumed to be unaltered. Geochemical data are from Aleutian, Andean, Indonesian and Scotian volcanic arcs, and were compiled by A.J. Stolz (electronic communication, 1998). These data (classified by SiO2 content) show the effects of magmatic differentiation on CCPI, and to a lesser degree on Al. Mafic rocks have high CCPI and low to moderate Al values because of their high Fe, Mg and high Ca contents, respectively. In contrast, felsic rocks have low CCPI because of their low Fe, Mg and high K contents, and high Al due to their low Ca and high K contents.
It is important to note that neither Al nor CCPI includes SiO2; thus the Alteration box plot does not provide a direct measure of the intensity of quartz or silica alteration. As outlined in Section 7.2, silica-altered rocks are important around some VHMS deposits, including the silicic core zone in the Hellyer alteration pipe (Gemmell and Large, 1992), the stockwork zones of some Kuroko deposits (Shirozu, 1974), and in some Cyprus-type alteration pipes (Lydon, 1984). The Alteration box plot is a powerful tool for relating lithogeochemical data to mineral assemblages and alteration intensity in VHMS systems, particularly in felsic volcanic rocks. It has obvious applications in mineral exploration for recognising favourable alteration styles, delineating altered zones and providing vectors to ore within large altered systems. A similar dual index approach may be useful for other deposit types, with different indices designed to highlight specific alteration assemblages. Element concentrations and mineral abundances Element concentrations can also be used as guides to alteration intensity. Many alteration studies have used Na depletion as a measure of hydrothermal alteration intensity (e.g. Franklin et al., 1975; Date et al., 1979; 1983; Hashiguchi et al., 1983; Ashley et al., 1988). Typically unaltered modern arc calcalkaline rhyolites have Na 2 O values between 3 and 5 wt% (Barrett et al., 1993; Stolz et al., 1996). Rhyolites with greater than 5 wt% Na 2 O are normally albitised, whereas rhyolites with less than 3 wt% Na 2 O reflect feldspar-destructive alteration styles (e.g. sericite, chlorite, pyrite, K-feldspar and carbonate). The lower the Na 2 O content the more intensely hydrothermally altered the rock; thus, Na 2 O typically
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Al (Ishikawa Alteration Index) FIGURE 2.11 | Al - CCPI Alteration box plot for rhyolites in the northern Central Volcanic Complex, western Tasmania. Samples are of rhyolitic pumice breccias from the Rosebery and Hercules footwalls. With increasing intensity of footwall chlorite + sericite pyrite alteration, Al and CCPI values increase and samples plot in the upper right of the Alteration box plot.
decreases towards the centre of VHMS alteration systems (e.g. Fig. 2.13). Alteration mineral abundances quantitatively estimated from whole-rock composition data can also provide measures of alteration intensity. For example, Large et al. (2001b) found that calculated mineral percentages closely approximated the petrographic estimates of alteration mineral abundances in samples from Rosebery. By plotting the calculated mineral abundances down hole they showed that diagenetic minerals, such as albite, decrease in abundance and hydrothermal minerals, such as sericite, quartz, chlorite and Mn-carbonate, increase in abundance with proximity to ore (Fig. 2.14). Mineral abundances can be calculated as percentages from the whole-rock analyses by the least-squares method outlined in Herrmann and Berry (2002). A free copy of the MINSQ (least-squares spreadsheet method for calculating mineral proportions from whole-rock major element analyses) is available to download from the University of Tasmania's Centre for Ore Deposit Research website <www.codes.utas. edu.au>.
FIGURE 2.12 | Schematic AI-CCPI Alteration box plots showing the 10 alteration trends recognised by Large et al. (2001a). These provide a tool for graphically discriminating prospective from non-prospective altered zones and/or systems. (A) The six trends marked by arrows on this box plot are typical of hydrothermally altered rocks associated with VHMS deposits. Trend 1: sericite alteration at the margins of the hydrothermal alteration halo in felsic volcanic rocks. Trend 2: footwall sericite + chlorite pyrite alteration in felsic and mafic volcanic rocks. Trend 3: chlorite sericite pyrite alteration, typical of footwall, chlorite-dominated zones in either felsic or mafic volcanic rocks. Trend 4: chlorite + carbonate alteration typically developed proximal to massive sulfide lenses in the footwall of either felsic or mafic host rocks. Trend 5: sericite + carbonate alteration in the proximal hanging wall to ore deposits or along strike in the host rocks. Trend 6: K-feldspar + sericite, an uncommon trend developed locally within footwall felsic volcanic rocks. (B) The four trends marked by arrows on this box plot are mainly attributed to diagenetic processes and are unrelated to mineralisation. Trend 7: albite + chlorite alteration, typical of low temperature seawater-volcanic rock interaction. Trend 8: epidote + calcite albite alteration common in intermediate and mafic volcanic rocks. Trend 9: K-feldspar + albite alteration. Trend 10: paragonitic sericite + albite alteration.
34 | CHAPTER 2
FIGURE 2.13 | Contoured Na2O data for the west-east 1700 mN section through the K-lens of the Rosebery VHMS deposit, western Tasmania. Modified after Large etal. (2001b).
In the northern Central Volcanic Complex (Mount Read Volcanics), detailed petrographic descriptions were combined with compositional data to assess the range of AI and CCPI values for subtly to intensely altered rhyolites (Table 2.6 and Fig. 2.15). The least-altered rhyolites were subtly altered and have comparable alteration indices to unaltered modern arc rhyolites (AI = 30-60 and CCPI = 10-40). Intensely altered rhyolites have mid to high alteration indices (AI = 40-100 and CCPI = 28-100). AI ranges for subtly, weakly, moderately, strongly or intensely altered rhyolites, dacites, andesites and basalts are similar. In contrast, the CCPI is influenced by the
primary composition. For this reason the Alteration box plot should never be used independently as a method of classifying the alteration system, but should be integrated with the primary geochemical and/or petrographic data. Using a combination of alteration mineral assemblage and composition data also enables separation of rock samples into least-altered, diagenetically altered and hydrothermally altered samples (Gifkins and Allen, 2001; Large et al., 2001a). The trend from subtly to intensely hydrothermally altered rocks associated with VHMS deposits is characterised by increases in both CCPI and AI, and decreases in Na 2 O (Table 2.7).
TABLE 2.6 | Alteration indices for altered rhyolites in the northern Central Volcanic Complex, western Tasmania. The broad range in Al and CCPI values reflects different alteration styles. For example, strongly altered rhyolites with low Al values probably reflect diagenetic alteration, whereas high Al values reflect hydrothermal alteration. nyuruinermai aiieiauon.
TABLE 2.7 | Alteration indices, Na2O contents and approximate mass changes for hydrothermally altered rhyolites from the footwalls to the Rosebery and Hercules VHMS deposits, western Tasmania. AI and CCPI increase and Na2O decreases with increasing intensity of alteration.
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FIGURE 2.14 | Variations in calculated mineral abundances in samples from DDH 120R through K lens of the Rosebery VHMS deposit, western Tasmania. Increasing intensity of hydrothermai alteration towards the ore lens corresponds with increasing proportions of chlorite, Mn-carbonate and calcite, and decreasing concentrations of quartz and albite.
36 | CHAPTER 2
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Al (Ishikawa Alteration Index) intense A moderate subtle strong o weak FIGURE 2.15 | Bivariant plots of rhyolite samples from the northern Central Volcanic Complex, western Tasmania, which have been classified qualitatively. (A) AI-CCPI Alteration box plot for subtly, weakly, moderately, strongly and intensely altered rhyolites. With increasing intensity of alteration rhyolites plot away from the subtle box in all directions depending on the alteration composition and hence on the processes. (B) Al versus Na2O for subtly, weakly, moderately, strongly and intensely altered rhyolites. With increasing intensity of alteration rhyolites plot away from the subtle field.
chemical characteristics of the altered rock or alteration facies, providing quick reference to the data collected and facilitating interpretation. Data sheets are used in Chapters 5, 6 and 7 to illustrate the dominant alteration facies or zones associated with each of the case studies. The information that is included on the data sheets may vary because the relevant or available data varies in different volcanic successions and in different deposits. Where appropriate, data sheets may incorporate: sample number location information geographical or geological feature formation or group succession coordinates map, cross-section, or alteration zonation model showing the location of the sample or alteration facies volcanic facies characteristics descriptive name for the volcanic facies (see McPhie et al. (1993) for guidelines) relict primary minerals composition (e.g. rhyolitic, dacitic, andesitic or basaltic) estimated from relict primary minerals and/or geochemical data lithofacies characteristics relict textures interpretation of the volcanic facies and application of genetic nomenclature (e.g. volcanogenic sedimentary deposit, resedimented mass-flow or turbidite deposit, syneruptive mass-flow deposit, autobreccia, hyaloclastite, peperite, pyroclastic-flow deposit, pyroclastic-fall deposit or pyroclastic-surge deposit) alteration facies characteristics descriptive name for the alteration facies alteration mineral assemblage alteration textures distribution or zonation of alteration facies alteration intensity relative timing interpretation of the alteration process (i.e. diagenetic, metamorphic, hydration, intrusion-related hydrothermal alteration, proximal or regional hydrothermal alteration and mineralisation, syntectonic hydrothermal alteration) photographs of distinctive features of the alteration facies in outcrop, drill core, hand specimen or thin section composition data (whole-rock, mineral-chemistry or isotope analyses) chemical characteristics such as important mass changes, alteration indices (e.g. Al and CCPI) and immobile element ratios (e.g. Ti/Zr) Alteration box plot, with the sample highlighted other significant compositional plots, such as Ti/Zr-SiO 2 bivariant plot, mass change bar graph, SWIR spectra et cetera.
I 37
This chapter describes common alteration textures, pseudotextures, and alteration distribution and zonation patterns in submarine volcanic successions, which can be observed at a variety of scales: map, outcrop, hand specimen and thin section. It also discusses the use of overprinting relationships in determining the paragenetic sequence. Alteration textures, patterns of distribution and zonation, and overprinting relationships are fundamental elements in describing and interpreting alteration facies (e.g. Fig. 2.3). Alteration textures can aid determination of equilibrium mineral assemblages, alteration intensity, and overprinting relationships. Alteration facies distribution and zonation patterns can be used to interpret patterns of fluid flow, changes in physicochemical conditions and development of alteration systems. Superimposed alteration patterns and overprinting textures are important for determining paragenesis involving multiple stages of alteration and hence for understanding evolution of the system over time.
Furthermore, there are two types of textures that are common in and unique to volcanic rocks, which, although not alteration textures, influence subsequent alteration, especially the development of pseudotextures. These are hightemperature devitrification textures (i.e. spherulites, varioles, lithophysae and micropoikilitic texture) and perlitic fractures (Figs 3.1 and 3.2). The formation and alteration of perlite is described in detail in Section 5.2.
Replacement textures
Most alteration forms by replacement, because pre-existing mineral phases and glass become unstable during changed geothermal conditions and are readily substituted by new, more stable minerals. Replacement is the process of practically simultaneous solution and deposition of a new mineral of partly or completely different composition either in a preexisting mineral or an aggregate of minerals (Lindgren, 1933). Although mineral exchange is essentially simultaneous, replacement may occur in stages, where intermediate products form, at least temporarily, before the final alteration
TABLE 3.1 | Types of textural changes that occur during alteration.
Replacement (metasomatism) Infill Dissolution Existing minerals or glass are replaced by one or more new mineral species A mineral or minerals are precipitated from solution into open space Existing minerals or glass are leached and removed by solution with or without replacement Recrystallisation of existing minerals to new grains, and/or a change in morphology of the same mineral species or composition Recrystallisation of existing minerals to new grains and/or a change in morphology and/or orientation of the same mineral species or composition Existing component or texture is rotated, milled, broken, compressed, modified, distorted or fractured
Deformation
38 | CHAPTER 3 TABLE 3.2 | Common macroscopic and microscopic alteration textures in volcanic rocks.
Replacement
Pervasive, selective, massive, disseminated, microcrystalline, cryptocrystalline Disseminated, pseudomorph, overgrowth, cleavage and rim texture, core and zonal replacement texture, microcrystalline, cryptocrystalline, spheroid, nodule, concretion
Domainal Vein halo Pervasive, selective, disseminated, pseudomorph, overgrowth, cleavage and rim texture, core and zonal replacement texture, microcrystalline, cryptocrystalline, spheroid, nodule, concretion Crustiform, fibrous, prismatic, spherulitic Microcrystalline, prismatic Crustiform, colloform, comb, botryoidal Stylolites, solution seams Open pore space infill textures (prismatic, fibrous and massive) Equigranular, granoblastic, granophyric, decussate Porphyroblastic, idioblastic, xenoblastic, poikiloblastic, intergrowths, overgrowths, reaction rims, polycrystalline grains Dynamic recrystallisation Schistosity Layering (gneissosity) Lineation Differential layering, microcrystalline, granoblastic, granophyric Aligned, strained, bent, kinked, flattened, twinned and broken grains (crystals or clasts), cleavage Cataclasite Mylonite Deformation Foliation Lineation Augen structure No foliation, porphyroblastic, microcrystalline Foliation, granular Cleavage, aligned, strained, bent, kinked, flattened, twinned and broken grains (crystals or clasts), fiamme, eutaxitic Aligned, strained, bent, kinked, flattened, twinned and broken grains (crystals or clasts), cleavage Cleavage Foliation Slaty cleavage Cleavage, mineral alignment, granoblastic, porphyroblastic, poikiloblastic
Infill
Dissolution
Static recrystallisation
minerals. For example, relict radiating fibrous textures locally preserved in feldspar-altered pumice and perlite clasts in the Mount Read Volcanics, western Tasmania, suggest that an intermediate phase between felsic glass and feldspar, possibly fibrous zeolites, occurred (Fig. 5.11: Gifkins and Allen, 2001). Replacement can range from the conversion of specific mineral phases or domains to new minerals (selective alteration, Fig. 3.3B, C and D), to complete replacement of a rock to a completely new mineral assemblage (pervasive alteration, Fig. 3.3A). Where alteration occurs dominantly by diffusion, it may affect a large volume of rock. Elsewhere it may occur along well-defined fluid pathways (vein-halo alteration, Fig. 3.3E) with its effects restricted to a scale of millimetres to metres (Titley, 1994). It is worth noting that the terms pervasive, selective or vein-halo depend on the scale of observation. For example, vein-halo alteration can appear pervasive when viewed in thin section.
Pervasive Pervasive alteration is extensive alteration that has completely changed the rock composition and texture at scales that range from millimetres to kilometres (Rose and Burt, 1979; Titley, 1982). Pervasive alteration is distributed without regard for pre-existing textures and can result in disseminated, massive microcrystalline or cryptocrystalline microscopic textures (Fig. 3.4A).
Selective Selective alteration converts only specific pre-existing phases to new mineral phases (Titley et al., 1978; Titley, 1982). The original rock texture may be only slightly modified during selective alteration because only certain components in the host (e.g. minerals, volcanic glass or clasts: Fig. 3.3B, C and D) are preferentially replaced, and others are left relatively unaltered (Rose and Burt, 1979).
A. Spherulites and obsidian in rhyolite Pink, isolated spherulites and densely microspherulitic flow bands are enclosed in black obsidian in this flowbanded rhyolite. Spherulites are radiating aggregates or bundles of acicular and fibrous crystals. They vary in shape from spherical to bow-tie shaped sheafs and axiolitic bundles, and are commonly composed of feldspar or intergrowths of alkali feldspar, plagioclase, cristobalite or tridymite and clinopyroxene (Lofgren, 1971b). Spherulites are typically the product of hightemperature (above the glass-transition temperature) devitrification of silicic glass (Lofgren, 1971a). Sample NG4, recent Ngongotaha lava dome, Hendersons quarry, Rotorua, New Zealand. B. Lithophysae in rhyolite This red albite + quartz + hematite-altered, flow-banded quartz + plagioclase-phyric rhyolite contains abundant spherulites and lithophysae. The lithophysae are filled with layered quartz. Sample from the Lower Devonian Snowy River Volcanics, Flukes Knob area, Victoria.
C. Varioles in basalt Dark spots in this basalt outcrop are varioles: radial or sheaf-like aggregates of plagioclase and pyroxene, olivine or iron oxides, and are similar to spherulites, but only occur in mafic facies (cf. Fowler et al., 1987; Williams etal., 1982). Shirakawa quarry, Miocene Green Tuff Belt, Odate, Japan.
D. Micropoikilitic texture in thin section The groundmass of this rhyolite is densely micropoikilitic; comprising patches of optically continuous quartz, which enclose variably oriented laths of sericitised albite. Poikilitic and micropoikilitic texture (snowflake texture) comprise an optically continuous crystal enclosing numerous randomly oriented inclusions of a different composition (Anderson, 1969). The boundaries between the micropoikilitic quartz domains in this sample are highlighted by concentrations of sericite. Cross polarised light. Sample 133921, Cambrian Mount Black Formation, Central Volcanic Complex, Mount Read Volcanics, Mount Black, western Tasmania.
FIGURE 3.1 | Examples of high-temperature devitrification textures.
40 | CHAPTER 3
A. Altered macroperlite Relict macroperlitic factures in this coherent dacite are enhanced by dark grey sericite + chlorite-altered zones along and adjacent to the perlitic fractures. The arcuate shape of the fractures is preserved in some areas. The perlite cores are pink albite + quartz + sericite altered.
Cambrian Mount Black Formation, Central Volcanics Complex, Mount Read Volcanics, Pieman Road, western Tasmania.
B. Relict perlite in thin section The formerly glassy groundmass of this rhyolite preserves perlitic fractures. Perlitic fractures are a network of fine typically concentric, arcuate fractures that enclose glassy or originally glassy cores. Here, the perlitic fractures are filled with dark, mixed-layer smectite/chlorite and the groundmass adjacent to the fractures is clinoptilolite altered. The perlitic cores are partly glassy and partly smectite altered. Plane polarised light. Sample J6-737 m, Miocene Nishikurosawa Formation, Hokuroku Basin, Green Tuff Belt, Odate, Japan.
C. Banded perlite This finely flow-banded, plagioclase-phyric rhyolite contains an intersecting fracture network of sub-parallel long fractures linked by short cross fractures (banded perlite) superimposed on the flow-banded texture.
Sample KB257, Siluro-Devonian rhyolite, Ural Volcanics, Ural Ridges area, New South Wales.
D. Banded perlite in thin section In thin section, concentrations of sericite hematite mark the relict perlitic fractures. The pale flow bands comprise a fine-grained mosaic of feldspar + quartz, whereas the darker bands consist of sericite + feldspar + quartz + chlorite. Disseminated fine-grained hematite occurs throughout the groundmass. Plane polarised light.
Sample KB257, Siluro-Devonian rhyolite, Ural Volcanics, Ural Ridges area, New South Wales.
Two textural types of selective alteration occur: disseminated alteration (or selective-pervasive alteration), which refers to the replacement of selective pre-existing phases throughout the host rock; and domainal alteration, which refers to the alteration of patches, pods, or groups of clasts within the host rock (Fig. 3.3F, G and H). In addition, selective alteration may result in concentrically zoned alteration facies within clasts or alteration halos around clasts (Fig. 3.31, J, K and L). Selective alteration can result in a patchy or mottled appearance (e.g. Allen, 1988). Common microscopic selective replacement textures are pseudomorphs, partial pseudomorphs (cleavage and rim texture, core and zonal texture, core and rim texture and skeletal texture), overgrowths on pre-existing components, and spheroids or nodules (Fig. 3.4B to L: Dimroth and Lichtblau, 1979; Craig and Vaughan, 1981; Ineson, 1989). Carbonate and zeolite nodules are common in submarine volcaniclastic facies and can have a wide variety of grainsizes from 0.2 to greater than 20 mm (Fig. 3.41 to L: Franklin et al., 1975; Lees, 1987; Khin Zaw and Large, 1992; Hill and Orth, 1994; Allen, 1997).
Incomplete infill Incomplete or partial infilling of veins and cavities or dissolution of void fill can leave an open vug in the centre (e.g. Fig.3.5A). In many cases, the resulting infill texture contains well-formed crystals that project into this vug.
Massive infill Massive infill textures result from the continuous deposition of a mineral or aggregate of minerals until the cavity is filled (e.g. Fig. 3.5B). Massive infill commonly contains well-formed crystals, especially quartz, feldspar, fluorite, cassiterite, galena, sphalerite and chalcopyrite crystals. Massive, microcrystalline forms also exist (Taylor, 1992).
Layered infill Layered or banded infill textures result from the deposition of a succession of minerals inwards from the cavity or fracture wall (Bateman, 1951). Layered infill textures do not generally contain well-formed crystals, such as comb texture (e.g. Fig. 3.5H), but vary from thin layers of individual minerals to crustiform bands or colloform textures.
Vein halo Vein-halo alteration involves the replacement of either the whole rock (pervasive alteration: Fig. 3.3E) or specific preexisting phases (selective alteration) in restricted areas, such as the halos around veins, intrusion contacts, or at stratigraphic contacts. Alteration progresses in fronts, moving out from fractures or contacts into the adjacent wall rock. Vein-halo alteration has also been termed infiltration metasomatism, vein-veinlet, reaction rim, vein-wall-rock, vein-envelope, veinlet-controlled and fracture-controlled alteration (e.g. Titley et al., 1978; Titley, 1982; Thompson and Thompson, 1996; Doyle, 2001).
Dissolution textures
Dissolution textures are common in altered volcanic rocks (Allen, 1990; Allen and Cas, 1990; Marsaglia and Tazaki, 1992; Gifkins and Allen, 2001). They form from the corrosion or leaching of pre-existing phases (either glass or mineral phases), with or without minor replacement by new mineral phases (Fisher and Schmincke, 1984). For example, leaching of rhyolitic glass is commonly accompanied by crystallisation of muscovite or clay minerals that absorb leached ions from solution (Karkhanis et al., 1980). Dissolution textures include corrosion vugs or dissolution pits, stylolites and solution seams (e.g. Fig. 3.6: Pettijohn, 1957).
Infill textures
Infill or open space-filling textures result from the precipitation of new mineral phases from solution into open spaces or cavities such as pore spaces, vesicles, inter-clast space, vugs and fractures (Taylor, 1992). Infill textures are characterised by well-developed crystal faces, zoned crystals and mineral banding (Craig and Vaughan, 1981). Silicate, carbonates, oxides, sulfates and sulfides all occur as void fill in altered volcanic rocks. Infill results from the precipitation of minerals from solution. The first mineral to be deposited forms a crust on the cavity walls and grows inwards, generally with the development of inward facing crystal faces. Common infill textures include incomplete infill, massive infill, and layered or banded infill (Fig. 3.6: Taylor, 1992). These textures can include fibrous, prismatic, spherulitic or equant crystal shapes and exist on a range of scales from micrometres to metres (Dimroth and Lichtblau, 1979; Taylor, 1992).
Corrosion vugs Dissolution or corrosion of volcanic glass or pre-existing minerals can create open cavities or oversized pores (Fig. 3.6A to F) in which infill can occur synchronous with dissolution or after dissolution (Hay, 1963; Sheppard et al., 1988). In some cases pseudomorphs of minerals or originally glassy particles, such as glass shards, form by dissolution and precipitation (Riech, 1979; Sheppard etal., 1988). Riech (1979) recognised infill textured zeolites and calcite within clinopyroxenes, and proposed that clinopyroxenes were corroded during diagenesis, creating an open void that was subsequently filled with zeolites and calcite. Similarly, Hay (1963) recognised partial to complete dissolution of glass shards followed by the precipitation of authigenic minerals, especially zeolites, in the new cavities as well as in original pore space.
42 | CHAPTER 3
A. Pervasively altered rhyolite Intense, pervasive, fine-grained K-feldspar + quartz alteration has completely replaced the groundmass and plagioclase phenocrysts in this rhyolite. Sample 143286, Central Volcanic Complex, Mount Read Volcanics, Mount Darwin, western Tasmania.
B. Selectively altered phenocrysts Sericite has selectively altered the coarse prismatic feldspar phenocrysts (F) in this latite. The pale greengrey, fine-grained groundmass is moderately and pervasively phengite + chlorite + ankerite altered, and the amygdales are quartz filled. Sample 144369, Ordovician Lake Cowal Volcanics, JuneeNarromine Volcanic Belt, Endeavour 42 prospect, New South Wales.
C. Selectively altered pumice clasts Large pumice clasts (P) in this sample of crystal- and pumice-rich volcaniclastic breccia have been selectively altered to orange albite + quartz, whereas the finer grained matrix has been altered to green sericite + chlorite + albite. The domainal alteration style enhances its clastic appearance. Sample 131993, Cambrian Mount Julia Member, Tyndall Group, Mount Read Volcanics, Comstock, western Tasmania.
D. Selectively altered matrix In this andesitic volcaniclastic breccia, the matrix is moderately and selectively epidote altered. In contrast, the plagioclase-phyric clasts (C) are weakly chlorite + sericite altered. Sample 144805, Ordovician Mingelo Volcanics, JuneeNarromine Volcanic Belt, Peak Hill, New South Wales.
E. Vein halo Red albite altered zones are restricted to 5 mm halos or selvages adjacent to quartz + actinolite + pyrite veinlets in this feldspar porphyritic dacite. Sample TH386 271.1 m, Cambro-Ordovician Trooper Creek Formation, Seventy Mile Range Group, Mount Windsor Subprovince, Thalanga, Queensland.
F. Banded, domainal alteration facies Diffuse and discontinuous pink and green bands in this massive crystal-rich volcaniclastic sandstone are defined by domains of albite + quartz chlorite, and chlorite + sericite + magnetite alteration facies, respectively. The bands are not obviously consistent with grainsize or component variations; they alternate on a 210 cm scale, are laterally extensive (1020 m) and are commonly, but not exclusively, bedding parallel. Sample 131982, Cambrian Mount Julia Member, Tyndall Group, Mount Read Volcanics, Lyell Comstock, western Tasmania.
G. Patchy, domainal alteration facies The domainal, green epidote + quartz and grey albite + quartz + hematite alteration facies are distributed in irregular patches with diffuse margins in this coherent plagioclase-phyric dacite. Sample M142, Cambrian Mount Black Formation, Central Volcanic Complex, Mount Read Volcanics, Tullah, western Tasmania.
H. Domainal alteration facies in pseudobreccia Domainal red albite + quartz and dark green epidote + sericite + albite alteration facies in this sample of macroperlite gives it a pseudo-polymictic and -clastic texture. However, the red apparent clasts have diffuse margins and identical phenocryst populations to the apparent matrix. Sample 147550, Cambrian Mount Black Formation, CentralVolcanics Complex, Mount Read Volcanics, Pieman Road, western Tasmania.
44 | CHAPTER 3
I. Zonation within clasts The andesite and basalt clasts in this polymictic volcanic breccia are concentrically zoned, with sericite + quartz + calcite-altered rims, and chlorite-altered cores. Some of the larger clasts have an additional quartz + sericite + chlorite-altered core zone. The matrix has been moderately and pervasively quartz + sericite + calcite chlorite altered.
Cambrian Que-Hellyer Volcanics, Mount Charter Group, western volcano-sedimentary sequences, Mount Read Volcanics, Hellyer, western Tasmania.
J. Zonation within clasts Clasts in this basaltic pebble conglomerate display heterogenous alteration facies, and some clasts are internally zoned. The basalt clast (B) has a fine-grained, pale green sericite-rich rim, and darker sericite + chloritealtered core. Sample 134632, Cambrian Red Lead Formation correlate, Dundas, Kapi Creek, western Tasmania.
K. Zonation within pillows This metamorphosed, amphibolite-grade lava-pillow has a typical triangular, draped shape and is concentrically zoned. The central red zone is coarse-grained, scapolitepoor and albite + hematite + sericite epidote altered. The average grainsize decreases, and scapolite grainsize and abundance increases, in consecutive zones towards the rim. Biotite + calcite + hornblende + microcline + scapolite + epidote + quartz comprise the inter-pillow matrix.
Proterozoic Corella Formation, Mary Kathleen Group, Malbon River, northwest Queensland.
L. Altered halos around clasts Orange albite + quartz alteration facies is distributed in a halo around a massive, albite-altered dacite clast (C) in this crystal- and lithic-rich volcaniclastic sandstone. The more pervasive green-grey domain is sericite + chlorite + quartz + albite altered. Sample 132090, Cambrian Mount Julia Member, Tyndall Group, Mount Read Volcanics, Anthony Road, western Tasmania.
A. Microcrystalline texture in thin section The groundmass of this rhyolite is a microcrystalline mosaic of quartz + feldspar + sericite. Quartz phenocrysts (Q) have been recrystllised. Microcrystalline texture (aphanitic) is a fine-grained granular texture where the individual crystals can be distinguished in thin section. In contrast, cryptocrystalline texture (phaneritic) is where the crystals are too minute to be distinguished even with the aid of a microscope (Williams et al., 1982). Cross polarised light. Sample 133318, Cambro-Ordovician Mount Windsor Formation, Seventy Mile Range Group, Thalanga, Queensland.
B. Pseudomorphs in thin section The plagioclase phenocrysts in this sericite + quartz + tourmaline-altered andesite were pseudomorphed by tourmaline, and subsequently almost completely replaced by blue-green chlorite. Pseudomorphs are crystals or aggregates of crystals that preserve the shape of a pre-existing mineral or particle (e.g. glass shard or pumice clast) (Spry, 1976). Plane polarised light. Sample 145199, Ordovician Forest Reefs Volcanics, Molong Volcanic Belt, Black Rock, New South Wales.
C. Pseudomorphs in thin section This thin section of plagioclase + quartz + pyroxenephyric rhyolite shows an illite pseudomorph after pyroxene. Plagioclase phenocrysts have been altered to K-feldspar and the groundmass comprises a fine-grained mosaic of K-feldspar + quartz + chlorite + smectite. Cross polarised light. Sample KB495, Siluro-Devonian Coan rhyolite, Mount Hope Volcanics, Coan Gonn Peak, New South Wales.
D. Cleavage and rim texture in thin section The plagioclase crystals in this basalt have been selectively altered by sericite along cleavage planes. Cleavage and rim textures occur by selective alteration of mineral grain boundaries and cleavages. It is common in plagioclase, in which montmorillonite, sericite or calcite form along the cleavage planes (Sales and Meyer, 1948). Plane polarised light. Sample SVD87a-104.9 m from the Cambrian Sterling Valley Volcanics, Mount Read Volcanics, Sterling Valley, western Tasmania.
46 I CHAPTER 3
E. Core and zonal texture in thin section Zones within plagioclase phenocrysts in this subtly, smectite + calcite-altered diorite have been selectively altered to sericite. These incomplete pseudomorphs, termed core and zonal texture, are particularly common in zoned feldspar, amphibole and mica crystals where the cores, or one or more zones in zoned minerals, are altered (Barker, 1990). In plagioclase crystals, like those pictured here, the calcic zones are typically altered to calcite or sericite (Sales and Meyer, 1948). Plane polarised light. Sample 152958, Pliocene-Pleistocene Luise Volcano, Lihir Island, New Ireland Province, Ladolam epithermal Au mine, Papua New Guinea. F. Core and zonal texture in thin section In this example of core and zonal texture, the core zones of plagioclase phenocrysts have been altered to sericite. The groundmass of this plagioclase + clinopyroxenephyric basalt was subtly and pervasively smectite + calcite-altered. Plane polarised light. Sample 152830, Pliocene-Pleistocene Luise Volcano, Lihir Island, New Ireland Province, Ladolam epithermal Au mine, Papua New Guinea.
G. Overgrowth texture in thin section A discontinuous K-feldspar overgrowth encloses a hematite-altered plagioclase phenocryst (P) in this strongly and pervasively albite + quartz + sericite-altered pumice breccia. K-feldspar nucleated on the plagioclase phenocryst, spread outwards filling vesicles, and replaced vesicle walls in the pumice clasts. Overgrowth textures are mineral rims that may be composed of one or more crystals of similar or different minerals. Cross polarised light. Sample 133814 from the Cambrian Hercules Pumice Formation, Central Volcanic Complex, Mount Read Volcanics, Hercules footwall, western Tasmania.
H. Altered nodules in pumice breccia Blue-green celadonite nodules have overprinted pumice clasts in this polymictic volcanic breccia. These nodules are composed of fine-grained aggregates of celadonite opal CT quartz, preserve uncompacted tube and round vesicle pumice textures, and are surrounded by pervasive smectite + mordenite + calcite alteration facies. Sample FK2, Miocene Byobu-iwa Member, Tokiwa Formation, South Fossa Magna, Green Tuff Belt, Fujikawa River, Japan.
I. Carbonate spheroids Large dolomite spheroids are enclosed in the strongly chlorite + quartz + dolomite-altered matrix of this formerly plagioclase-phyric andesite. Nodules and spheroids are spherical domains of alteration, which may comprise radiating aggregates of fibrous crystals, fine internally concentric structures, or mosaics of anhedral grains, with or without cores (Allen, 1997; Hill andOrth, 1995). Sample 135756, Cambrian Que-Hellyer Volcanics, Mount Charter Group, western volcano-sedimentary sequences, Mount Read Volcanics, Hellyer footwall, western Tasmania.
J. Carbonate spheroids in thin section In thin section, the dolomite spheroids display concentric zones and a coarse, radiating, fibrous texture. This compositional zonation in the spheroids probably indicates multiple stages of carbonate alteration (cf. Hill and Orth, 1995). Plane polarised light. Sample 135756, Cambrian Que-Hellyer Volcanics, Mount Charter Group, western volcano-sedimentary sequences, Mount Read Volcanics, Hellyer footwall, western Tasmania.
K. Carbonate spheroids Carbonate spheroids are concentrated in individual beds in this strongly chlorite + carbonate + pyrite-altered laminated volcaniclastic sandstone. The larger spheroids, which are up to 2 mm in diameter, have coalesced. Sample 138601, Archaean Mb5 Golden Grove Formation, Luke Creek Group, Murchison Volcanics, Golden Grove, Western Australia.
L. Carbonate spheroids in thin section Thin section examination shows these carbonate spheroids are supported in a fine-grained quartz + sericite + carbonate matrix. Plane polarised light. Sample 138601, Archaean Mb5 Golden Grove Formation, Luke Creek Group, Murchison Volcanics, Golden Grove, Western Australia.
48 | CHAPTER 3
A. Incomplete infill in fractures Incomplete filling of fractures in this altered diorite left sub-planar vugs. The pyrite fill has botryoidal surfaces, representing rounded shapes of either spherulitic radiating aggregates of fibrous crystals or fine-concentric internal structures (cf. Jensen and Bateman, 1981). This massive plagioclase-phyric diorite has been pervasively K-feldspar + pyrite (>quartz + illite) altered, and dissolution of primary mafic minerals produced a fine, spongy, porous texture. Sample 152959, Pliocene-Pleistocene Luise Volcano, Lihir Lsland, New Ireland Province, Ladolam epithermal Au mine, Papua New Guinea.
B. Massive infill Pale green epidote altered halos surround massive chlorite-filled amygdales (A) in this basalt sample. Sample 144753, Ordovician, Junee-Narromine Volcanic Belt, Boundary Prospect, Lake Cowal, New South Wales.
C. Layered infill stringer vein This banded vein consists of successive layers, from the vein wall to centre, of quartz, quartz and intergrown chalcopyrite and pyrite, and dolomite. A thin dolomite vein has overprinted the stringer vein at an oblique angle. These veins are hosted in strongly and pervasively sericite + chlorite + albite + pyrite-altered andesite. Cambrian Que-Hellyer Volcanics, western volcanosedimentary sequences, Mount Read Volcanics, Hellyer footwall, western Tasmania.
D. Layered infill in amygdales Amygdales (A) in this basalt clast, from a basaltmudstone peperite, contain concentric layers of quartz and calcite, which have grown inwards from the vesicle walls. The basalt groundmass has been pervasively sericite + chlorite + calcite altered. The clast grainsize decreases towards the clast rim, to the left of the field of view in this photograph. Sample 76836, Cambrian Que-Hellyer Volcanics, western volcano-sedimentary sequences, Mount Read Volcanics, Hellyer, western Tasmania.
E. Layered infill texture in vesicles Vesicles (V) in this plagioclase-phyric pumice clast have been filled with roughly concentric layers of tan-coloured mordenite, dark smectite and clear clinoptilolite. The zeolites occur in clusters or aggregates of fine, radiating fibres. The originally glassy vesicle walls (W) have been replaced by mordenite + K-feldspar smectite. Plane polarised light. Sample OH8-387 m, Miocene Onnagawa Formation, Hokuroku Basin, Green Tuff Belt, Odate, Japan.
F. Layered infill texture in amygdales Amygdales in this subtly altered perlitic rhyolite have been filled with bands of fine-grained montmorillonite and unknown radiating fibrous minerals. Pale polarised light. Sample J6-737 m, Miocene Nishikurosawa Formation, Hokuroku Basin, Green Tuff Belt, Odate, Japan.
G. Layered infill in amygdales The amygdales in this palagonite-altered trachytic basalt clast from a crystal- and lithic-rich pumice breccia are filled with layers of montmorillonite and fibrous zeolites. Plane polarised light. Sample OH8-387 m, Miocene Onnagawa Formation, Hokuroku Basin, Green Tuff Belt, Odate, Japan.
H. Comb texture This example of comb texture shows layers of prominent sparry quartz + amethyst carbonate crystals projecting inwards from the vein or cavity wall.
Sample T5> Cretaceous, andesite, Fresnillo epithermal district, Mexico.
50 | CHAPTER 3
A. Dissolution vugs This hand specimen of polymictic breccia has a spongy or vuggy porous texture due to the dissolution of primary mafic igneous minerals and glass. It has been intensely and pervasively adularia + illite + pyrite altered with illite replacing plagioclase crystals, secondary K-feldspar in the altered matrix, and disseminated pyrite. Sample 152726, Pliocene-Pleistocene Luise Volcano, Lihir Island, New Ireland Province, Ladolam epithermal Au mine, Papua New Guinea.
B. Dissolution vugs in thin section In thin section, irregularly shaped, empty, corrosion or dissolution vugs (V) are conspicuous in the matrix and clasts. Some vugs cut across clast margins. Plane polarised light. Sample 152726, Pliocene-Pleistocene Luise Volcano, Lihir Island, New Lreland Province, Ladolam epithermal Au mine, Papua New Guinea.
C. Filled dissolution vug in thin section Corrosion vugs, created by the dissolution of volcanic glass or pre-existing minerals, are commonly filled by subsequent mineral precipitation from solution. Successive layers of montmorillonite and zeolite have filled an irregular vug (V) in this thin section. The vug occurs in the matrix and in a basalt clast, crossing the clast-matrix contact. Plane polarised light. Sample OH8-387 m, Miocene Onnagawa Formation, Hokuroku Basin, Green Tuff Belt, Odate, Japan.
D. Vuggy quartz The prominent features in this quartz-rich sample are the corrosion vugs, which were generated by the dissolution of pumice clasts and crystals from this pumice and lithic tuff. Miocene rhyodacitic pumice and lithic tuff, Pierina Au-Ag deposit, Peru.
E. Kaolinite + dickite-altered andesite Large (up to 4 mm), blocky feldspar phenocrysts have been kaolinite altered in this sample of massive, coherent andesite. Miocene andesitic lava, Pierina Au-Ag deposit, Peru.
F. Vuggy quartz In this sample of vuggy quartz, which is equivalent to the previous kaolinite + dickite-altered andesite, the feldspar phenocrysts have been dissolved resulting in blocky vugs. The groundmass is composed dominantly of quartz. Miocene andesitic lava, Pierina Au-Ag deposit, Peru.
G. Stylolite in thin section Stylolites (S2) in this rhyolitic pumice breccia have concentrated fine-grained opaques and sericite chlorite. The stylolites define the compaction foliation and are crenulated by the dominant regional cleavage {S2) defined by alignment of sericite in the subtly albite + quartz + sericite-altered matrix. Sample 147422, Cambrian Kershaw Pumice Formation, Central Volcanics Complex, Mount Read Volcanics, Rosebery, western Tasmania.
E. Solution seams in thin section These analcime-filled solution seams occur in a smectiterich fiamme, extending from the damme terminations into the shard- and crystal-rich matrix of a crystal-rich pumice breccia. They are interpreted to have formed by dissolution and precipitation under the influence of lithostatic load during diagenesis. Plane polarised light. Sample FK7, Miocene Wadaira Tuff Member, Tokiwa Formation, South Fossa Magna, Green Tuff Belt, Wadaira, Japan.
52 | CHAPTER 3
Vuggy silica (quartz) alteration facies is characterised by fine-grained, microcrystalline quartz and abundant open vugs or pores, which may be partly infilled (e.g. Fig. 3.6D, E and F). It is common in high-sulfidation epithermal systems and results from the extensive leaching of all phases, except SiO2 and TiO 2 , from volcanic rocks by hot acid solutions (White and Hedenquist, 1990).
Stylolites Stylolites are common in altered volcaniclastic rocks (Allen, 1990; Allen and Cas, 1990; Marsaglia and Tazaki, 1992; Gifkins and Allen, 2001). They are surfaces of dissolution associated with strain (pressure solution). They are roughly planar surfaces that exhibit mutual column and socket interdigitation and may branch. Stylolites result from mechanical compaction and removal of elements by diffusion and precipitation (Merino et al., 1983). They indicate volume loss and may form parallel or sub-parallel to bedding during burial, or at high angles to bedding during folding. Stylolites often contain a residue of insoluble material and minerals precipitated from solution. RecrystaUisation, dissolution, grain growth, grain orientation, pressure twinning, fracturing and residual accumulation of minerals along stylolites are common (Amstutz and Park, 1967). Irregular, anastomosing, bedding-parallel stylolites have been recognised in originally glassy volcanic facies, especially pumice breccias, in the Mount Read Volcanics (Allen, 1990; Allen and Cas, 1990; Gifkins and Allen, 2001). These are seams that concentrate fine-grained opaques and sericite at the margins of originally glassy clasts, along tube vesicle walls in pumice clasts and in the matrix (Fig. 3.6D: Gifkins, 2001). These stylolites are interpreted as diagenetic compaction and dissolution fabrics that formed by the dissolution of soluble components, particularly glass, and by the precipitation of clays and Fe-oxides as a result of pressure during burial (Allen, 1990; Allen and Cas, 1990; Gifkins, 2001).
RecrystaUisation textures are produced by changes in the size, shape and arrangement of minerals in a rock. With increasing temperature, recrystaUisation generally involves the change from fine to coarse grainsize (aggrading), except for static recrystaUisation to hornfels and dynamic recrystaUisation where large, strained grains are replaced by a mosaic of tiny, unstrained crystals (Folk, 1965). Minerals may be directed or randomly orientated (non-directed: Spry, 1976). Directed textures occur where recrystaUisation is accompanied by stress (dynamic recrystaUisation). Non-directed textures occur where the pressure is equal in all directions (static recrystaUisation). Common macroscopic and microscopic recrystaUisation textures include mineral overgrowths, porphyroblasts, poikoblasts, and hornfelsic, granoblastic, granophyric and decussate textures (Fig. 3.7).
Solution seams Solution seams are non-sutured, discontinuous mineralfilled seams that may form during diagenesis as a result of stress-related dissolution of soluble components and reprecipitation (Merino et al., 1983). Analcime-filled solution seams in pumice-rich rocks from the Green Tuff Belt (Japan) are anastomosing and roughly parallel to bedding. They occur in the fine-grained matrix and within fiamme and partly compacted pumice clasts (Fig. 3.6E: Gifkins et al., in press).
Deformation textures
Deformation textures are stress activated and develop in response to overburden pressures or regional tectonic stress. Because volcanic deposits typically have high initial porosities they are easily modified by mechanical compaction during burial, tectonic deformation or, in the case of pyroclastic deposits, welding (Peterson, 1979; Allen, 1988; Branney and Sparks, 1990). Textural modification associated with compaction is essentially a result of increased pressure causing the re-arrangement and deformation of grains and reduction of intergranular pore space (Deelman, 1975). Deformation textures result from the rotation, brittle fracturing, flattening and distortion of existing grains or fabrics, especially clasts that were previously altered to soft minerals (McBride, 1978; Galloway, 1979; Craig and Vaughan, 1981; Branney and Sparks, 1990).
A. Porphyroblasts The large, strongly altered, cordierite porphyroblasts give this rhyolite a distinctive coarsely spotty texture. This texture inspired the terms dalmatianite, which was applied by early workers in the Noranda Camp, and the spotted fades, which was applied by Riverin and Hodgson (1980), for the cordierite-altered Amulet rhyolite and Millenbach andesite. The porphyroblasts are enclosed in a groundmass of chloritised biotite + sericite + quartz. Porphyroblasts are metamorphic crystals that are surrounded by a much finer grained matrix of other minerals (Spry, 1976). These large minerals have formed at the expense of the matrix and are the metamorphic equivalent of phenocrysts. Archaean Amulet Rhyolite Formation, Noranda, Abitibi greenstone belt, Amulet Upper A deposit, Canada. B. Porphyroblasts in gneiss This biotite + garnet gneiss is characterised by spotty 5 mm diameter garnet porphyroblasts in a medium- to fine-grained quartz + feldspar + biotite groundmass. The garnet porphyroblasts commonly have a biotite rim. A gneiss is a rock with coarsely differentiated layering denned by the segregation of minerals of different composition (typically dark and light minerals) in medium- to coarse-grained, granular rocks. Layering forms parallel to the tectonic foliation and in this case deviates around the garnet porphyroblasts. The precursor is interpreted to have been a felsic volcaniclastic rock. Sample 154061, Proterozoic Potosi gneiss, Harp prospect, Broken Hill Block, New South Wales. C. Porphyroblasts in thin section This sample of garnet hornfels, from the contact zone between rhyolite and a diorite intrusion, contains euhedral garnet porphyroblasts in the biotite + muscovite + quartz groundmass. Porphyroblasts, like these, with well-developed crystal shapes are idioblastic or euhedral, whereas those with poorly developed crystal shape are xenoblastic or anhedral (Yardley, 1989). Plane polarised light. Sample 140868, Cambro-Ordovician Mount Windsor Formation, east Thalanga, Mount Charter, Queensland.
D. Poikiloblast in thin section This thin section of amphibolite displays an amphibole poikiloblast with quartz and biotite inclusion trails. Poikiloblasts are porphyroblasts that contain numerous inclusions that may or may not show a preferred orientation (Barker, 1990). Poikiloblastic texture is analogous to poikilitic or micropoikilitic texture. Usually the inclusions are minerals that also occur in the matrix (Yardley, 1989). In this sample, the biotite inclusion trails display snowball rotation indicating syntectonic growth of the amphibole. Plane polarised light. Sample 3215, Proterozoic Corella Formation, Mary Kathleen Group, Malbon River, northwest Queensland.
54 | CHAPTER 3
Common deformation textures include intergranular textures and fabrics such as foliations, lineations, and augenstructure, and intragranular textures such as strained, bent, kinked, flattened, twinned and broken grains (crystals or clasts), as well as irregular grain contacts (e.g. Fig. 3.8A, B and C: Deelman, 1976; Spry, 1976). Deformation can modify pre-existing textures such as volcanic, hydration and devitrification textures (e.g. Fig. 3.8D to H). Fiamme and eutaxitic deformation textures are unique to volcanic facies (e.g. Fig. 3.9: Ross and Smith, 1960; Allen and Cas, 1990; McPhie et al., 1993; Gifkins et al., in press). Fiamme and eutaxitic textures are characteristic of, but are not restricted to, welded ignimbrites (e.g. Fig. 3.9A and B: Ross and Smith, 1960; Smith, I960), welded pyroclastic fall deposits (e.g. Sparks and Wright, 1979), welded autobreccia (e.g. Sparks et al., 1993) and pyroclastic deposits that have undergone secondary welding as a result of contact with hot lava or intrusions (e.g. Ross and Smith, I960; Christiansen and Lipman, 1966; Schmincke, 1967; McPhie and Hunns, 1995). Similar fiamme and eutaxitic texture also occur in non-welded altered pumice-rich rocks (e.g. Fig. 3.9C and D: Fiske, 1969; Allen, 1988; Branney and Sparks, 1990; Gifkins et al., in press) and felsic lavas (e.g. Pichler, 1981; Allen, 1988). The terms fiamme and eutaxitic texture are used herein to describe the rock texture and not to imply any particular origin. Fiamme are flame-like, glassy or devitrified lenses, which define a pre-tectonic foliation (cf. McPhie et al., 1993). Fiamme may have a wide variety of sizes (0.5 mm to 1 m), length to height ratios (up to 40:1), shapes (e.g. flame-like, bow tie, irregular branching and blocky) and internal textures (aphyric, porphyritic, vesicular or stylolitic) (Gifkins et al., in press). Eutaxitic texture is the pre-tectonic foliation defined by the parallel alignment of fiamme (cf. Fritsch and Reiss, 1868; Ross and Smith, I960; Smith, I960). Eutaxitic texture typically imparts a blotchy or streaky appearance to the rock due to the colour contrast between the darker fiamme and paler matrix (e.g. Fig. 3.9A and C).
Doyle, 2001). Polyphase and patchy alteration of monomictic volcaniclastic facies can also result in false clast-supported and false polymictic textures.
Pseudoclastic textures
The most common pseudoclastic textures are pseudobreccia and false pyroclastic texture (also referred to as false eutaxitic texture). Other pseudoclastic textures include false thinbedded volcaniclastic and pseudogranular textures. Pseudobreccias have the appearance of breccias, but form as a result of alteration of coherent facies (Carozzi, 1960; Allen, 1988). In outcrop they resemble coarse-grained, monomictic or polymictic, clast- to matrix-supported breccias comprising angular to sub-rounded clasts in a fine-grained matrix (Fig. 3.10A, BandC). False pyroclastic textures occur in both coherent facies and in situ hyaloclastite. In outcrop and hand specimen they may have a eutaxitic texture and contain abundant fiamme (e.g. Fig. 3.10D). In thin section they appear to contain splintery and arcuate fragments, which may closely resemble pyroclastic glass shards (false shards: Fig. 3.10E). Both pseudobreccia and false pyroclastic texture develop as a result of two-phase alteration of fractured (perlitic or quench fractured) coherent or autoclastic facies and domaincontrolled alteration of nodular devitrification textures in coherent facies (e.g. Fig. 3.11: Allen, 1988). Networks of intersecting quench and/or perlitic fractures may control polyphase alteration in the fractured glassy parts of coherent lavas and intrusions because they are permeable pathways for fluid flow. Initially glass immediately adjacent to the perlitic fractures is altered, then, as the fractures are filled, replacement fronts migrate away from the perlitic fractures towards the core. This may either obscure the continuity of the perlitic fractures or, if alteration is incomplete, enhance the perlitic fractures. False shard textures develop either due to the preservation of less altered, relatively siliceous slivers between two or more fractures, or as altered segments of the fractures themselves (e.g. Fig. 3.10E: Allen, 1988). The shape of false shards is a function of the shape of the fracture network. For example, cuspate false shards are produced from classical perlite, whereas those resembling flattened or welded shards result from banded perlite (e.g. Fig. 3.2D). False clasts develop where altered perlitic glass is partly overprinted by a subsequent alteration phase, thereby preserving isolated relicts of the earlier phase. Alternatively, the earlier phase may be incomplete, leaving isolated kernels of glass that are subsequently altered to a different mineral assemblage. Pseudobreccia may also result from domainal or selective alteration of nodular devitrification textures: spherulites and lithophysae (e.g. Fig. 3.10F and G). Spherulites and lithophysae are typically recrystallised to quartzo-feldspathic compositions, whereas the interstitial originally glassy domains are altered to phyllosilicate-rich assemblages (Allen, 1988). Consequently, the originally glassy and crystalline domains differ in alteration mineralogy and colour, and the spherulites appear as rounded siliceous clasts in a fine-grained phyllosilicate-rich matrix. Pseudogranular or sandy textures resemble well-sorted sandstones. These result from the recrystallisation of densely
3.2 I PSEUDOTEXTURES
The incomplete destruction of primary textures and the combined effects of a number of different overprinting alteration styles (polyphase alteration) can result in significant textural modification and the development of false textures or pseudotextures (De Rosen-Spence et al., 1980; Allen, 1988; McPhie et al., 1993). Pseudotextures are alteration textures that modify or obscure primary volcanic textures and often lead to incorrect interpretation of the primary volcanic facies. Allen (1988) described examples of altered silicic lavas and autobreccias from Benambra, New South Wales, that have the remarkably deceptive appearance of welded and non-welded pyroclastic facies and thinly bedded tuffaceous rocks. Pseudotextures can be subdivided into pseudoclastic textures (pseudobreccia, pseudogranular, false thin-bedded volcaniclastic) or false pyroclastic textures (false shards, false pyroclastic or eutaxitic: Fig. 3.10). However, strong pervasive alteration can also produce false massive textures that resemble either massive volcaniclastic or coherent facies (Allen, 1988; McPhie et al., 1993; Doyle and Huston, 1999;
A. Augen schist This sample of quartz-augen schist comprises large lenticular quartz-rich domains (Q) enclosed in a strongly foliated, sericite + quartz chlorite-altered matrix. Augen texture is common in deformed, strongly porphyritic coherent and crystal-bearing volcaniclastic rocks. This augen schist probably resulted from the superposition of a strong regional cleavage on an altered pumice breccia. The cleavage anastomoses around competent silicified pumice clasts. Sample 040617, Cambrian western volcano-sedimentary sequences, Mount Read Volcanics, Rosebery hanging wall, western Tasmania.
B. Broken crystals in andesite This deformed andesite contains broken plagioclase phenocrysts in a strongly foliated, sericite + chlorite + magnetite epidote-altered groundmass. Broken or fractured grains may result from mechanical pressure during tectonic deformation (McBride, 1978). Typically, feldspar crystals have been fractured along their cleavage planes, whereas quartz crystals have developed conchoidal fractures (Taylor, 1950; Sippel, 1968). Cross polarised light. Sample 144387, Ordovician Lake Cowal Volcanic Complex, Junee-Narromine Volcanic Belt, Lake Cowal, Gateway Prospect, New South Wales.
C. Deformed grains In this amphibolite grade volcaniclastic siltstone, the quartz grains are deformed polycrystalline grains with undulose extinction, and elongated parallel to the regional cleavage. Cross polarised light. Sample GA9, Early Proterozoic Supra crustal succession, Bergslagen mining district, Garpenberg, Sweden.
D. Deformed clasts and pillows Pillow fragments and clasts in this basaltic hyaloclastite were deformed and stretched parallel to the regional foliation. The clast shapes are irregular and difficult to recognise as pillow or hyaloclastite fragments. Despite this, many clasts preserve an internal zonation. Amphibolite, Proterozoic Corella Formation, Mary Kathleen Group, Malbon River, northwest Queensland.
FIGURE 3.8 | Examples of deformation textures, deformed clasts and pre-existing textures in altered volcanic rocks.
56 | CHAPTER 3
E. Deformed clasts Lens-shaped siliceous clasts (Q in this volcaniclastic breccia have been rotated and stretched into the strong tectonic cleavage. The fine-grained matrix has been foliated and chlorite + sericite + quartz altered. Sample 133520, Cambro-Ordovician Trooper Creek Formation, Seventy Mile Range Group, Mount Windsor Subprovince, central Thalanga, Queensland.
F. Folded pumice clast This sample of rhyolite-, pumice- and crystal-rich breccia contains a folded tube pumice clast with an axial planar cleavage (Sj) defined by aligned sericite. The pumice clast has been albite + quartz + sericite altered. Plane polarised light. Sample KB304B, Siluro-Devonian Ural Volcanics, Ural Ridges area, New South Wales.
G. Deformed relict perlite Relict perlitic fractures in this jigsaw-fit andesitic breccia are elongate and flattened, especially adjacent to competent phenocrysts. The groundmass has been sericite + chlorite + calcite + albite altered and the perlitic fractures chlorite filled. Plane polarised light. Sample 76902, Cambrian Que-Hellyer Volcanics, western volcano-sedimentary sequences, Mount Read Volcanics, Hellyer, western Tasmania.
H. Deformed grains In this sample of volcaniclastic sandstone, strongly' deformed feldspar grains and clasts have been rotated parallel to the strong cleavage. Plane polarised light. Sample 133520, Cambro-Ordovician Trooper Creek Formation, Seventy Mile Range Group, Mount Windsor Subprovince, central Thalanga, Queensland.
FIGURE 3.8 | Examples of deformation textures, deformed clasts and pre-existing textures in altered volcanic rocks, cont.
A. Fiamme and eutaxitic texture in welded ignimbrite Dark flame-like obsidian lenses or fiamme (F) are aligned in this sample of subaerial welded rhyolitic ignimbrite. Fiamme are commonly interpreted as flattened pumice clasts. The fiamme in this sample are interpreted to result from the plastic deformation, flattening and sintering together of hot glassy pumice clasts during welding (cf. Smith, I960). The bedding-parallel alignment of flattened, elongate fiamme and glass shards defines the eutaxitic texture. Sample OW7, Pleistocene Owahoroa ignimbrite, Whitianga Group, Coromandel Volcanic Zone, Owharoa Falls, New Zealand. B. Fiamme in thin section In thin section, the former pumice clasts, fiamme (F), lack uncompacted vesicles, have feathery terminations and are enclosed in domains of cuspate and platy shards (5), and quartz, feldspar and biotite crystal fragments. Although some shards have preserved bubble-wall shapes, others were plastically deformed and compacted, especially adjacent to crystals. Plane polarised light. Sample OW11, Pleistocene Owahoroa ignimbrite, Whitianga Group, Coromandel Volcanic Zone, Owharoa Falls, New Zealand.
C. Fiamme and eutaxitic texture in non-welded pumice breccia Dark, plagioclase-phyric, wispy, chlorite-rich fiamme are enclosed in pale domains of quartz + chlorite + pyritealtered pumice clasts, shards and crystal fragments in this non-welded rhyolitic pumice breccia. The beddingparallel alignment of fiamme defines the eutaxitic texture. Alteration and compaction of pumice clasts during diagenesis formed these apparent welding textures. Sample 133809, Cambrian Hercules Pumice Formation, Central Volcanic Complex, Mount Read Volcanics, Hercules footwall, western Fasmania.
D. Fiamme in thin section In thin section, the chlorite fiamme (F) have feathery terminations and lack internal textures other than sparse plagioclase phenocrysts and hematite-rich stylolites. The pale quartz + chlorite + pyrite-altered domains contain uncompacted tube pumice clasts (P). Plagioclase crystals are dusted with hematite and sericite. Plane polarised light. Sample 133811, Cambrian Hercules Pumice Formation, Central Volcanic Complex, Mount Read Volcanics, Hercules footwall, western Fasmania.
58 I CHAPTER 3
A. Pseudobreccia in perlitic rhyolite Sericite + chlorite-altered perlitic fractures and pink albite-altered perlitic cores result in the pseudoclastic texture in this plagioclase-phyric coherent rhyolite. Sample BBP248-504.7 m from the Cambrian Central Volcanic Complex, Mount Read Voleanics, Boco, western Tasmania.
B. Pseudobreccia in macroperlitic dacite Polyphase alteration of macroperlite in this plagioclasephyric dacite has resulted in dark chlorite + epidote-rich domains along and adjacent to the perlitic fractures. This overprinted and enclosed earlier, pale grey albite + sericite-altered perlitic cores. The chlorite + epidoterich domains resemble the matrix in a matrix-supported breccia. Locally, the arcuate perlitic fractures are well defined.
Cambrian Sterling Valley Volcanics, Mount Read Volcanics, Sterling Saddle, western Tasmania. C. False clasts
In this coherent andesite, plagioclase phenocrysts have been extensively replaced by epidote, pyroxenes by chlorite and the groundmass domains by green epidote + chlorite and orange albite. The domainal distribution of the alteration facies gives the andesite a patchy pseudoclastic texture. The false clasts have both sharp and diffuse margins, which are transgressed locally by altered plagioclase phenocrysts.
Sample 145147, Ordovician Forest Reefs Volcanics, Molong Volcanic Belt, Cooramilla, New South Wales. D. False pyroclastic texture
The most conspicuous feature of this sample is the wispy dark green chlorite-rich lenses that resemble fiamme. However, these lenses are aligned in the tectonic cleavage and occur in an evenly porphyritic rhyolite. The lenses are interpreted to result from domainal chlorite and sericite + quartz + biotite alteration of the groundmass in a coherent quartz + plagioclase-phyric rhyolite. Sample 140727, Cambro-Ordovician Mount Windsor Formation, MountWindsorSubprovince, centralThalanga, Queensland. E. False shards in thin section Polyphase chlorite + biotite and K-feldspar alteration of perlitic fractures, and their subsequent deformation have resulted in irregular arcuate and platy shapes, which resemble shards (arrows) in this quartz + plagioclase + pyroxene-phyric coherent rhyolite. Plane polarised light. Sample KB499, Siluro-Devonian Coan rhyolite, Mount Hope Volcanics, Mount Hope area, New South Wales.
F. Pseudoclastic texture in devitrified rhyolite This rhyolite contains silicified nodules that are composed of coalesced spherulites in a fine-grained sericite-altered groundmass. These nodular devitrification textures give a clastic appearance to the hand specimen and outcrop. Late Devonian Bunga Beds, Boyd Volcanic Complex, Bengunnu Point, New South Wales.
G. False clasts in thin section The clastic texture in this rhyolite comes from the uneven distribution of strongly chlorite + hematitealtered spherulites in a strongly foliated, chlorite + sericite + feldspar + hematite-altered groundmass. The foliation has wrapped around the altered spherulites, which have preserved fibrous textures and quartz cores. Plane polarised light. Sample KB536D, Siluro-Devonian Mount Hope Volcanics, Boolahbone tank, Mount Hope area, New South Wales.
H. Pseudogranular texture This altered dacite has a fine granular texture in hand specimen and resembles massive sandstone. However, in thin section it has a densely microspherulitic groundmass in which the recrystallised quartz + albite spherulites are separated by cuspate sericite-rich domains. The fine-grained, densely packed spherulites give the hand specimen its sandy texture. Sample MR25, Cambrian Kershaw Pumice Formation, Central Volcanics Complex, Mount Read Volcanics, Mount Read summit, western Tasmania.
I. Pseudogranular texture in thin section Recrystallised micropoikilitic textures in the groundmass of this aphyric rhyolite resemble sand-sized, rounded grains in a well-sorted quartzo-feldspathic sandstone. The margins of the micropoikilitic domains are marked by concentrations of sericite, which enhance the granular texture. Plane polarised light. Sample 147448, Cambrian Kershaw Pumice Formation, Central Volcanics Complex, Mount Read Volcanics, western Tasmania.
60 | CHAPTER 3
J. False thin-bedded volcaniclastic texture Flow banding in this microspherulitic plagioclase-phyric dacite is defined by alternating pale albite + quartz and darker albite + sericite + quartz layers. The planar, repetitive, thin flow banding resembles thin bedding in clastic facies such as tuffaceous siltstones. Sample 76772, Cambrian Que-Hellyer Volcanics, western volcano-sedimentary sequences, Mount Read Volcanics, Hellyer, western Tasmania.
K. False thin-bedded volcaniclastic texture in thin section In thin section, this finely flow-banded rhyolite resembles a thin-bedded volcaniclastic facies with fractured plagioclase crystals. However, axiolitic and bow-tie shaped spherulitic textures are locally preserved in the groundmass. Cross polarised light. Sample KB132A, Siluro-Devonian Ural Volcanics, Ural area, New South Wales.
L. False volcaniclastic texture in thin section Fractured and broken plagioclase crystals, and recrystallised spherulites in the groundmass of this flowbanded rhyolite contribute to its pseudoclastic texture. Cross polarised light. Sample 133837 Cambrian Mount Black Formation, Central Volcanic Complex, Mount Read Volcanics, Mount Read summit, western Tasmania.
M. False polymictic, matrix-supported texture The dark chlorite-rimmed clasts in this plagioclasephyric basaltic breccia appear to be supported in a compositionally different, pale calcite + chlorite-altered matrix. However, the matrix comprises jigsaw-fit, blocky and splintery clasts of perlitic basalt that are identical to the darker clasts. The chlorite-rimmed clasts appear subrounded, because chlorite alteration of the clast margins and adjacent matrix has obscured the blocky and splintery shapes. Sample 76833, Cambrian Que-Hellyer Volcanics, western volcano-sedimentary sequences, Mount Read Volcanics, Hellyer, western Tasmania.
N. False polymictic texture Overprinting domainal albite + hematite and epidote alteration facies in this plagiocla.se + hornblende-phyric dacite gives the sample a heterogenous appearance. The abundance of pink, albitised plagioclase phenocrysts in the red and green domains is equivalent, although they appear more abundant in the epidote-altered domains due to the colour contrast between the phenocrysts and epidotealtered groundmass. Colour differences between the two alteration facies and more prominent phenocrysts in the epidote-altered domains obscure the massive, coherent texture and uniform composition of this sample. Sample 147557, Cambrian Mount Black Formation, Central Volcanic Complex, Mount Read Volcanics, Pieman Road, western Tasmania. O. False matrix-supported texture Clasts in this monomictic dacite breccia display jigsaw-fit texture. However, feldspar + quartz + sericite alteration facies has replaced the groundmass adjacent to the quench fractures between clasts, enhancing the matrix, and imparting an apparent matrix-supported texture. The feldspar + quartz + sericite-altered matrix has been more resistant to weathering than the sericite + chlorite-altered clasts and forms ridges on the outcrop. The larger clasts are perlitic, plagioclase + hornblende porphyritic with planar and curviplanar margins typical of clasts produced by quench fragmentation.
Cambrian, Mount Black Formation, CentralVolcanic Complex, Mount Read Volcanics, Tullah lakeside, western Tasmania.
P. False matrix-supported texture In this in situ andesitic hyaloclastite, blocky chloritealtered plagioclase + pyroxene-phyric clasts appear to be supported in a pyrite + quartz + sericite-rich matrix. However, thin section inspection reveals relict clasts with jigsaw-fit textures preserved in the false matrix domains. Sample 144710, Ordovician Lake Cowal Volcanics, JuneeNarromine Volcanic Belt, Boundary Prospect, New South Wales.
Q. False coherent texture This albite + quartz + sericite- and chlorite + epidotealtered pumice and rhyolite breccia resembles a coherent, feldspar porphyritic facies. The albite-altered plagioclase crystals, pseudophenocrysts, are evenly distributed in a fine-grained, sericite-rich false groundmass. On the left side of the photograph, pervasive, massive albite + quartz alteration facies obscures the plagioclase crystals in a pseudo-aphyric texture. Sample 147402, Cambrian Kershaw Pumice Formation, CentralVolcanic Complex, Mount Read Volcanics, Rosebery, western Tasmania.
62 | CHAPTER 3
FIGURE 3.11 | Sketches summarising the relationship between primary volcanic, high-temperature devitrification and hydration textures, and pseudotextures. (A) Pseudotextures in classical perlite (after Allen, 1988). False shards may be produced either (i) as siliceous segments between phyllosilicate-altered perlitic fractures or (ii) phyllosilicate-altered sections of the perlitic fractures, (iv) Alternatively, pervasive phyllosilicate alteration can obscure the perlitic fractures resulting in a massive texture. (B) Pseudotextures in flow-banded facies comprising alternating crystalline (spherulitic) and glassy flow bands (modified from Doyle, 2001). (i) Glassy domains are altered to phyllosilicate-rich assemblages and spherulitic bands to quartzo-feidspathic assemblages. Consequently the originally glassy and crystalline domains differ in alteration colour and mineralogy. The spherulites superficially appear as rounded siliceous dasts in a fine-grained phyllosilicate-rich matrix, resulting in a pseudobreccia texture, (v) In parallel flow-banded facies this can result in a false thin-bedded voicaniciastic texture. The crystalline nature of the quartzo-feldspathicaltered bands enhances the granular appearance of the false beds. (C) Pseudotextures from in situ quench fragmented porphyritic glass (modified from Doyle, 2001). Alteration progresses as fronts away from the fractures and into the non-fractured glass, (i) Where phyllosilicate alteration is incomplete the remaining kernels of glass are subsequently altered to quartzo-feidspathic assemblages. The further the alteration progresses away from the fractures, the more matrix-supported the resulting pseudobreccia texture, (ii) Pseudoclastic texture also develops as a result of the complete replacement by the first alteration phase (phyllosilicate alteration) and only partial replacement by the second alteration phase (quartzofeidspathic alteration), thereby preserving isolated relics of the earlier phase, (iii) False polymictic texture develops in quench fragmented porphyritic glass as polyphase alteration results in colour variations between the false dasts and matrix. Varying intensities of alteration enhance the polymictic appearance. Phenocrysts are more prominent in dark phyllosilicate domains than in paler siliceous domains, resulting in an apparent variation in crystal content consistent with a polymictic rock, (iv) Pseudomassive texture develops from pervasive phyllosilicate alteration. (D) Pseudotextures from porphyritic autobreccia or hyaloclastite (modified from Doyle, 2001). (i) and (ii) alteration commences along fractures and in the matrix of autobreccia but gradually progresses into the dasts, greatly enhancing the clastic, matrix-supported appearance. The result is commonly false matrix-supported texture, (iii) Polyphase alteration results in pseudoclasts and pseudomatrix that comprise different alteration mineral assemblages and colours, and therefore appear to have different primary compositions (false polymictic texture). Phenocrysts are more prominent in dark phyllosilicate-altered domains, (iv) Pseudomassive texture occurs where alteration has been extensive and pervasive. (E) Pseudotextures from porphyritic pumice breccia (modified after Gifkins, 2001). False eutaxitic texture results from phyllosilicate alteration of originally glassy pumice dasts or shards within the pumice breccia. The phyllosilicate-altered pumice dasts and shards are flattened by compaction (i) or tectonic deformation (ii) resulting in a texture that resembles eutaxitic texture in welded ignimbrites. (iii) False polymictic texture as a result of colour variations and apparent variations in phenocryst content due to polyphase alteration, (iv) False coherent textures result from the complete and pervasive phyllosilicate alteration and subsequent compaction of originally glassy shards and pumice dasts producing a massive textured rock in which the original dasts are indistinguishable.
spherulitic or micropoikilitic groundmass of coherent felsic fades (e.g. Fig. 3.10HandI). False thin-bedded volcaniclastic texture resembles thinly bedded and tectonically folded volcaniclastic rocks, and can occur in altered, planar flow-banded and flow-folded lavas and intrusions (e.g. Fig. 3.10J and K). The false thin-bedded volcaniclastic texture is due to the planar and uniform character of flow banding and the apparent textural and compositional differences between flow bands (Allen, 1988). This apparent compositional difference between flow bands results from domainal alteration: originally glassy bands were altered to dark phyllosilicate assemblages and contain well-preserved phenocrysts, whereas the originally cryptocrystalline bands were altered to pale quartzo-feldspathic assemblages and contain altered polycrystalline phenocrysts that are hardly recognisable. Phenocrysts may also be extensively fractured and dismembered during deformation, thereby contributing to the pseudoclastic and finer grained appearance (e.g. Fig. 3.10L). Discrepancies in colour and the apparent relative proportions of phenocrysts enhance the compositional contrast between adjacent bands.
alteration of pumice breccia produces a massive textured rock in which the original clasts are indistinguishable (Fig. 3.10Q).
Is the alteration facies limited in extent or widespread? Typically the macroscopic alteration distribution is described as either regional or local in extent. Regional alteration styles are widespread, affecting extensive (hundreds of metres to tens of kilometres) expanses of rock. Local alteration styles are limited in extent and can refer to alteration on a scale of centimetres, such as wall-rock alteration associated with a fault or vein, to hundreds of metres, such as the extensive hydrothermal alteration associated with the Rosebery VHMS deposit (western Tasmania) that extends up to 100 m stratigraphically beneath the ore lenses, 10-20 m into the hanging wall and 500 m along strike (Large et al., 2001b).
64 | CHAPTER 3
Is the alteration fades associated with other alteration fades, structures, mineralised rock or particular units? Locally distributed alteration fades are commonly associated with structures, such as veins or fractures, ore bodies or particular volcanic units: forming halos, envelopes or selvages. They may also occur around isolated clasts within clastic facies. In zoned alteration systems or halos, they are commonly spatially and temporally associated with other alteration facies.
and that can also be applied to the distribution of alteration facies or minerals (Table 3.3): (1) regional zoning, (2) district zoning, and (3) local or ore body zoning. In addition, altered zones may occur within or surrounding individual clasts in clastic facies. Thus the dimensions of altered zones may vary from a few centimetres to several tens of kilometres (cf. Bohlke et al., 1980; Galley, 1993). These variations in dimension are a function of the size of the alteration system (regional versus local systems), and changes in physical and chemical conditions such as the porosity and composition of the host rock, fluid-rock ratio and composition of the fluid (Rose and Burt, 1979). Different alteration processes result in different zonation patterns. Regional alteration processes such as diagenesis and metamorphism, produce thick, flat-lying, vertically zoned systems. Local hydro thermal systems and contact metamorphism result in footwall and hanging wall altered zones or concentrically zoned altered halos or contact aureoles. Zonation related to faults or fractures is generally parallel to the structure, commonly cross cutting stratigraphic contacts.
TABLE 3.3 I Scales of alteration zonation. Regional zonation Alteration facies or minerals occur in zones throughout a region Altered zones are associated with a cluster of ore bodies, fractures or intrusions Altered zones are associated with an individual ore body, fracture or intrusion Altered zones are associated with smallscale features such as clasts or minerals in the rock
District zonation
Local zonation
Sample-scale zonation
assumed that higher-grade metamorphic rocks formerly had mineral assemblages typical of lower-grade zones and were altered progressively as metamorphism proceeded. However, variations in geothermal gradient, variable rates of sedimentation and folding and faulting can modify the progression of metamorphism and the resulting metamorphic zones, in particular, folding and faulting may affect the position of mineralogically determined isograds by promoting reactions or causing local increases in temperature or heat flow (Coombs et al., 1959). Coombs (1954) first recognised vertical metamorphic zoning of low-temperature, high-pressure metamorphic mineral assemblages in a 10 km section of the uplifted Permian to Jurassic Wakatipu Metamorphic Belt, in the New Zealand geosyncline (Fig. 3.13A). The Wakatipu Metamorphic Belt comprises submarine emplaced rhyolitic to basaltic volcaniclastic and volcanogenic sedimentary rocks, which were progressively metamorphosed (Coombs, 1954). There is a continuous gradational sequence of regional metamorphic zones characterised by zeolite, prehnite + pumpellyite, pumpellyite + actinolite and greenschist facies (a biotite zone and chlorite zone) at depth (Fig. 3.15B: Coombs, 1954; Coombs etal., 1959; Landis and Coombs, 1967). These zones have an even thickness over a wide area (>10 km by 300 km) suggesting that the geothermal gradient, estimated at l4-25C/km, was consistent throughout the Wakatipu Metamorphic Belt (Landis and Coombs, 1967).
FIGURE 3.12 | Schematic cross-section of vertically developed diagenetic zones in the central Hokuroku Basin, Japan (after lijima, 1974; Hay, 1978; lijima, 1978).
FIGURE 3.13 | Alteration zonation patterns associated with regional metamorphism. (A) Regional metamorphic zones in the Wakatipu metamorphic belt, South Island, New Zealand, (after Coombs et al.,1959, and Landis and Coombs,1967). (B) Schematic cross-section reconstruction of regional metamorphic zones and isotherms during peak metamorphism of the Wakatipu metamorphic belt, New Zealand (after Landis and Coombs, 1967).
66
CHAPTER 3
(Fig. 3.14). The Amulet Rhyolite Formation comprises coherent and clastic basalts and andesites with minor rhyolitic lava domes. The volcanic rocks are variably altered and the distribution of the alteration facies can be related to stratigraphic depth and primary host rock composition. Within the andesites there are four regionally extensive alteration facies, from top to bottom: chlorite + actinolite + albite + epidote + quartz; silicified; mottled epidote + quartz; and chlorite alteration facies (Fig. 3.14B). The upper chlorite + actinolite + albite + epidote + quartz alteration facies is the result of low-grade regional metamorphism, whereas the other three alteration facies are interpreted to be the products of regional deep, semi-conformable alteration (Gibson et al., 1983).
FIGURE 3.14 | Diagram showing alteration zonation patterns associated with regional hydrothermai alteration. (A) A schematic cross-section through a vertically stacked sequence of deep, semi-conformable altered zones in the Amulet Rhyolite Formation, Noranda district, Abitibi belt, Canada (after Gibson, 1989, in Galley, 1993). (B) A reconstructed section of deep, semi-conformable altered zones in the Amulet Rhyolite Formation at Turcotte Lake (after Gibson et al., 1983).
that correspond with decreasing temperature away from the intrusion contact (e.g. Fig. 3.15). For example, submarine basaltic lavas and breccias of the Upper Triassic Karmutsen Subgroup, Vancouver Island, Canada, have undergone lowpressure, high-temperature contact metamorphism related to the shallow emplacement of the Jurassic Coast Range Batholith (Carson, 1973; Kuniyoshi and Liou, 1976). Intrusion of the Coast Range Batholith resulted in two locally developed contact metamorphic zones: hornblende + plagioclase zone and epidote + actinolite zone, which are superimposed on a prehnite + pumpellyite facies regional metamorphic zone (Fig. 3.15A: Kuniyoshi and Liou, 1976). The hornblende + plagioclase zone is approximately 2600 m wide and the epidote + actinolite zone less than 900 m wide (Kuniyoshi and Liou, 1976).
FIGURE 3.15 | Diagram showing alteration zonation patterns associated with contact metamorphism. (A) Contact metamorphic zones in the northeastern Vancouver Island, Canada (from Kuniyoshi and Liou, 1976). (B) Schematic cross-section of contact-metamorphic zonation.
Fig. 3.16A: Large and Both, 1980; Jack, 1989; Large, 1992; Gemmell and Fulton, 2001). In the Hokuroku district, local hydrothermally altered halos associated with the Kuroko deposits comprise up to four altered zones in a roughly concentric distribution around the ore deposits (Fig. 3.16B: Urabe et al., 1983; Utada et al., 1988; Utada, 1991). From core to margin the altered zones are: sericite + quartz pyrite zone; chlorite + sericite + quartz zone; mixed-layer clay (illite-montmorillonite) zone; kaolinite or smectite-montmorillonite zone (Date et al., 1983; Urabe et al., 1983). These altered zones vary in thickness from approximately 16 m to 100 m, transgress stratigraphic boundaries, and grade into and interfinger with regional diagenetic zones such as the clinoptilolite + mordenite zone in Figure 3.16B (Utada, 1970, 1991; Iijima, 1974). In contrast, the mineral assemblages in altered zones associated with Australian VHMS deposits reflect highergrade regional metamorphic overprints. Some have proximal chlorite zones and halos of quartz + sericite, sericite and carbonate zones (Fig. 3.16A and C: Allen, 1988; Large, 1992; Doyle, 2001).
68 | CHAPTER 3
FIGURE 3.16 | Schematic cross-sections showing hydrothermal alteration zonation patterns associated with VHMS deposits. (A) Hydrothermally altered zones developed in the footwall alteration pipe and hanging wall alteration plume to the Hellyer VHMS deposit (after Gemmell and Fulton, 2001). (B) Hydrothermally altered halo developed around the Uwamuki group deposits, Kosaka VHMS mine, Japan (after Urabe et al., 1983). (C) Hydrothermally altered halo developed around the K-lens VHMS ore lens at Rosebery (after Large et al., 2001b). (D) Hydrothermally altered zones developed in the footwall alteration pipe and hanging wall alteration plume to an ore lens in the Millenbach VHMS deposit, Canada (after Riverin and Hodgson, 1980).
either as narrow selvages around individual veins or as wide pervasive fracture-controlled altered zones. Decreasing fluid temperatures and changes in fluid chemistry (especially pH) away from fractures or faults results in alteration zonation parallel to the fracture or vein surface.
youngest. The paragenetic sequence is typically depicted using a horizontal bar chart (e.g. Fig. 3.17) or a space-time diagram, such the schematic diagram by Wilson et al. (2003) that shows alteration and vein stages relative to the intrusive history of the Ridgeway Complex at the Ridgeway Au-Cu porphyry deposit in New South Wales. Unfortunately, interpreting timing relationships between different alteration facies can be difficult and confusing as there are few unambiguous overprinting textures. The superposition of many different alteration phases on the same rock can obscure or complicate alteration textures. In addition, while one mineral is being deposited under certain conditions at one place, other minerals are forming elsewhere under different conditions. Thus the deposition of one mineral may overlap with another in both time and space.
FIGURE 3.17 | Interpretation of the relative timing of alteration mineral assemblages in the northern Central Volcanic Complex, western Tasmania (modified after Gifkins and Allen, 2001). S1 is the bedding-parallel, stylolitic foliation interpreted as a diagenetic compaction and dissolution fabric (Allen, 1990). S2 is the regional tectonic cleavage related to Devonian folding. Assemblages in brackets refer to pre-metamorphic equivalents. For example, early regional sericite is probably a metamorphosed equivalent of early clays. The feldspar + quartz + sericite alteration mineral assemblage may include the growth of early zeolites and the replacement of zeolites and glass by K-feldspar and albite during diagenesis.
70 | CHAPTER 3
Method
The relative timing of alteration mineral assemblages is determined by documenting overprinting relationships among the alteration mineral assemblages, mineral deposits, successive volcanic units or intrusions, the compaction foliation and regional tectonic cleavages. This requires detailed examination of textural and mineralogical features that are visible in the field, hand specimen (including drill core) and thin section. Although thin sections can be useful in displaying the inter-relationships between different minerals, they may be too small to show larger cross-cutting features (e.g. veins) and textural features in coarse-grained rocks. Paragenetic determination relies on a representative suite of samples that includes all rock types and alteration facies in the alteration system. Because overprinting relationships are not always straightforward the inspection of a large number of samples is required for a systematic understanding of the overprinting textures.
Overprinting textures
Overprinting texture refers to any texture or geometry that can be used to infer that one mineral or group of minerals has formed later than another mineral. Table 3.4 describes the three main types of overprinting textures. There is a wide range of overprinting textures, some of which are described in Sections 3.1 and 3.2; however, the reader is referred to Ramdohr (1980), Craig and Vaughan (1981), Ineson (1989) and Taylor (1996) for more detailed discussions of overprinting textures and their significance. The possible relationships among alteration mineral assemblages, mineralised rocks, successive volcanic units or intrusions, the compaction foliation and regional tectonic cleavages and their implication for the timing of alteration are described in Table 3.5. Recent work (Allen, 1997; Gifkins, 2001; Gifkins and Allen, 2001) in pumice breccias around the Rosebery VHMS deposit has unravelled a complex sequence of hydrothermal and non-hydrothermal alteration mineral assemblages. This work was based on overprinting relationships between alteration mineral assemblages, compaction foliation (S:) and tectonic cleavage (S2: Fig. 3.17). Alteration mineral assemblages that infill primary porosity, preserve delicate uncompacted
Mineral superposition
Where one mineral or a group of minerals can be seen to have nucleated upon a pre-existing mineral or grain; this applies to replacement, infill and recrystallisation textures Where fractures fragment pre-existing minerals or grains, provide space for subsequent infill and focus wall-rock alteration Where foliations or lineations rotate, modify, distort or fracture pre-existing minerals or components
Fracture superposition
Foliation superposition
pumice textures and/or are overprinted by Sj and S2 are interpreted to be early, prior to compaction and complete lithification. These include thin films of sericite, chlorite + sericite + hematite and calcite (or their pre-metamorphic equivalents, smectites, calcite and palagonite) that coated all original surfaces including vesicle walls, plagioclase crystals, shards and fractures and pre-date the infilling of vesicles by subsequent minerals. Feldspar + quartz + sericite, chlorite + sericite, chlorite + sericite + hematite, chlorite, sericite and quartz + sericite alteration facies have filled and preserved vesicles, and replaced glass, indicating that they (or their premetamorphic equivalents such as zeolites and clays) formed prior to compaction and deformation. Alteration features that define the bedding-parallel compaction foliation, such as chlorite + sericite + hematite and chlorite + sericite fiamme, are crenulated by the regional cleavage (S2) and are interpreted to be pre- to syn-S,. Alteration features that overprint the early alteration mineral assemblages and Sp but which are strongly foliated by S2, are broadly syntectonic or post-Sj pre-S2. A chlorite + epidote alteration assemblage has overprinted the early sericite films and chlorite + sericite fiamme but is strongly foliated by S2 and interpreted to be post-Sj and pre- to syn-S2. Chlorite + calcite + magnetite has replaced and post-dated the chlorite + sericite fiamme and chlorite + sericite + hematite stylolites that define Sv and which are commonly transposed into the S2 cleavage and associated with syn-S2 chlorite veins. Chlorite pyrite is associated with shear zones parallel to S2, and undeformed post-S2 brittle fractures and faults. Sericite + calcite + actinolite epidote recrystallised earlier alteration mineral assemblages and are aligned parallel to S2. Alteration mineral assemblages that are unaffected or only very weakly affected by the S2 foliation are interpreted to be post-deformation. These alteration mineral assemblages are related to chlorite + quartz + calcite vein infill and associated vein wall-rock replacement and altered halos associated with Devonian granites, such as quartz calcite tourmaline + magnetite veins. Early Mn-carbonate, chlorite, sericite and quartz + sericite alteration facies are spatially associated with ore at Rosebery (Fig. 3.16C), whereas the other alteration facies are regionally extensive, spatially associated with synvolcanic or Devonian intrusions, veins, faults or shear zones. The overprinting relationships, combined with spatial associations and distributions of the alteration facies, suggest that diagenetic alteration began shortly after eruption in the Cambrian and continued until the transition to regional metamorphism. Hydrothermal alteration associated with the VHMS deposits at Rosebery and Hercules commenced prior to burial compaction, but was synchronous with diagenesis and the intrusion of synvolcanic sills. Peak regional metamorphism was synchronous with Devonian deformation and is overprinted by contact metamorphic assemblages associated with the emplacement of Devonian granites. The interpretation of textures to determine a paragenetic sequence can result in misleading results unless the subsequent effects of metamorphism and deformation upon the textures and minerals are appreciated. For example, in the Que River VHMS deposit galena commonly occurs in the S2 cleavage. As a result, conventional interpretation may conclude that it formed syn-S2 (Devonian). This interpretation would
suggest that galena post-dates the other sulfides (sphalerite and pyrite), which are overprinted by S2. However, geological evidence (Large et al., 1989) combined with lead isotope data (Gulson and Porritt, 1987) indicates that galena deposition occurred on the seafloor at the same time as the other sulfides in the Cambrian. In this case, the textural evidence constrains
the timing of recrystallisation of the galena to syn-S2, whereas the geological and isotopic evidence suggests syn-depositional formation of galena. Misinterpretations of this type are common for soft and easily recrystallised minerals such as sericite, chlorite, clay minerals, galena and chalcopyrite.
TABLE 3.51 Overprinting relationships in altered volcanic rocks and their implications for the relative timing of alteration (modified after Allen and Large, 1996)
Alteration facies to primary volcanic texture Alteration facies truncated by clast margins Clasts with different alteration facies in the same rock Alteration facies infills primary porosity Alteration facies cross cuts primary porosity or clast margins Rock contains relict high-temperature devitrification textures Alteration facies to successive volcanic units or intrusions Alteration facies truncated by younger less-altered rocks Alteration facies overprints intercalated intrusions Alteration facies overprints younger rocks Between alteration facies and diagenetic compaction textures Alteration facies protects primary texture from compaction Alteration facies defines the compaction foliation (e.g. fiamme) Alteration facies overprints the compaction foliation Hydrothermal assemblages and diagenetic facies Hydrothermal facies overprinted by early diagenetic facies Hydrothermal facies overprinted by late diagenetic facies Hydrothermal facies overprints late diagenetic facies Alteration facies to early bedding-parallel stylolitic dissolution foliation (S1) Alteration facies overprinted by stylolitic foliation Alteration facies overprints stylolitic foliation Alteration facies to tectonic foliations and lineations (>S2) Alteration textures deformed and cut by tectonic foliation Alteration textures less deformed than primary volcanic textures Undeformed alteration textures Alteration facies to metamorphic assemblages and textures Alteration facies overprinted by metamorphic assemblages Alteration facies overprints metamorphic assemblages Megascopic alteration facies distribution Regional distribution Stratabound in formerly permeable facies Localised in fractured domains of coherent volcanic rocks Restricted to faults and shear zones Overprinting relationships between all alteration assemblages
Pre-fragmentation Pre-frag mentation Pre-lithification Post-lithification Post-devitrification Older syn-volcanic/intrusion Syn- to post-intrusion and overlying units Syn- to post-younger rocks Pre-compaction Pre- to syn-compaction Syn- to post-compaction Pre- to early-diagenetic Syn-diagenetic Post-diagenetic Pre- S1 Post-S1 Pre-cleavage Syn-cleavage Post-cleavage Pre-metamorphic Post-metamorphic Diagenetic or metamorphic Pre- to syn-lithification Post-lithification and post-fracturing Syn- to post-faulting Provides a paragenetic sequence for different alteration assemblages
72
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This chapter reviews three principal types of geochemical data that are used to characterise, quantify and interpret the processes of alteration: (1) whole-rock lithogeochemistry including major, trace and immobile trace elements; (2) mineral chemistry or composition of individual mineral phases in alteration mineral assemblages; and (3) stable isotope ratios of whole rocks and specific alteration minerals. Geochemistry is the study of the abundance and distribution of chemical elements in the earth (Mason, 1966). It has particular applications for the interpretation of altered rocks. Geochemical data can aid recognition of the type and composition of the precursor rocks before alteration. The chemical compositions of metasomatised or altered rocks and mineral phases reflect compositional changes during alteration and provide clues about the alteration processes. On a utilitarian level, geochemical data are routinely used in mineral exploration to identify broad chemical halos and gradients or vectors toward mineralised zones, and to discriminate between prospective and non-prospective targets.
4.1 | LITHOGEOCHEMISTRY
Literally, lithogeochemistry is the determination and study of the abundances and distribution of elements in stones. In this chapter, we understand it to mean the whole-rock chemistry of the 10 or 12 major elements in rocks (usually expressed as oxides) and various groups of trace elements, such as rare earth elements (REE) and immobile elements. Galley's (1995) review of lithogeochemical applications in massive-sulfide exploration also included mineral and isotope chemistry but those methods are considered here in separate Sections (4.2 and 4.3). There are three main applications of lithogeochemistry in mineral exploration (Eilu et al., 1997): (1) identification or discrimination of prospective and nonprospective areas and lithological units (2) recognition of large alteration and geochemical halos to increase the size of exploration targets (3) definition of exploration vectors based on compositional gradients around ore deposits.
Several aspects of lithogeochemistry that attempt to 'see through' the effects of alteration to reveal the compositions of the protoliths, identify the process or type of alteration and quantify the chemical changes associated with alteration have particular relevance to studies of altered rocks. Chemostratigraphy uses immobile elements to identify lithologic correlations, magmatic affinities and geotectonic settings in otherwise unrecognisable altered rocks. Mass-transfer techniques, also based on immobile elements, are used to infer the compositions of unaltered precursors and quantitatively estimate the major element changes that occurred. Rareearth-element geochemistry can facilitate recognition of rock alteration processes (e.g. Eu anomalies in exhalites). Alteration indices may assist in the discrimination of alteration styles or facies, and the quantification of alteration intensity (Section 2.4). If composition data are available, lithogeochemical methods certainly contribute to the interpretation and evaluation of altered rocks. However, they are not quick solutions to all problems and may, if used in isolation, lead to false conclusions. In every case it is important to consider other geological information: field relationships, distribution or zonation of alteration mineral assemblages, macro- and micro-scale textures, mineralogy et cetera. Before describing the lithogeochemical methods, we provide explanations of some common lithogeochemical terms (Table 4.1), brief descriptions of geochemical sampling and analytical techniques, and draw particular attention to the phenomenon of closure in composition data.
Data expressed as part of a whole (e.g. in weight percent, wt%, or parts per million, ppm). A quantity of material, whole rock or its components, measured in weight units (g). Usually expressed in grams per hundred grams (g/100 g) to avoid confusion with composition data in weight percent, although they are effectively the same. Mass changes that are proportional to the whole initial mass of the rock. Usually expressed in grams per hundred grams (g/100 g). It may refer to individual components or the sum of all components (net mass change). The absolute mass change in a component expressed as a percent proportion of the initial composition of that component in a rock. Relative mass changes distort the perception of chemical processes. For example, the addition of a small quantity (say 0.5 g/100 g) of MnO initially present at 0.5% would produce a 100% relative gain in MnO. In comparison, addition of the same quantity of SiO2 (0.5 g/100 g) to the same rock initially containing 50% SiO2 would represent only 1% relative gain. This gives the false impression that MnO was a vastly more important element of mass change than SiO2. Absolute mass changes are preferable because they are quantitative rather than proportional, and accurately reflect the quantities of materials added to or subtracted from the system. The sum of positive and negative rock component mass changes relative to the initial mass of the rock. Usually expressed in grams per hundred grams (g/100 g). The amount of a component expressed as a proportion of the whole rock. Usually given in units of weight percent (wt%) for major elements and oxides, and in parts per million (ppm) for trace elements. It is analogous to "concentration" in chemical solutions.
Proportion
Sampling strategy The number and size of samples to be used in a lithogeochemical investigation depends on many factors. These include the available budget, degree of exposure, geological complexity, compositional homogeneity of rock units or altered zones, the elements of interest and the volume of rock that can be physically removed from the outcrop or drill-core shed. There can be no universally applicable strategy but generally, more is best. Obviously, a good understanding of the geological context is fundamental to any subsequent lithogeochemical interpretation. Smash and grab sampling may lead to inadequate and often meaningless interpretations. Field methods should avoid sampling rocks potentially modified by weathering or other superficial secondary processes, unless these processes are under investigation. The sampler must also recognise potential overprinted alteration facies. For example, a sample containing a dense network of metamorphic quartz veins is of little value if the purpose is to study synvolcanic pervasive alteration phases; it would be better to select a sample without veins. Handling, transport and subsequent storage of lithogeochemical samples should not allow contamination or cross contamination. When sampling drill cores or cuttings stored at a mine site, be aware that mines and concentrators are dusty places, and expect to see the signature of the ore in your trace-element data if the samples are not clean. In all but very coarse-grained rocks, samples of around 1 kg should be adequate (Potts, 1987). In fine-grained or glassy volcanic rocks, samples in the range 200 to 500 g are generally sufficient for major element analyses. However, for low-level trace elements (<1 ppm) the 'nugget effect' may be significant if elements of interest are concentrated in sparsely disseminated grains (e.g. zircon). Potts (1987) provided illustrative tables of the sample weights required for analytical precision, at various concentrations and grainsizes. These
represent the quantities of sample that actually undergo analysis and should not be confused with the amount of pulverised sample from which smaller portions are taken for analysis.
Sample preparation All whole-rock analytical techniques (except neutron activation analysis) require samples to be crushed and ground to fine powder for direct analysis, acid digestion or fusion. There are opportunities here for sample contaminations from wear on the grinding machinery, cross contamination between samples in a batch, and contamination from previous batches of samples put through the mill. Reputable laboratories will use routine procedures to minimise those problems. However, if low-level trace elements are important, it may help to inform the laboratory personnel and request extra care. Jenner (1998) cautioned against the use of new diamond saw blades and recycled coolant for trimming slabs. He suggested that if sawn rock slabs must be analysed, they should be washed in acetone and distilled water. If the rock samples include overprinting phases, such as veins and weathered rinds, these are best cut out before crushing. The practice of crushing to -10 mm and attempting to pick out the rock chips without extraneous materials does not eliminate contamination. Jaw crushers are infamous contaminators. Crevices between their moving parts harbour dust that causes cross contamination, and the wear of plates directly contributes steel particles. Magnetic separation of steel particles is inadvisable because it may lead to selective removal of magnetic minerals. A better alternative is to crush rock samples down to ^5 mm fragments in a hydraulic press fitted with tungsten carbide plates. The crushed rock, including any fine dust, can then be coned and quartered down to about 80 or 100 g for pulverising to a final grainsize of less than 75 (Am in a swing mill.
Materials used in swing mills include tungsten carbide, chrome steel, alumina ceramic, and agate. All of these are potential contaminators of some elements. Chrome steel is the least expensive, but seriously compromises Cr and lowlevel Fe analyses. Tungsten carbide is popular and durable but will contribute Co and W to the sample, and possibly also Ti, Ta and Nb (Potts, 1987). Agate mills are fragile, expensive and slow but are the least likely to contaminate samples destined for low-level trace element determination.
Precision, accuracy and reference materials Precision is a measure of the repeatability of data within an analytical session, and reproducibility in different analytical sessions over longer intervals. Analysing several duplicate samples within batches and subsequent batches provides an estimate of the precision of a technique. Precision is reported as the co-efficient of variation (CV), which is equivalent to relative standard deviation (RSD) expressed as a percentage of the mean.
representative duplicate samples allows the user to monitor long-term precision and calibration drift. It permits greater confidence in the analytical data, which justifies the additional expense. Keeping the reference materials and duplicates anonymous can be problematic, even if the sample numbers are disguised. A few small packets of powdered or crushed rock stand out prominently in a batch of drill-core samples and analysts have no difficulty in recognising them as standards. They may analyse them with special care, develop their own comparative data over successive batches, and be tempted to adjust any outliers. However, the recognition that the client is prepared to carry out independent quality control generally has a positive effect on analytical practice and discourages complacency at the laboratory.
Limit of detection Limit of detection of an element is commonly understood to be 'the lowest concentration that can be confidently measured by a particular method on an average sample' (e.g. Anonymous, 1997). However, as pointed out in detail by Potts (1987), the levels of confidence are frequently not stated. That obscures the reality that the quoted detection limits are often below the levels at which reliably quantitative measurements are possible. Potts (1987) proposed three new terms for better definition of the much abused 'detection limit': Lower limit of detection (LLD) for a signal level of three standard deviations higher than the mean background (mean + 3s). This is the lowest level at which an element can be recognised but not quantitatively estimated. Limit of determination (LOD) representing a level six standard deviations above the background signal (mean + 6s). It is the lowest level at which the signal can be quantitatively measured for a confident analysis. Limit of quantitation (LOQ) is set at 10 standard deviations higher than background (mean + 10s) to provide extra confidence in the analysis in cases where there are legal, commercial or statutory implications placed on the interpretation of detection limits. According to Jenner (1998) the limit of detection commonly quoted by analysts is equivalent to Pott's (1987) lower limit of detection (LLD; mean + 3s). Jenner (1998) gave the example that if LLD for an element is 0.3 ppm, then data reported between 0.3 and 1 ppm may or may not be significantly different, but the element is recognisably present. Data above 1 ppm may be considered quantitative, or in other words, data at 1.1 and 1.5 ppm can be confidently regarded as different. The consequence is that one cannot place much reliance on data reported at close to the lower limit of detection. A safe rule of thumb is to treat with circumspection any data of less than one order of magnitude above the quoted detection limit. Therefore, select an analytical method that will provide quantitative data at an order of magnitude lower than the threshold of interest.
where s> is the standard deviation of element i in the samples analysed, and %J is the sample mean. Accuracy is a measure of how close analytical data lie to the 'true' values. It may be evaluated by including in each analytical batch some international geochemical reference materials, or in-house standards for which the true values are relatively well determined. It is important that such reference materials have compositions near the compositional range of the rocks being analysed (i.e. a standard rhyolite is inappropriate when analysing a batch of basalts). For each element accuracy is expressed as a positive or negative percentage difference, relative to the true or accepted values of the standard.
where Cr' is the true or accepted proportion of element i in the reference material, and Ca] is the apparent or analysed proportion of element i in the reference material. Reputable analytical laboratories will routinely run reference materials to calibrate their instruments and maintain an acceptable level of accuracy. It is helpful if the client, upon submittal, gives the analyst an indication of the rock types, mineral assemblages and compositional range of the samples, to enable an appropriate selection of reference materials. However, laboratories do not routinely report their analyses of reference materials for comparison with accepted values. Even if they do, the potential for fudging the results provides the user with a less than satisfactory assurance of accuracy. The solution is for the user to acquire some appropriate geochemical reference materials and include a sample or two, preferably disguised, in each analytical batch. This can involve considerable expense. Potts (1987) suggested that a minimum of 10 reference materials should be submitted with each batch for a full assessment of accuracy. In many cases, the user may not be greatly concerned with the 'correct' values provided that the data are relatively consistent or precise within and between batches. Submitting
76 | CHAPTER 4
Analytical techniques The most popular methods for analysis of whole-rock samples are X-ray fluorescence spectrometry (XRF), inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry (ICP-AES) and inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). These methods offer good precision for a large number of major and trace elements over wide concentration ranges. XRF remains the preferred method for major elements (Robinson, 2001). However, some commercial laboratories have recendy converted to ICP-AES, presumably for its rapid throughput and ability to measure most major and trace elements. ICP-MS is used only for trace element determinations. Neutron activation analysis (NAA) provides low limits of detection for REE, some platinum-group elements and some high-field-strength elements but it requires access to a nuclear reactor, produces radioactive waste and has slow turnaround of weeks or months. The geochemical laboratory at the University of Tasmania's School of Earth Sciences uses a combination of XRF on flux-fused and powdered samples (for major elements and moderate-abundance trace elements, respectively) and solution or laser-ablation ICP-MS for low-abundance trace elements (Robinson, 2001). To obtain the appropriate quality of data, it is important to involve the analysts in the selection of analytical methods. Inform them of the approximate compositional range in the samples and the geochemical objectives of the analyses. X-ray fluorescence (XRF) can be used to analyse up to about 60 elements with atomic numbers greater than 10 (Na upwards) at concentrations from 100% down to a few parts per million (Rollinson, 1993). Detection limits for trace elements in the range 0.5 to 2 ppm are achievable, and precision for major elements approaches less than 1% RSD (Robinson, 2001). However, routine procedures used in commercial laboratories generally result in higher detection limits of 2-10 ppm. Optimum detection limits and precision for trace elements, at concentrations below about 0.2%, are obtained by analysis of 610 g undiluted rock powder pressed into a pill. The rock powder must be ground to a grainsize of less than 75 [im to ensure homogeneity in the sample. Major element concentrations are determined on glass discs made by fusing a small amount of powdered rock diluted with lithium metaborate and tetraborate fluxes. The fusion produces a homogenous glass, which enables analysis of the light major elements and minimises X-ray absorption and enhancement matrix effects. The composition of the rock influences the type and dilution factor of the flux to be used, especially in sulfide-, base-metal- and carbonatebearing samples. Accordingly, at the geochemical laboratory in the University of Tasmania's School of Earth Sciences, approximate proportions of S, Fe, Ca, Ba, Cu, Pb and Zn are first determined on the powder pills, along with the trace elements, to enable appropriate selection of fusion fluxes. In sulfide-bearing samples, fusion should be a two-stage process with LiNO 3 in the flux to oxidise sulfur. Initially, the carefully weighed sample-flux mixture is heated and held for 10 minutes at 700C to ensure that the sulfur is retained as sulfate, and not evolved. It is then heated to 1000C for a further 10 minutes to complete the fusion and the melt is cast into a 32-mm diameter glass disc.
In the past decade, inductively coupled plasma (ICP) analysis has revolutionised geochemical analysis, particularly for trace elements. There are two separate methods of analysis known as ICP-AES and ICP-MS. Both use inductively coupled high-temperature argon plasma to generate atomic and ionic emissions in the sample. In ICP-AES (atomic emission spectrometry) the spectrum of atomic emissions is measured by an array of photomultipliers. This method is sometimes called ICP-OES (optical emission spectrometry). ICP-MS uses a mass spectrometer to measure ionic particles in plasma-sample gases. ICP-AES provides low limits of detection typically 210 ppm for trace elements and 10 100 ppm for major elements. ICP-MS enables determinations of heavier trace elements at extreme detection limits, up to four orders of magnitude lower than ICP-AES (e.g. REE and HFSE detection limits in the range of 0.1 to 2 ppb). ICP methods are able to measure most elements at low detection limits with high precision using linear calibration over eight orders of magnitude (Robinson, 2001). Up to 50 elements can be analysed simultaneously in a few minutes on samples of less than 100 mg. There are a number of disadvantages to ICP related to the requirement that the rock sample must be dissolved in dilute solution before introduction to the plasma. Ensuring complete dissolution of rocks, including refractory phases such as zircon and REE minerals, and maintaining them in solution without contamination, is a difficult task (Yu et al., 2001). Samples are typically digested by strong acid cocktails in sealed teflon vials for one or two days, dried by evaporation and then the residue is re-dissolved in dilute nitric acid ready for analysis. In some cases, samples are fused with lithiumborate fluxes or sodium peroxide before acid dissolution. It is advisable to test for complete solution by comparing the ICP-MS data with XRF determinations of some relatively immobile elements, such as Zr, Nb, Y and REE (Robinson, 2001). The likely loss of some volatile elements during fusion and evaporation may render the method unsuitable for Hg, Tl, Sb, Se and As.
H 2 O and CO 2 A combination of XRF and ICP-AES or ICP-MS can provide accurate analyses of most major elements and a surfeit of trace elements. However, they cannot determine H 2 O and CO 2 as XRF is limited to elements of atomic numbers greater than 10, and ICP, which measures the samples in solution, obviously cannot determine water. Loss on ignition (LOI) is a poor substitute for H 2 O and CO 2 analyses. For geochemical analyses of altered rocks that contain significant hydrous minerals or carbonates, it is preferable to separately determine H 2 O and CO 2 . Hydrogen and total carbon in rock samples can be analysed by the 'C-H-N elemental analyser', an instrument designed for routine determinations of C, H and N in organic compounds (Potts, 1987). It is a relatively straightforward and inexpensive technique requiring only about 25 mg of finely ground rock powder. On the, generally safe, assumption that altered volcanic rocks do not contain significant organic substances, the total H and C determinations can be recalculated to H 2 O and CO 2 for inclusion in major element composition data.
Interference Some instrumental analytical methods are susceptible to inaccuracies caused by peak overlap, particularly in mineralised rocks with exotic-metal contents. For instance, in XRF analyses on powdered samples, high concentrations of Ba and Pb interfere with determination of Ti and Zr, respectively. These problems may be minimised by instrument configuration or, in extreme cases, another method of analysis. Therefore, it is important that the analyst is advised which elements are critically important for the geochemical interpretation and the approximate compositional ranges of the rocks submitted, so that the appropriate analytical methods and procedures are applied. For example, if the purpose of analyses is to infer the volcanic precursors of Pb + Zn + Ba-bearing mineralised rocks by immobile element chemostratigraphy, it would help the analyst to know that accurate Ti and Zr analyses are priorities, and that the mineral assemblage includes Pb- and Zn-sulfides, and barite.
sulfides) can produce a weight gain, partly offsetting the LOI. Even if FeO and Fe are separately determined, it is not reasonable to assume that they will be completely oxidised in the LOI process. LOI may include a contribution from volatilisation of alkali metals, sulfur oxides and fluorine; the loss may be only partial and not predictable. For example, in samples containing both sulfide and carbonate, some SO 2 may react with CaO and remain in the ignited sample. The variables affecting LOI and the wide range of compositions in altered and mineralised rocks may lead to unpredictable results that are not readily interpretable. Consequently, LOI is not a reliable substitute for H2O+ and CO 2 analyses, and it may significantly underestimate the evolved volatiles.
Totals The sum of the elements in a major-element analysis is frequently taken as an indication of analytical reliability. Considering the shortcomings of LOI determinations, it is unreasonable to expect that their inclusion in a major element analyses will provide totals close to 100%. Nor should one expect that the error values on determinations of individual elements should cancel each other to produce totals of 100%. Further ambiguity is due to the usual practice of analysing and reporting total Fe as Fe2O3, irrespective of its actual oxidation state. Sums of XRF major element oxides, sulfur and LOI data will exceed 100%. This is because the sulfur is measured twice: in the fused disc XRF and in the LOI determinations. However, simple subtraction of XRF determined sulfur does not solve the problem because the sulfur may not be entirely evolved in the LOI process. Reasonable totals are obtained if H 2 O + and CO 2 are separately determined by another method and summed with XRF major element oxides and sulfur. Low totals do not necessarily indicate erroneous analyses; it may be that some significant elements were not determined. For example, boron constitutes about 10% of tourmalines and some micas contain significant proportions of Li, Fl, Rb and Ce (Deer et al., 1966), and mineralised rocks may contain significant proportions of base metals. Potts (1987) cautioned that, although it is nice to find totals near 100%, it is not a satisfactory test of the quality of analytical data. He considered that the only acceptable way of checking accuracy of modern instrumental analytical techniques, such as XRF and ICP, was to analyse appropriate geochemical reference materials. By applying this quality control practice to all of the methods used to produce a set of major-element data, the user can have reasonable faith in the relative accuracy of the individual elements analysed. Likewise, confidence in the accuracy of individual determinations permits acceptance of odd totals as accumulated errors, or indications of incomplete analyses.
Reporting data Major elements in rocks are conventionally reported in weight percent (wt%), mostly as oxides and in order of decreasing cation valency: SiO2, TiO 2 , A12O3, FeO (or Fe2O3 total), MnO, MgO, CaO, Na 2 O, K 2 O, P 2 O 5 , H 2 O + , CO 2 , S and Total. The percentages are relative to the dry sample; analysed after driving off moisture (H2O~) by heating for a few hours at 105C. H 2 O + in the analysis represents structural water in crystals or glass. All other elements are typically regarded as trace elements although some may be present at greater than the conventional 0.1% cut off. Trace elements are usually reported in alphabetic order in parts per million (ppm), which is equivalent to the SI unit |ig/g preferred by analysts. It is often useful to re-order the trace elements into groups according to their geochemical characteristics (e.g. immobile trace elements, rare earths, etc.) to facilitate plotting. It is important to note that geochemical analyses are usually reported to one decimal place more than can be quoted with confidence (Potts, 1987).
Loss on ignition Hydrogen and carbon, mainly as H 2 O and carbonate, are significant components of some silicate rocks, particularly altered rocks. However, since XRF or ICP methods cannot determine these light elements, it has become common to report loss on ignition (LOI) as a proxy. LOI is determined by igniting a weighed sample at 1000-1050C for at least 12 hours and then weighing the residue. Expressed in weight percent (as for the major elements), it is often assumed that LOI represents the combined proportions of H 2 O + and CO 2 in the rock. However, for several reasons pointed out by Potts (1987), the determination of LOI has little geochemical value: The maximum temperature may not be high enough to dehydrate some minerals, such as talc, topaz, cordierite and epidote. Oxidation of ferrous iron (e.g. in silicates, magnetite and
Recalculating to volatile free It is common practice, particularly in petrological literature, to recalculate major-element analyses to 100% 'anhydrous'
78 | CHAPTER 4
or 'volatile free'. The recalculation involves multiplying the proportion of each major-element oxide in an analysis, except LOI, by a factor derived from the formula 100/2 Q, where 2 C| is the weight percent sum of all major oxides (not including LOI) in the analysis. Thus the 10 major oxides are commonly adjusted to sum to exactly 100%. LOI is reported, but not included in the total (e.g. Crawford et al., 1992; Stolz, 1995). The object of recalculation is to remove apparent variations in the proportions of major oxides that may be due to differences in LOI values. This may be a valid approach for studies of petrogenesis and fractionation in unaltered or weakly altered rocks, where alteration was limited to hydration or minor calcite vesicle fillings (Crawford et al., 1992). In these cases, additions of H 2 O + and CO 2 may be the only significant metasomatic changes, although CaO may be added if it is not otherwise derived from the decalcification of plagioclase. It is not unreasonable to 'subtract' the estimated additions due to hydration and carbonation to determine equivalent anhydrous magmatic compositions. In more altered rocks, however, many of the other major elements, particularly Si, Fe, Mg, Ca, Na and S, are also likely to be involved in significant mass changes. Thus recalculating to volatile free would distort the pattern of mass changes, artificially increasing the changes of other elements relative to the constituents of LOI. In cases where the 10 major oxides (SiO2 to P2O5) sum to low totals, volatile free recalculation followed by immobile-element-based mass change estimates could result in actual small net mass losses of some elements appearing as mass gains. Similarly, it may upwardly distort the estimates of net mass change, with implications for interpretation of volume changes. Barrett and MacLean (1994a) recommended using volatile free recalculated major element data for mass change estimates. They neglected to mention whether the same recalculation factor should also, for consistency, be applied to all the trace elements. Failure to similarly adjust the trace elements could lead to small inconsistencies in immobile element ratios (e.g. Ti/Zr, which is usually calculated from major element TiO 2 data). It could also positively skew subsequent mass change estimates based on immobile elements. The volatile free recalculation has a proportionally greater effect on data for altered rocks because they generally have higher LOI than their unaltered precursors. Upward recalculation of all trace elements, as well as majors, can avoid those problems. However, comprehensive recalculation is unnecessary as both chemostratigraphic methods and mass change estimates are based on ratios of elements and hence are unaffected by recalculation. The method used in some studies (e.g. Gemmell and Large, 1992), of recalculating the 10 major oxides but not other major elements, such as sulfur, is also inconsistent. It has the effect of under-estimating mass changes in sulfur relative to the other oxides. In dealing with altered rocks, it is preferable to obtain as near as practical 'complete' major element analyses. The major element suite should include sulfur, H 2 O + and CO 2 and any other elements likely to exceed 0.1% (e.g. base metals). Ensure adequate quality controls and then trust in the accuracy of the
data. They do not require fudging or normalisation at the risk of introducing new errors and misinterpretations. Otherwise, where analyses of altered rocks are limited to the usual 10 major oxides and LOI, it is best to treat LOI as a (somewhat fuzzy) component in its own right, and not to recalculate to artificial 100% totals. This particularly applies to data that are to be used in mass transfer calculations.
FIGURE 4.1 | Schematic illustration of the effect of closure in composition data (after Eilu et al., 1997). Alteration leading to a net mass gain in the system results in a lower proportion (or concentration) of element i, although the actual mass of element i is not changed (AM, = 0). Mp = initial mass and MA = altered mass of total system.
Rollinson (1993) presented a detailed discussion of the problem of closure in geochemistry and suggested some solutions. It is not a trivial matter in the study of altered rocks. The techniques for estimating alteration-related mass transfers overcome the problem of closure by quantifying the amounts of elements or oxides gained by or lost from altered rocks.
Incompatible elements Incompatible elements are those that tend to be excluded from the lattices of minerals crystallising from magmas and are instead partitioned into the melt phase. Hence, incompatible elements exist at highest proportions in the most evolved felsic rocks. The high-field-strength elements (HFSE) Zr, Y and Nb are generally incompatible, except in some calc-alkaline suites. They have similar low magmatic liquid-solid distribution coefficients and so tend to retain similar inter-element ratios throughout a single magmatic fractionation series, and on x-y bivariate plots form linear trends that project from the zero origin. Subsequent alteration involving net mass gain or loss can change the proportion of incompatible elements in the whole rock but their primary ratios are preserved. As a result alteration trends coincide with the primary fractionation trends. The gradients of these trends vary according to magmatic affinity (MacLean and Barrett, 1993; Barrett and MacLean, 1994a). Samples from different magmatic suites thus produce separate linear trends of magmatic enrichment, which regress to the origins on incompatible-incompatible immobile element plots (e.g. Fig. 4.2). Incompatible-incompatible element ratios and bivariate plots have chemostratigraphic applications even in hydro thermally altered samples in which the major elements may not be reliable discriminants. Incompatible-incompatible element ratios are used to identify magmatic affinities, favourable volcanic suites and terranes.
Chemostratigraphy
Major element compositions are routinely used to classify volcanic rocks in terms of petrogenesis and tectonic setting (e.g. Pearce and Cann, 1973). However, the same method is not applicable to altered rocks because many of the major elements, especially Si, Fe, Mg, Ca, Na and K, are relatively mobile during alteration. Consequently, compositional changes related to alteration may considerably outweigh their primary variations. Fortunately, several elements are chemically immobile during most types of alteration and these can be reliably used to classify and correlate altered volcanic rocks. In this context, immobile means elements that are neither added to, nor taken from, the rock during alteration. Immobile elements may be involved in phase changes and perhaps be mobile at millimetre scale, but their mass in the altered rock remains unchanged. Although the proportions (concentrations) of immobile elements may change, due to net mass changes in the size of the system, their inter-element ratios remain the same.
Immobile elements The high-field-strength elements Ti, Zr, Nb and Y are relatively immobile during hydrothermal, diagenetic and weathering alteration, and during regional metamorphism up to mid-amphibolite facies. Ratios of these immobile elements are the basis of tectono-magmatic discrimination diagrams developed in the 1970s (e.g. Pearce and Cann, 1973; Floyd and Winchester, 1978). Many studies of VHMS deposits have shown that Al, Ti, Zr, Nb, Y, heavy REE (Lu, Yb), Hf, Ta and Th, and in some cases P, Sc, V and Cr, remain essentially immobile during alteration. Their immobility has been documented even in the most intense hydrothermally altered zones directly beneath deposits (e.g. MacLean and Kranidiotis, 1987; Skirrow and Franklin, 1994; Barrett and MacLean, 1994a). Barrett and MacLean (1994a) recognised some mobility of the light REE in proximal, intense chlorite altered zones beneath some deposits and suggested that they may be useful as exploration vectors. Y and Nb show considerable scatter in some datasets and this may be partly attributable to primary variations (Ewart, 1979) or slight chemical mobility in some systems. Analytical precision may also be a factor, particularly for Nb, which typically occurs at low concentrations not much above XRF detection limits. In practice, Ti and Zr are the most reliably immobile elements. They can be inexpensively and accurately analysed by XRF on pressed powder pellets and they exist at easily detectable levels in most volcanic rocks, unlike the heavy REE, Sc, Nb, Ta, Hf and Th, which generally exist at less than 20 ppm. Compatible elements Compatible elements have high magmatic distribution coefficients (>1) and are preferentially taken up by mineral
FIGURE 4.2 | Schematic Y-Zr (incompatible-incompatible) plot used for determination of magmatic affinities in altered volcanic rocks (modified after MacLean and Barrett, 1993).
80 | CHAPTER 4
phases crystallising from magma. Consequently, compatible elements are depleted from the melt phase (this is opposite to the enrichment in incompatible elements). Thus, the relative proportion of compatible and incompatible elements in residual melts changes as fractionation proceeds. Batches of magma that are successively tapped off and emplaced as eruptive or intrusive units will have successively smaller compatible-incompatible element ratios. Aluminium, Ti, Cr, Sc and V are generally compatible during crystallisation and immobile during alteration (Barrett and MacLean, 1994a). Bivariate plots of immobile compatible-incompatible element data for least-altered samples from a particular magmatic affinity should show smooth fractionation trends, generally with negative slopes (Fig. 4.3). Subsequent net mass gains and losses imposed by alteration will produce, on compatible-incompatible immobile element plots, separate alteration lines for each chemically distinct rock unit (Fig. 4.3). This property is particularly useful for the discrimination and correlation of initially homogenous but subsequently altered volcanic units that may be otherwise unidentifiable. Chemostratigraphic fingerprinting is commonly done with Ti/Zr ratios and TiO2Zr bivariate plots. However, in tholeiitic suites Ti enrichment parallels the typical Feenrichment trend at the mafic end of the fractionation series (MacLean and Barrett, 1993). In other words, Ti is initially incompatible in tholeiitic fractionation series up to about the composition of basaltic-andesite. On a TiO2 Zr plot, the mafic end of the tholeiitic series has a positive fractionation trend, essentially similar to the alteration trends superimposed by subsequent metasomatic net mass changes (Fig. 4.3). Therefore, TiO 2 -Zr is not a reliable discriminant of altered mafic tholeiites. A reasonable substitute is A12O3 Zr, which has a near linear, slightly negative trend in tholeiites (MacLean and Barrett, 1993). Titanium becomes compatible in tholeiitic magmas more evolved than basaltic-andesite and the TiO 2 -Zr fractionation curve then has a negative slope. Two examples of chemostratigraphic discrimination and correlation in the Mount Read Volcanics are presented in Figures 4.4 and 4.5.
It is worth emphasising that immobile element ratios must be used with discretion in chemostratigraphic discrimination and correlation. This method is most effective in rocks with primary compositional homogeneity, such as coherent lavas and sills, and possibly in some massive syneruptive volcaniclastic units such as pumice breccias. Processes of magma generation, crystallisation and fractionation determine the immobile element ratios of magmas. Therefore, immobile element ratios are likely to be uniform within single coherent eruptive or intrusive emplacement units. However, volcaniclastic debris may be subject to unhomogenising processes. Both lateral and vertical compositional variations may occur in volcaniclastic units as a result of: mechanical sorting of components of different densities, such as clasts, pumice, scoria, crystals (e.g. Ti-oxides and zircon) and glass shards, during eruption and transport winnowing of glass shards from turbidity currents mixing of debris from a variety of volcanic sources in variable proportions or incorporation of extraneous clasts into the base of volcaniclastic mass flows. Gifkins (2001) showed that thick, graded, rhyolitic pumice breccia units in the Central Volcanic Complex, western Tasmania, have Ti/Zr ratios that vary from -5 near the crystal- and lithic-rich bases, to -9 in the fine-grained, shard-rich tops of the units. This is consistent with an increased concentration of zircon crystals towards the base of the units but may also reflect the abundance of felsic clasts in the basal portions. In contrast, graded rhyolitic volcanic breccia units in the Rosebery hanging wall, western Tasmania, display the opposite trend. Large et al. (2001b) suggested that decreasing Ti/Zr ratios towards the top of these units were due to physical fractionation of Zr-poor crystal and lithic components from Zr-bearing originally glassy pumice and shards during emplacement.
Testing immobility It is preferable that element immobility in any system is established, rather than assumed, before proceeding with chemostratigraphic interpretations of altered rocks. This is also an important preparatory step for methods of estimating mass transfers of mobile elements. The simplest test is to plot potentially immobile elements on x-y bivariate diagrams with the origins at zero. If possible, the tests should use data from unaltered and variably altered samples of a single, originally compositionally uniform volcanic unit, such as a coherent lava or sill. If the selected elements are immobile, the data points for a single-precursor system should align in a highly correlated linear trend, which projects to the origin of the plot and through the data points of the least-altered samples. These linear trends, or alteration lines, are due to net mass gains and losses of the mobile elements in the altered rock samples (Fig. 4.6). Typically there is some data scatter due to analytical errors and slight inhomogeneities in the primary rock. However, if both elements are immobile, calculated linear correlation co-efficients (r) for alteration lines should exceed -0.85 (Barrett and MacLean, 1994a). In contrast, elements that were mobile during alteration are
FIGURE 4.3 | Schematic TiO2-Zr (compatible-incompatible) plot showing the negative curvilinear fractionation trend typical of co-genetic calc-alkaline volcanic suites (after Barrett and MacLean, 1994a). Mafic tholeiites may show a positive trend up to the composition of basaltic-andesite, because of TiO2 incompatibility in the early stage of magmatic differentiation.
10 20 30 40 50 0
Ti/Zr
25
50
75
100
Alteration Index
100(K2O+MgO) (K 2 0+Mg0+Ca0+Na 2 0) FIGURE 4.4 | Graphic log and down-hole Ti/Zr and Al plots of drill hole NC4, near Lake Newton, western Tasmania. The Ti/Zr data clearly delineates units of different primary volcanic compositions despite effects of strong hydrothermal alteration in rocks intersected in the middle and lower part of the hole. The high Ti/Zr ratios at -200-230 m led to recognition of an altered mafic volcanic breccia unit, which had previously been interpreted as a zone of chlorite-altered felsic volcaniclastic rocks. Another altered mafic unit occurs below 530 m. Quartz and feldspar crystal-rich sandstones in the upper 100 m have a range of Ti/Z ratios, which suggests that they do not have a unique provenance.
readily identifiable by their erratic distribution or near total removal (Finlow-Bates and Stumpfl, 1981).
compositional data, due to closure. The results of mass transfer calculations are usually easy to relate to mineral assemblages and may reveal clues about the composition, source and temperature of hydrothermal fluids (e.g. Barrett and MacLean, 1994b). Mass change data have been used to infer hydrothermal water-rock ratios (e.g. MacLean and Hoy, 1991). They are also used in the interpretation of whole-rock 618O and REE data (e.g. MacLean and Barrett, 1993). Thus, they may enable discrimination of favourable alteration systems and altered zones within systems. When plotted spatially mass transfer data can be used as quantitative exploration vectors (Section 8.2).
82 I CHAPTER 4
FIGURE 4.5 | Chemostratigraphic correlation diagram of the volcano-sedimentary succession that hosts the Rosebery massive sulfide deposit, western Tasmania. A thin unit of dacitic pumice breccia, between the massive sulfide lens and the feldspar + quartz + biotite porphyry sill intersected in hole 120R, is texturally indistinguishable from the footwall rhyolitic pumice breccias (Ti/Zr = 7-9) but has a distinctive Ti/Zr ratio of between 12 and 14.
FIGURE 4.6 | TiO2-Zr plot of data from a tholeiitic volcanic suite (after MacLean and Barrett, 1993). The data points for least-altered basalt, andesite and rhyolite samples define the magmatic 'fractionation curve'. Two linear arrays of data represent variably altered samples of originally homogenous units of andesite and rhyolite. These highly correlated alteration lines intersect the least-altered data points on the fractionation curve and project towards the origin. Data points on the alteration lines below the fractionation curve represent net mass gains, those above the curve represent net mass losses. The positive slope at the basaltic end of the fractionation curve is due to incompatibility of TiO2 in the early stages of differentiation of tholeiitic magmas. This may lead to confusion of fractionation and alteration trends in mafic tholeiites.
There are several approaches to estimating mass transfers. These include the mathematically complex graphical method of Gresens (1967); subsequently simplified by Grant (1986) and Huston (1993) to produce the isocon method; the immobile element techniques of MacLean and Barrett (1993), and the Pearce element ratio analysis of Stanley and Madeisky (1996). These techniques all depend on recognition of immobile elements. They also, with the exception of the Pearce element ratio analysis, depend on the identification of precursor-rock compositions. The determination of unaltered precursor compositions is often problematic in the altered, lithologically and structurally complex rocks that host ore deposits. The safest approach is to consider the geological context, established from field relationships and rock textures, in combination with various immobile element tests (e.g. MacLean and Barrett, 1993; Stanley and Madeisky, 1996). This ensures that precursors are appropriately matched to the altered rocks under investigation. The isocon method does not include a procedure for selecting precursors and it commonly produces erroneous results because incorrect geological assumptions are applied. For this reason, we prefer the more rigorous MacLean and Barrett (1993) method, which is also simplest to calculate. Another potential difficulty arises from primary compositional variations in volcanic rocks related to magmatic fractionation or volcaniclastic mixing processes. Huston (1993) recognised this as a deficiency of the isocon method. He suggested examining standard deviations of data from least-altered samples to screen their suitability, estimating errors for the consequent mass changes and recognising that small apparent mass changes may be artefacts of primary inhomogeneities, not due to alteration. The Pearce element ratio analysis method (Stanley and Madeisky, 1996) and the multiple-precursor variant of the MacLean and Barrett (1993) method attempt to overcome the limitations of primary variability. Of these two, we prefer the MacLean and Barrett approach, again for its relative ease of calculation.
The MacLean and Barrett multiple-precursor method involves sorting samples into affinity groups, calculating primary variability trends (fractionation curves) and using immobile elements to synthesise primary compositions for altered samples that may fall between compositions of the available least-altered samples. This method relies on the assumptions that co-genetic groupings can be recognised and separated, and compositional variations are smooth linear or curvilinear trends for every major element. This is generally true for magmatic fractionation, and therefore applicable to volcanic suites, but the variations may be erratic if volcaniclastic, sedimentary or multiple alteration processes were involved (Eilu et al., 1997). Thus, due caution must be exercised when using this method in mixed provenance volcano-sedimentary successions. Filtering sample sets through geological field evidence and petrographic textural observations are obvious fundamental precautions. Sample sets from restricted prospect-scale areas are less likely to have complex primary compositional variations than district-scale sample sets. Peculiar aberrations or significant mass changes in elements otherwise expected to be immobile, such as Al, should arouse suspicion that primary fractionation trends may have been incorrectly modelled.
Single precursor mass transfer technique The MacLean and Barrett method of estimating mass transfers in single-precursor systems incorporates testing of immobility as a fundamental step. The analytical data for potentially immobile elements, from an initially homogenous but variably altered lithological unit, are plotted on x-y bivariate diagrams and linear regressions are calculated. The existence of highly correlated (r >0.85) trends that pass through the origin enables selection of the optimal element to be used as the immobile monitor in the mass change calculations. This graphical process also highlights any outliers or samples
FIGURE 4.7 | Diagram representing the calculation of mass transfers for an altered rock with an initial mass of 100 units (after MacLean and Barrett, 1993). The proportion of immobile element in the altered rock decreases (is diluted) because of net mass gains in mobile element(s). The ratio of immobile elements Z/Za represents the factor, which multiplied by the proportion of immobile element in the altered rock, would restore it to a mass unit, rather than a proportion of the whole. The same factor applied to all other elements produces the 'reconstructed composition' in mass units. The mass transfers in each element are then calculated by subtracting its primary composition from the reconstructed composition. In this example, a large mass gain in X combined with a small mass loss in Y produces a large net mass gain.
84 | CHAPTER 4
from different precursors, which should be eliminated or treated separately. It identifies any primary compositional inhomogeneities in the rocks, which may require treatment by the multiple-precursor method (MacLean and Barrett, 1993) or Pearce element ratio analysis (Stanley and Madeisky, 1996). These more complex methods are not explained here; the reader is referred to the relevant references for details. The single-precursor mass transfer method proceeds by calculating the ratios of the proportions of an immobile element in the altered and unaltered samples. Each of the mobile element proportions is then multiplied by that ratio to obtain a reconstructed composition (Fig. 4.7). The mass change of each element is found by subtracting its percent
proportion in the precursor from that in the reconstructed composition. The steps below and the flow chart in Figure 4.8 outline the procedure for estimating mass changes in single-precursor systems. Figures 4.9, 4.10 and 4.11 present a worked example based on compositions of Thalanga footwall rhyolites, Queensland. (1) Acquire and tabulate the lithogeochemical analyses (e.g. Figure 4.9). The first part of this section (4.1) presents some guidance on sampling and analytical techniques. Barrett and MacLean (1994a) recommended using major element composition data that are recalculated to 'volatilefree' totals of 100%. However, it is unreasonable to expect
Comments related to Thalanga data in Figures 4.9, 4.10 and 4.11. Values below detection replaced by arbitrary small values; e.g. 0.5 x detection limit or zero (Figures 4.9 and 4.10).
Data should preferably be from mappable single-precursor units. This example includes 34 rhyolites from diverse volcanic units. However, the remarkable uniformity of im m obile- el em ent ratios suggests they were essentially co-magmatic and can be treated as a singleprecursor system.
No obvious outliers. Yttrium (Fig. 4.10) typically shows considerable scatter, which may be a result of primary variation.
AI?O3 andZr both have three of four correlation co-efficients >0.85 (Fig. 4.10). Either could be used as the immobile monitor component. Zirconium was selected because of marginally higher average correlation (0.86 vs 0.83).
Appropriate $ symbols in the formula enable it to be filled across and down in the spreadsheet and maintain cell references to Z, Za and C.
Large positive and negative net mass changes are mainly due to SiO2 gains and losses, or addition of Fe and S in pyritic samples (Fig. 4.11), Note that because of closure, the SiO2 changes are not obvious in the analytical data.
FIGURE 4.8 | Flow chart for mass-change calculations by the single-precursor method (after MacLean and Barrett, 1993).
elements of an analysis to total exactly 100%, and the use of recalculated data may produce positive distortions in subsequent mass transfer estimates. In dealing with altered rocks, it is preferable to obtain accurate analyses of all the major elements (including S, CO, and H 2 O + ) and include them in the mass transfer calculations. If S, CO 2 and H 2 O + data are not available, and losses on ignition (LOI) are significant (>2%), then LOI could be included as a separate, albeit loosely denned, component of mass change. (2) Test for immobility. Plot analytical data for potentially immobile elements (e.g. Al, Ti, Zr, Nb, Y, etc.) on x-y bivariate diagrams with the origins at zero (e.g. Fig. 4.10). If possible, use data from variably altered and unaltered samples of a single uniform rock unit. (3) Inspect for outliers and, with geological considerations, decide whether to cull them, or treat the data as a multipleprecursor system. Readers are referred to MacLean and Barrett (1993) for details of the multiple-precursor method. (4) The immobile element data for single-precursor systems should plot on highly correlated linear trends (r >0.85) that pass through the origin and through the data points for least-altered samples. Evaluate the bivariate diagrams
A 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 Sample no. * 140802 * 140727 * 140808 * 140724 * 140902 TH394-142 TH144B-34 TH41A-575 TH005-256 TH238-236 TH038-191 TH085-125 TH148-159 TH085A-422 TH270-278 TH270-145 TH085-312 TH018-266 TH038-054 TH085-159 TH085A-348 TH238-194 TH270-220 TH085A-335 TH085-204 TH085-215 TH085A-241 TH085-188 TH270-313 TH061-086 TH41A-713 TH061-157 TH270-381 TH085A-384 Precursor composition B C
and correlation factors to determine which element consistently occurs in highly correlated trends and is most suitable as an immobile monitor (i.e. was uniform in the primary rock and least mobile during alteration). (5) Select a composition for the precursor. This could be from a single unaltered sample or an average of several unaltered samples. (6) Calculate the absolute mass change for each component using the formula: Aa = [Z7 Z a . Ca ] - C where Aa is absolute mass change expressed in g/100 g Ca = wt% proportion of component in altered rock C = wt% proportion of component in precursor Za = proportion of immobile element in altered rock Z = proportion of immobile element in precursor. The mass changes may be calculated from compositions of individual altered samples or from average compositions of sample groups representing certain mineral assemblages or altered zones. (7) For visual comparison, plot the absolute mass changes for individual elements on a bar graph (e.g. Fig. 4.11).
G
MnO
0.04 0.04 0.08 0.02 0.00 0.02 0.03 0.08 0.06 0.02 0.09 0.06 0.02 0.03 0.07 0.09 0.01 0.13 0.02 0.09 0.08 0.05 0.13 0.04 0.09 0.13 0.06 0.05 0.07 0.03 0.05 0.01 0.14 0.30 0.03
0/
H
MgO
0.67 3.94 2.38 1.67 0.08 0.76 0.68 4.33 2.14 3.54 3.13 1.90 1.05 1.98 4.35 4.24 1.10 9.88 2.91 2.51 4.70 4.16 5.88 1.76 3.97 6.42 2.53 2.77 3.88 1.19 1.12 0.61 4.90 7.79 0.70
I
CaO
1.42 0.12 0.00 0.05 0.11 0.46 0.90 1.75 3.08 0.12 0.25 3.03 0.24 0.28 0.01 0.27 0.00 0.01 0.00 0.08 0.00 0.07 0.00 0.02 0.00 0.01 0.08 0.00 0.00 0.34 0.08 0.12 0.11 0.19 0.93
K
K2O
4.04 3.92 2.39 1.99 5.87 1.82 3.60 2.80 3.06 2.23 3.40 3.68 5.33 3.69 4.15 4.73 3.75 5.08 2.43 4.41 2.91 3.57 0.91 2.45 1.51 1.59 2.82 2.14 2.50 6.33 6.36 7.60 2.40 0.93 3.15
M S
0.01 0.00 0.65 10.61 0.48 0.00 0.24 0.01 1.33 0.00 0.06 1.39 0.30 2.03 1.08 0.84 3.47 0.53 1.61 0.81 0.86 0.44 7.64 1.57 4.97 2.89 3.59 4.36 0.44 0.00 0.66 0.13 5.92 5.12 0.08
0/
O
Total
Q|R
Whole-rock major and trace element composition data Alteration facies east-altered footwall -noderate, foliated sericite + chlorite strong, pervasive quartz + sericite + pyrite chlorite ntense, pervasive quartz + pyrite ntense, microcrystalline quartz + K-feldspar east-altered footwall east-altered footwall SiO, 76.40 70.90 75.70 67.00 84.20 77.39 77.25 76.71 77.80 74.62 77.81 75.25 82.02 69.97 64.37 72.70 72.73 66.82 75.37 75.29 66.93 74.41 63.38 78.04 71.22 67.08 71.59 74.54 72.56 74.39 75.87 78.48 55.36 49.30 77.01 TiO2 0.11 0.10 0.07 0.05 0.06 0.09 0.10 0.07 0.07 0.09 0.07 0.07 0.08 0.11 0.12 0.09 0.08 0.08 0.08 0.09 0.10 0.09 0.05 0.06 0.05 0.07 0.07 0.06 0.10 0.11 0.10 0.08 0.10 0.10 0.10
AIA
11.90 14.50 11.40 6.60 7.40 11.85 11.90 10.18 8.83 13.40 10.54 11.13 8.84 13.06 17.56 12.22 12.33 11.26 10.70 12.79 14.57 12.18 7.99 9.48 8.28 10.44 11.03 8.40 12.55 13.75 12.17 11.60 13.90 13.47 11.88
FeA
1.64 1.69 5.14 14.34 0.60 1.13 2.09 0.99 1.90 1.40 1.51 2.32 0.68 2.80 4.73 2.39 5.48 2.46 4.47 1.96 5.70 1.42 13.46 4.45 9.18 8.62 6.91 6.95 4.93 1.56 1.70 0.88 14.36 19.14 1.62
Na2O 2.27 1.05 0.21 0.06 0.34 4.79 2.77 1.57 0.84 1.82 0.90 0.59 0.53 0.38 0.24 0.22 0.17 0.12 0.12 0.10 0.09 0.08 0.00 0.16 0.15 0.12 0.11 0.09 0.03 0.95 0.42 0.37 0.18 0.08 3.28
PA
0.02 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.02 0.02 0.05 0.01 0.01 0.02 0.02 0.05 0.02 0.01 0.01 0.02 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.02 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.02 0.02 0.02 0.02 0.02
LOI Zr Nb
13 19 14 7
40 54 36 44 20 34 33 30 57 30 41 42 28 49 46 36 35 45 27 48 46 39 19 30 17 29 37 29 39 52 47 37 63 44
35
0.00 98.03 2.75 128 0.00 102.40 8.24 79 0.15 0.15 0.99 0.00 99.15 98.47 99.74 98.51 100.15 97.25 97.77 99.44 99.11 94.38 96.70 97.80 99.13 96.39 97.72 98.14 95.95 96.74 99.45 98.04 99.43 97.38 98.81 99.37 97.07 98.66 98.55 100.08 97.39 96.44 0.49 0.49 0.77 1.38 2.12 2.49 2.08 1.75 1.03 3.39 4.23 2.56 4.07 2.65 3.54 2.50 4.11 2.79 7.60 2.95 5.33 5.02 4.73 4.50 3.17 1.24 1.71 0.76 7.22 7.83
12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49
0.26
0.00 0.18
80 9 137 14 141 12 113 12 114 13 140 13 119 13 116 12 114 11 162 17 195 20 130 14 129 15 132 15 119 14 137 16 176 16 138 16 83 9 105 11 84 9 116 12 120 14 92 11 140 16 158 18 157 17 122 13 154 19 145 16 13
0.10
0/
{Formula in cell C451 ={$Q$38/$O5"C5)' . 1 C$38] is ?lled across and down. ' units h \ Placement of $ symbols is critical to \ DL 0.05 i maintain cell references for Zo, Za and Co. \ \ Mass Changes 140727 140808 140724 140902 V_ moderate, foliated sericite + chlorite ' > strong, pervasive quartz + sericite + pyrite chlorite ntense, pervasive quartz + pyrite ntense, microcrystalline quartz + K-fe!dspar units siOj -15 7 43 72
0.01
0.05
0.01
0.01
0.01
0.01
0.05
0.01
0.01
0.01
0.1
TiO2
AIA
FeA
MnO
MgO
CaO
Na.O
K2O
PA
0 0 0 0
s
0 1 19 1
co2
0 0 0 0
Net -15 9 84 76
0 0 0 0
g/100q 9/100g
1 1 0 1
0 4 24 -1
g/100g
0 0 0 0
3 2 2 -1
-1 -1 -1 -1
-2 -3
3
-3
0 -1 0 7
FIGURE 4.9 | Example of layout and calculation of mass changes by the single-precursor method for 34 rhyolites from the Thalanga footwall, Queensland. Data from Paulick (1999) and Paulick et al. (2001). Values below limit of detection replaced by zero. Sample numbers with * are featured in the Thalanga data sheets (Section 7.7).
86 | CHAPTER 4
FIGURE 4.10 | Bivariate plots of potentially immobile elements: AI2O3, TiO2, Zr, Nb and Y (Thalanga data from Figure 4.9). (A) TiO2 versus Zr, (B) AI2O3 versus Zr, (C) Nb versus Zr, (D) Y versus Zr, (E) TiO2 versus Nb, (F) AI2O3 versus Nb, (G) Y versus Nb, (H) TiO2 versus Y, (I) AI2O3 versus Y, (J) TiO2 versus AI2O3, (K) Na2O versus Zr, and (L) sulfur versus Zr. These plots facilitate recognition of compositional outliers, which should be excluded from single-precursor calculations, and selection of the least-mobile element to serve as the immobile monitor in mass-change calculations. In this example, Zr and AI2O3 both show consistent highly correlated trends that project to the zero origin. Note the considerable scatters, and hence poorer linear correlations, in plots involving Y and the major elements sulfur and Na2O. These are consistent with primary compositional variations or significant chemical mobility, particularly for sulfur and Na2O.
FIGURE 4.11 | Bar graph showing estimated absolute mass changes of major elements in four samples representing major alteration fades in the Thalanga footwall, Queensland (data from Figure 4.9).
Mobility of light REE and effects of net mass change Rare earth elements (with the exception of Eu) are generally incompatible during igneous fractionation. Heavy REE (Lu and Yb) are essentially immobile, whereas the light REE may be variably mobile during alteration (MacLean and Barrett, 1993). Lanthanum is the most likely to be affected and the mobility of the other REE decreases towards the heavy REE (Barrett and MacLean, 1994a). These incremental changes in the lighter REE modify the slopes of chondrite-normalised REE patterns, which may confuse petrogenetic interpretation. Therefore, immobility of REE needs to be established before they are used to infer magmatic affinity. Plotting geochemical data for each rare earth element against a reliably immobile element, such as Zr, is a means of testing for scatter and mobility. If the elements were immobile, REE and Zr data
from altered single-precursor systems or co-genetic volcanic suites should produce highly correlated linear trends on bivariate plots. In systems where REE were chemically mobile, both positive and negative shifts in light REE concentrations have been recorded. Significant mobility of REE appear to occur in proximal altered zones associated with VHMS deposits (MacLean and Barrett, 1993). The greater mobility of the light REE may produce a fan shaped array in chondritenormalised plots with the REE profiles converging towards the heavy, least-mobile REE (e.g. Fig. 4.12A) Even in cases of REE immobility, net mass changes associated with alteration may produce significant vertical shifts in chondrite-normalised REE patterns. The slopes of the REE patterns are retained, but the y-axis magnitudes are modified (downward by net mass gain and upward by net mass loss; Fig. 4.12B).
Europium anomalies in seafloor sediments Recent studies of sediments and hydrothermal precipitates in modern and ancient massive sulfide environments have found them relatively enriched in light REE, particularly in Eu (Barrett et al, 1990; Peter and Goodfellow, 1996; Shikazono, 1999). The explanation is that Eu exists in a divalent state in felsic magmas and hence is compatible in feldspars, unlike the other trivalent REE, which remain incompatible (Rollinson, 1993). The divalent Eu+2 in feldspars may be liberated by subseafloor hydrothermal alteration to sericite or chlorite, whereas the incompatible REE that are concentrated in alteration resistant phases, remain relatively immobile. The liberated Eu+2 is transported by reduced acidic hydrothermal fluids and may ultimately be precipitated by oxidation at the seafloor. Therefore, in felsic volcanic successions, altered VHMS-footwall zones tend to be depleted in Eu. In contrast, positive Eu anomalies exist in seafloor sediments and jaspers, and probably indicate proximity to hydrothermal vents (Barrett et al., 1990). Both phenomena have significance for massive sulfide exploration in modern and ancient submarine volcanic environments. The recognition of positive Eu anomalies in stratiform jasper lenses recently contributed to the discovery of a small satellite massive sulfide deposit at Thalanga in the Mount Windsor Volcanics (Miller et al., 2001).
Minerals, by definition, are natural homogenous solids of definite chemical composition and definite atomic structure (Dana, 1957). However, many minerals do not have simply defined chemical formulas. Their compositions may lie between limits defined by two or more end-member formulas, effectively forming solid solutions. Mineral crystal structures can accommodate various impurities where atoms and ions
88 | CHAPTER 4
of suitable size and charge can substitute for others in the lattice, occupy interstices in the lattice or be omitted from a proportion of lattice sites. The considerable variety of linked tetrahedral crystal structures in silicate minerals permits a wide range of chemical substitutions and interstitial solid solutions. A frequently cited example is the olivine series in which Mg2+ and Fe2+ ions, having similar charge and size, substitute for each other between the end member compositions of forsterite (Mg2SiO4) and fayalite (Fe2SiO4). The sheet-like structures of phyllosilicates allow a great range of ionic substitutions and interstitial contaminants. For example, muscovite, with the ideal formula of K2Al4[Si6Al2O20] (OH) 4 , commonly contains the isomorphous substitutions of Na, Rb, Cs, Ca and Ba for K; Mg, Fe2+, Fe3+, Mn, Li, Cr, Ti, and V for octahedral Al, and F for OH and tetrahedral cation proportions from Si6Al2 to Si7Al] (Deer et al., 1966). Layered clays (particularly smectites) also accommodate many cationic substitutions and exchanges as well as physical mixtures and inter-layered structures of more than one clay mineral (e.g. smectite-illite). The causes of such variations are both physical and chemical. Temperature, pressure, fluid pH, JO2, and cation solubility may all affect the stability and composition of the minerals formed. Chemical and temperature gradients in hydrothermal alteration systems commonly produce spatial zonation of alteration mineral assemblages. Similarly, they may produce gradational and zonal variations in some alteration mineral compositions. For example, the Mn content of metasomatic pyroxenes associated with Zn skarns generally increases systematically along the fluid pathway, and can be used to identify proximal and distal skarns, and altered zones (Meinert, 1993). The standard methods for determining mineral compositions and crystal structure are electron microprobe and X-ray diffraction analyses. Although Galley (1995) noted that these methods are more readily available than previously, the impracticality of mineral chemistry as an exploration tool, and the complexity and cost of these laboratory techniques means that they are rarely used other than in academic research. The development of field portable short wavelength infra red (SWIR) spectrometers and spectral interpretation software during the last decade, has allowed mineral chemistry to be practically integrated into exploration programs for a variety of deposit types (Thompson et al., 1999). SWIR spectral analysis can determine compositional and crystal-structural variations in white micas, smectites, clays, chlorites, biotites and carbonates (Pontual et al., 1997). These minerals are prominent in altered volcanic rocks and are also prone to significant compositional variations. The technique reliably estimates variations in white mica composition but appears to be less effective at analysing chlorites in typical mixed phyllosilicate assemblages (Herrmann et al., 2001). Carbonates have relatively weak SWIR absorptions, which tend to be obscured in mixed assemblages containing phyllosilicates and are thus less amenable to spectral analysis. Although there are many possible applications in mineral deposit exploration, we do not know of any cases where systematic investigations of mineral chemistry have led to an ore discovery. As pointed out by Simmons and Browne (2000), the extent to which patterns of mineral distribution
and chemical variations can be used in exploration depends largely on whether they are related to a single phase of hydrothermal activity that produced equilibrium mineral assemblages.
Applications
The three main applications of mineral chemistry in alteration studies are: (1) interpretation of the processes and physicochemical conditions of alteration (2) discrimination or identification of metasomatic alteration and mineralisation styles from mineral compositions (3) determination of spatial variations and exploration vectors to ore.
Interpretation of processes The compositional and crystal-structure variations in some minerals are diagnostic of particular alteration processes because of physicochemical influences on mineral stability and composition. Thus, mineral chemistry may be used to infer the geological environment in which an alteration mineral assemblage formed. However, these kinds of compositional variations may not always be universally applicable; they may require orientation testing to determine their usefulness in different districts or sites. For example, Dill et al. (1997) found that the kaolinalunite deposits in felsic volcanic rocks of western Peru could be classified into hypogene (hydrothermal) and supergene (weathering) types on the basis of the chemical variations in kaolinite. Hydrothermal kaolinite tended to be rich in Ba, Sr and sulfur, whereas weathering-related kaolin clays concentrated Cr, Ti, Nb and REE. This approach has direct applications to mineral exploration because hypogene kaolinite alteration in Peru is associated with high-sulfidation epithermal Au-Ag deposits. Similarly, Yang et al. (1999) alluded to lowand high-crystallinity forms of kaolinite in the Comstock district of Nevada, which they respectively attributed to lowtemperature weathering and higher temperature hydrothermal alteration processes. They suggested that spectral recognition of distinctive kaolinite could be used in satellite-borne remote sensing to detect prospective hydrothermal altered zones.
Discrimination of hydrothermal alteration styles Mineral compositions can be used to identify or fingerprint hydrothermal-alteration mineral assemblages, and possible associations with mineralised rock. This application is useful at early stages of mineral exploration to discriminate between economically favourable and less favourable alteration and mineralisation styles. For example, Zn-skarn assemblages are commonly dominated by pyroxene with varying amounts of garnet, amphibole, bustamite, chlorite and carbonate, which may all be Mn enriched. Manganese-rich pyroxene (johannsenite) is virtually diagnostic of distal Zn skarns (Meinert, 1983) and could be used as an index mineral in exploration for this type of deposit.
Another example that is more relevant to submarine volcanic successions, is the recognition of a class of pyriticalteration systems in the Mount Read Volcanics that have some characteristics of high-sulfidation epithermal deposits. These include Western Tharsis and Lyell-Comstock, which contain sub-economic Cu + Au resources (Huston and Kamprad, 2000; Corbett, 2001), and Basin Lake and Chester, which appear to be barren (Boda, 1991; Green and Taheri, 1992; Williams, 2000; Williams and Davidson, 2004). White micas in the central zones of these systems have distinctive, non-phengitic sodic compositions (Herrmann et al., 2001). The recognition of sodic white mica, along with low 634S values in pyrite and the presence of pyrophyllite, enables the discrimination of this type of alteration system from those associated with economic Zn-rich polymetallic VHMS deposits (i.e. Rosebery and Hellyer). The altered footwall zones of Zn-rich polymetallic VHMS deposits contain normal potassic to slightly phengitic white micas. The fact that the compositional variations in white mica can be simply determined by SWIR spectral analysis makes this a practical method for selecting and ranking exploration targets.
Mineral chemistry exploration vectors Many documented studies have shown spatial variations in mineral chemistry in altered zones around VHMS deposits. Chlorite has received the most attention, particularly in the last two decades, and there are few deposits for which no data are available. There has also been significant interest in carbonate and, to a lesser extent, white mica compositions. Chlorite compositions are typically Mg-rich in the proximal altered zones of VHMS deposits. They commonly show systematic distal trends to more Fe-rich compositions. These trends are typically recognisable over several hundred metres, both laterally and stratigraphically into the footwall, away from the ore. Some examples include the Seneca and Corbet deposits in Canada (Urabe et al., 1983), the Arctic deposit in Alaska (Schmidt, 1988), and the Thalanga deposit in north Queensland (Paulick et al., 2001). However, there are many cases where the opposite trend exists and Fe-rich chlorites occur in proximal altered zones. The Aznacollar and Masa Valverde deposits are two examples in the Iberian pyrite belt (Sanchez-Espana et al., 2000). At the Home deposit, Canada (MacLean and Hoy, 1991), chlorites in proximal chlorite-rich zones are more Fe-rich than in the enclosing sericite + chlorite zone (Fig. 4.13). Similarly, at Mattagami Lake (Abitibi belt, Canada) there is a general trend of Fe enrichment in chlorites upwards towards the ore position and outwards from the core of the altered footwall zone (Costa et al., 1983). In northern Turkey, the dacite-hosted deposits of the eastern Black Sea province have altered footwall zones of Mg chlorite and sericite (Cagatay, 1993). In contrast, the western Black Sea ophiolite-hosted pyritic Cu deposits of the Kure district are associated with Fe-rich chlorites and trends of Fe enrichment toward ore. Some deposits exhibit inconsistent patterns of variations in chlorite composition. McLeod (1987) found that Mg chlorites around the Mount Chalmers deposit (Queensland) have a stratigraphic upwards trend of Fe enrichment in the footwall and a sharp reversal to Mg enrichment in the mineralised zone. Two recent regional-
scale studies by Hannington et al. (2003a, 2003b) showed contrasting compositional trends in chlorites associated with VHMS deposits in the Noranda district, Canada, and Kristineberg deposits of the Skellefte district, Sweden. In the Noranda district, the moderately Fe-rich compositions of chlorites (Fe/Fe+Mg 0.4-0.9) associated with sulfide deposits and surrounding district-scale hydrothermally altered zones, contribute to discrimination of prospective and non-prospective volcanic centres. However, chlorites in the Kristineberg district are distinctly Mg rich (Fe/Fe+Mg 0.050.5) and show little variation between proximal and distal alteration facies. These studies also found the chlorites associated with sulfide deposits contained significant Mn (up to 1% MnO) and Zn (up to 0.5% ZnO) suggesting that these could be used as proximity indicators in exploration. McLeod and Stan ton (1984) investigated several eastern Australian VHMS deposits and showed that chlorites in sphalerite-rich ores are relatively Mg rich compared to those in chalcopyrite-rich ores. Furthermore, the Mg/Fe ratios of chlorites are related to Mg/Fe ratios of co-existing phyllosilicates and the Fe content of co-existing sphalerite. Therefore, zonal compositional variations in chlorite may be reflected in other alteration mineral species, such as white mica, which may be more easily measured by SWIR. Importantly, McLeod and Stan ton (1984) concluded that the compositions of chlorites and other phyllosilicates had not been significantly modified by subsequent greenschist facies metamorphism. Variations in chlorite composition have also been used, with some success, as empirical and thermodynamically calculated geothermometers to estimate temperature gradients in hydrothermal systems above 200C (e.g. Cathelineau and Nieva, 1985; Walshe, 1986). They are sensitive to re-equilibration and therefore not reliable indicators of hydrothermal temperatures in subsequently metamorphosed terrains (Green and Taheri, 1992).
FIGURE 4.13 | Aliv-Mg-Fe cation plot showing trend to Fe-rich chlorite with proximity to the Cu-Au VHMS deposit at the Home Mine, Quebec, Canada (after MacLean and Hoy, 1991). Where Ab = albite, Ep = epidote, Mt = magnetite and Ser = sericite.
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White micas, commonly referred to as sericite, are nearly ubiquitous in massive sulfide-related hydrothermal alteration systems and they can vary considerably from the ideal muscovite formula of K2Al4[Si6Al2O20](OH)4 (Deer et al., 1966). The term phengite refers to white micas in which Fe, Mg and some other cations substitute for Al in octahedral sites and the charge balances are maintained by increased Si/Al ratios in tetrahedral sites. Phengitic micas form solid solutions between the end members of muscovite and celadonite: K2(Mg,Fe2+)2(Al,Fe3+)2Si8O20](OH)4. Barium-rich phengitic micas, in which Ba substitutes for K in inter-layer sites, also exist in some sediment-hosted sulfide and VHMS deposits (e.g. Schmidt, 1988; Jiang et al., 1996; Leistel et al., 1998). At low to moderate temperatures, there may be limited Na substitution for K, with Na/Na+K ratios up to about 0.2. The sodic muscovites generally have low phengite contents. White micas formed at temperature below 300C may have a significant proportion of vacancies in inter-layer sites normally occupied by K, as well as phengite-like Fe-Mg substitution in octahedral sites. These are commonly termed illites; they form complex solid solutions between three end-members: muscovite, celadonite and pyrophyllite. Yang's (1998) review provides a more detailed description of variations in white mica compositions. Although white mica composition has been examined in a number of massive sulfide-related hydrothermal alteration systems, few studies were systematic enough to evaluate its usefulness as an exploration tool. White micas in the proximal altered zones of the weakly metamorphosed Hellyer deposit, western Tasmania, are more phengitic than the normal muscovites in distal altered zones (Yang, 1998). At the nearby but slightly more metamorphosed Que River deposit, Offler and Whitford (1992) found considerable small-scale compositional variations in mica, even within single samples, due to a complex alteration history. Although the metamorphic phases preserve hydrothermal alteration compositional trends, no convincing vectors were recognised, possibly because of structural complications. Around the Arctic deposit, Alaska, white micas span almost the entire compositional range between muscovite and celadonite (Schmidt, 1988). Metamorphic micas outside the hydrothermal altered zones are highly phengitic. Micas in a variety of proximal alteration mineral assemblages are variably phengitic; some contain up to 0.4 cations of Ba per formula unit and the least-phengitic types are significantly sodic. It is not clear whether these variations are systematic enough to be used as broad exploration vectors. Altered zones in the Iberian pyrite belt also have a confusing variety of mica composition patterns. Plimer and de Carvalho (1982) found that white micas in altered footwall zones around the Salgadinho Cu deposit are phengitic, and appear to show increase in Fe/Fe+Mg ratios towards the mineralised zone. In contrast, in the Rio Tinto deposit the proximal altered zones contain muscovite and the distal altered zones (up to 2500 m from the deposit) contain micas of more phengitic composition (Leistel et al., 1998). The Masa Valverde deposit is associated with Ba-rich muscovites and some ore bodies in the Aljustrel district have extensive halos of sodic white mica (Leistel et al., 1998; Carvalho and Barriga, 2000). With the possible exception of Ba substitution, most of the compositional variations in white micas are semi-quantifiable
by SWIR spectral analysis. This has been demonstrated by several recent studies in the Mount Read Volcanics (Herrmann et al., 2001). Figure 4.14 provides an example of variations in wavelengths of Al-OH bond-related absorption features in SWIR spectra of white mica in samples taken at intervals from a single drill hole. These wavelength variations are directly related to white mica compositional variations. Some alteration systems, particularly those associated with disseminated Cu-Au deposits and/or kaolinite pyrophyllite assemblages, exhibit compositional gradients in white mica compositions that are measurable over a few hundred metres. The background white mica compositions are commonly variably phengitic and tend to non-phengitic muscovite or sodic-muscovite in proximal altered zones (e.g. Huston and Kamprad, 2000; Herrmann et al., 2001). Figure 4.15 illustrates variations in wavelengths of Al-OH absorption features, related to white mica composition, spatially around the Western Tharsis deposit. Carbonates are a third group of minerals that can accommodate compositional variations and are common in some VHMS altered zones. Documentation of carbonate compositional trends and zonal distributions is fairly sparse. However, it seems that massive-sulfide-related carbonates are typically Fe-, Mg- or Mn-bearing phases, and background diagenetic or metamorphic carbonates are commonly calcic. Documented examples include the Hokuroku district in Japan (Shikazono et al., 1998), the Rosebery deposit in western Tasmania (Large et al., 2001b), and the South Bay deposit in northwest Ontario (Urabe et al., 1983).
FIGURE 4.14 | Stack of selected SWIR hull quotient spectra of core samples from a diamond-drill hole through the altered zone at the Chester deposit, western Tasmania. Annotations on the left side are depths in metres down the hole. The spectral features are almost entirely attributable to white mica in the alteration mineral assemblages. Note the distinct variation in wavelengths of the Al-OH absorption features at around 2200 nm. These indicate that the hole intersected mineral assemblages containing normal potassic muscovite in the upper part, sodic white mica from about 100 to 250 m and muscovite to slightly phengitic white mica in the lower part.
FIGURE 4.15 | Cross-section of the Western Tharsis deposit (western Tasmania) showing zonation of wavelengths of AI-OH absorption features in SWIR spectra. The background of 2200-2210 nm, corresponding to slightly phengitic white mica, decreases over a few hundred metres to 2194-2198 nm, attributable to non-phengitic, slightly sodic white mica in the proximal altered zone associated with disseminated pyrite and chalcopyrite.
Inevitably, there are exceptions, such as the deposits of the northern Iberian pyrite belt, which have calcite, ankerite and dolomite in proximal alteration mineral assemblages (Sanchez-Espana et al., 2000). The Mattabi deposit in the Sturgeon Lake area, Canada, is underlain by a funnel shaped siderite-rich altered zone grading outwards to dolomite, which is widespread on a district scale in the footwall and hanging-wall volcanic rocks. Hydrothermal carbonates in the Rosebery-Hercules area, western Tasmania, are conspicuously Mn rich, (Khin Zaw and Large, 1992; Large et al., 2001b). Large et al. (2001b) showed that Mn-siderite and ankerite carbonates in the footwall of the Rosebery deposit increase in Mn content towards ore (Fig. 4.16). Magnesium contents of carbonates in altered footwall zones of the South Bay deposit, Canada, increase steadily towards ore over distances of tens to hundreds of metres (Urabeetal., 1983). Chlorite, white mica and carbonate all have potential as mineral exploration vectors, at least on a prospect or deposit scale. However, the considerable diversity of compositional trends in the published data indicate that exploration vectors need to be empirically established on a district or deposit specific basis, and are not universally applicable.
FIGURE 4,16 | Downhole plot of drill hole 120R illustrating the distribution of Mn-rich carbonates (kutnahorite and manganosiderite-rhodochrosite) in proximity to K-lens of the Rosebery Pb-Zn VHMS deposit, western Tasmania. Magnesiumcarbonates occur in the footwall and in a thin unit of altered pumice breccia immediately above the ore lens; carbonates more than 50 m above ore in the hanging wall sequence are Ca rich.
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TABLE 4.2 | Natural abundances of H, C, 0 and S isotopes, and standards in common use (data from Rollinson, 1993).
99.9844
Isotope geochemistry is a diverse and rather specialised science. This section aims to provide a bare outline of aspects that have particular relevance to interpretation of altered volcanic rocks. It includes only a brief introduction to theoretical principles, necessary to grasp the applications. We recommend that interested readers supplement this by referring to other textbooks Rollinson (1993) provides an excellent working basis. Isotopes are distinct atomic forms of elements that have the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons in their nuclei. Of the 92 naturally occurring elements, 60 consist of more than one isotope and many of them have two or more stable isotopes. That means that they are non-radioactive, and do not change naturally, or decay, into other radiogenic elements by emissions of subatomic particles from their nuclei. Some natural radiogenic isotopes have important geological uses in geochronology, petrogenesis and metallogenesis, because their rates of decay are constant and measurable. Stable isotopes also have many geological applications, mainly based on their properties of isotopic fractionation. The stable isotopes of the light elements H, C, O and sulfur have received the most attention from geochemists because they are naturally abundant in the hydrosphere and in crustal rocks, not least in altered rocks. Informal isotopic notation uses the chemical symbol of the element preceded by the mass number of the isotope written as a superscript. Thus 17O denotes the oxygen isotope with 17 nucleons, comprising eight protons and nine neutrons. A single isotope, which usually has equal numbers of protons and neutrons, typically dominates the isotopic composition of each element (Table 4.2). Therefore isotopic ratios are very small numbers (e.g. for the average abundances of oxygen isotopes, 18O / 16 O = 0.002). To avoid direct comparison of these unconvincingly small ratios, stable isotopic proportions are expressed in parts per thousand (i.e. per mil, %o) relative to a standard material (i.e. delta form). For example:
D C
12
13
1.11
99.7630 0.0375 0.1995 95.02 0.75 4.21 0.02 Troilite in Canon Diablo meteorite (CDT) Std mean ocean water (SMOW), ViennaSMOW (V-SMOW) or PDB belemnite.
16
O O O S S S S
17 18 32
33 34 36
Stable isotopes undergo fractionation (or selective partitioning into different phases) according to thermodynamic properties that are related to their differing atomic weights and consequent ionic bond strengths (Faure, 1986; Rollinson, 1993). Fractionation may occur by several physicochemical processes of which the most geologically important are isotopic exchange reactions between phases. The degree of fractionation is controlled by physical and chemical factors, which vary according to the elements and fractionation processes involved. Thus, O-isotopic fractionation is largely dependent on temperature, whereas S-isotopic fractionation is influenced by temperature, pH, / O 2 , and the activities of sulfur and other cations involved with sulfate.
Geothermometers The temperature dependency of isotope fractionations between mineral pairs forms the basis of isotope geo-
thermometry. Provided that the paired minerals formed in equilibrium, that their fractionation factors are known and are significantly different, their original isotopic compositions have been retained and can be separately determined, then a combination of equations can be solved for temperature of formation. This approach is useful with O isotopes, because O is common to, and abundant in, silicates and other alteration phases, such as carbonates and sulfates. It is also applicable to S-isotopic compositions of minerals in complex sulfide and ore assemblages. Hydrogen isotopes are not generally reliable as geothermometers because they are readily modified by subsequent fluid interactions. Furthermore, the mineral fractionation factors are relatively insensitive to temperature and are not well calibrated (Ohmoto, 1986). It is usually difficult to physically separate fine-grained minerals for isotopic analysis and to petrographically demonstrate equilibrium between the analysed phases. However, close agreement between several temperature estimates of two or more pairs of minerals in a single assemblage (e.g. quartz + magnetite, muscovite + chlorite and calcite + chlorite) would inspire reasonable confidence in their isotopic equilibrium and the calculated temperature. In fluid-dominated hydrothermal systems, mineral-water O-isotope fractionation factors can be used to estimate relative temperatures. Although it is difficult to reliably measure the isotopic composition of the water from fluid inclusions (Nesbitt, 1996), an assumed value can provide approximate or relative temperature estimates. This approach is used in the determination of ocean palaeo-temperatures from 618O values of the carbonate shells of marine organisms (Rollinson, 1993) and also has applications in mineral exploration (e.g. Miller et al., 2001).
FIGURE 4.17 | 6D- and S18O-isotopic compositions of natural waters (from Taylor, 1979; Ohmoto, 1986). SMOW is standard mean ocean water with 6Dand618O values of 0%o.
Fluid origins Natural waters have a broad range of H- and Oisotopic compositions because of fractionation effects in the hydrosphere, lithosphere and mantle (Fig. 4.17). Consequently, it may be possible to infer the source or sources of alteration fluids, and something about their evolution, from their isotopic signature. Fluid inclusions in hydrothermal minerals may permit direct measurement, but commonly the fluid compositions are calculated from isotopic compositions of alteration minerals with known fractionation characteristics, that are assumed to have been in equilibrium with the hydrothermal fluid. Isotopic composition of a single hydrothermal mineral may constrain the fluid composition if independent temperature estimates, such as fluid inclusion data, are available. Otherwise, isotopic compositions of mineral pairs in equilibrium can be used (as outlined above) to deduce temperature, which can then be applied in the mineral-water fractionation relationship to estimate fluid-isotopic composition.
hydro thermal alteration systems. Water-rock ratios can be estimated from whole-rock O-isotope data or from inferences of mass transfers and solubilities (e.g. Ohmoto et al., 1983). Unaltered mafic volcanic rocks have initial 618O values in the range 6 to 7.5%o, slightly higher than the mantle value of 5.7%o, and unaltered felsic volcanic rocks have values up to about 10%o, (Hoefs, 1973). The 618O values of hydrothermally altered volcanic rocks will differ from initial values, depending on the temperature and mineral assemblage (which affect fractionation), the initial isotopic composition of the water and the quantity of water that reacted with a given amount of rock. The water-rock ratio is usually expressed in atomic proportions of oxygen. Taylor (1979) presented the following equations expressing these relationships in closed and open hydrothermal systems: closed systems
Water-rock ratios Knowledge of water-rock ratios may help to determine the processes of alteration and interpret the hydrology of
where the superscripts and subscripts i, f, w and r, respectively refer to initial, final, water and rock. These equations can be plotted as curves of the type illustrated in Figure 4.18, which relate 818O / to water-rock ratios. Thus, a measured final 5 18 O r can be used to estimate the amount of water involved in hydrothermal or diagenetic alteration, under assumed (or otherwise determined) values for temperature, whole-rock fractionation factors and the initial isotopic compositions of fluid and rock. However, as discussed in some detail by Ohmoto (1986) and noted by Green and Taheri (1992), natural geologic systems are not likely to be simple isothermic, closed or open systems. Rates of isotopic re-equilibration vary according to temperature, and the isotopic compositions of both rock and
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30
fluid change incrementally along the flow path. The final rock 5 I8 O reflects an integrated history of fluid-rock reaction and offers only broad constraints on temperature and water-rock ratio. Green and Taheri (1992) suggested that conditions of diagenesis might approximate a closed system, whereas submarine hydrothermal convection is more analogous to an open system. Water-rock ratios calculated under assumptions of either closed or open systems are likely to represent the minimum values because of kinetic and incremental factors affecting rates of re-equilibration. Natural open systems may require water-rock ratios one or two orders of magnitude greater to achieve equivalent shifts in the isotopic composition of the rock (Ohmoto, 1986). Nevertheless, consideration of water-rock ratios is important in evaluation of whole-rock 618O data. This will be further explained in the following section on isotopic exploration vectors.
Early isotopic studies (e.g. O'Neil and Silberman, 1974; Taylor, 1974) discovered the link between terrestrial epithermal Au-Ag deposits, meteoric-hydrothermal convection and very broad halos of low 618O in volcanic host rocks. These extensive isotopic halos had obvious potential as semi-regional exploration vectors and stimulated further investigations into volcanic successions hosting other deposit types. Among them was the landmark study by Green et al. (1983) on whole-rock O-isotope geochemistry in the host rocks to VHMS deposits in the Hokuroku district, Japan. They found concentric zonation of whole-rock 618O values around the cluster of Fukuzawa ore bodies ranging from 6.7 + 1.3%o
FIGURE 4.19 | Cross-section illustrating the distribution of whole-rock 518O values (black contours), and altered footwall zones around the Fukuzawa deposits, Hokuroku district, Japan (modified after Green et al., 1983).
in the proximal sericite + chlorite zone and 11.1 + 2.5%o in the surrounding 1 3 km-wide montmorillonite zone, to 16.9 2.7%o in the outer zeolite zone (Fig. 4.19). The 618O anomaly is significantly broader and less variable than elemental geochemical halos; it extends up to 1 km laterally beyond the Na 2 O depletion anomaly and at least 400 m into the hanging wall above the mineralised zone. The wide extent of the whole-rock 518O anomaly is advantageous for regional exploration. It has particular application in deformed terrains where the original mineral assemblages of hydrothermally altered zones has been obscured by subsequent metamorphism, because the hydrothermal whole-rock 618O patterns may still be preserved. This is because regional metamorphism typically involves low water-rock ratios. The observed whole-rock 618O values are consistent with isotopic exchange between the host rocks and large amounts of seawater (0%o, w/r >1) at different temperatures. Isotopic modelling, using a plagioclase fractionation factor as an average felsic volcanic rock value, showed that high 618O values in the diagenetic zeolite zone could be produced by interaction with fluid of virtually any source (magmatic, sea or meteoric) at low temperatures and relatively small waterrock ratios. This may be due to the high fractionation factors between silicates and water at temperatures below 100C. However, low 818O values of the proximal sericite + chlorite zone are more consistent with conditions of equilibrium with
either meteoric waters at unrealistically low water-rock ratios (-8%o, <0.2) or seawater at 200-300C and moderate to large water-rock ratios. The submarine volcanic environment and implications of hydrothermal mass transfers favour the latter interpretation. Cathles (1983) carried out detailed thermal, geochemical and isotopic analysis of a hypothetical, but geologically realistic, submarine intrusion-heated convective hydrothermal system. His model produced O-isotopic results that were consistent with 518O data observed by Green et al. (1983) in the Hokuroku district. It predicts that rocks in the shallow substrate become isotopically heavier by reaction with down-welling seawater at low temperatures. Lower isotopic fractionation, due to increased temperatures at depths greater than about 2 km below the seafloor, produces a zone of low rock 5 18 O. As the convective system evolves, and depending on permeability and rate of isotopic exchange, the deeplow 818O zone migrates up through the shallow-high 818O anomaly, to produce a low 518O isotopic anomaly around the vent site (Fig. 4.20). Chapter 8 summarises some other deposit- and districtscale isotopic studies, which illustrate the possible complexities in submarine volcanic successions, but indicate significant potential for whole-rock O-isotope geochemistry in targeting mineral exploration: potential that has not been widely applied outside academic studies.
FIGURE 4.20 | Modelled distribution of changes in whole-rock 618O values due to hydrothermal alteration generated by the convection of fluid around a subseafloor intrusion (after Cathles, 1983). The intrusion is 1 km wide and 3.25 km deep, and emplaced with its top 1.75 km below the seafloor. Re-equilibration with down-welling, low-temperature seawater produces a shallow zone of higher 818O. Increasing temperatures at depth create a sub-horizontal zone of low 818O, which propagates up to the seafloor resulting in the characteristic low 818O surrounded by a halo of positive anomalies. Note that the contours represent shifts from the initial rock 818O values, not the actual rock 818O values.
96
I 97
This chapter discusses the alteration processes and their products (textures, minerals and zones) that occur immediately after deposition and during burial of volcanic facies in submarine environments. It encompasses the relatively lowtemperature processes of hydration, diagenesis and earJy burial metamorphism. Provided sufficient time, burial-related alteration ultimately results in the lithification of clastic facies in the succession. Oxidation, hydration, dissolution, dehydration, ion exchange, and hydrolysis reactions result in the breakdown of volcanic glass, precipitation of authigenic minerals in pore space, and replacement of glass and magmatic minerals by new minerals. Alteration mineral assemblages may change over time due to changing physical and chemical conditions during burial, and may progress to low-pressure, high-temperature regional metamorphic assemblages at depth (Coombs et al., 1959). The recognition and description of burial-related alteration styles in submarine volcanic successions has implications for exploration and ore genesis studies, because of dramatic changes in porosity and permeability, which result from cementation, compaction and dissolution during diagenesis. These changes influence subsequent fluid pathways and the sites of hydrothermal venting and mineralisation. Although it has been frequently assumed that compositional changes associated with diagenetic alteration are limited, they may involve mass changes of up to 9% (Gifkins and Allen, 2001). Diagenetic and burial metamorphic mineral assemblages and the thickness of altered zones can also be used to determine a basin's thermal history (e.g. Utada, 1991).
ratio. At elevated temperatures, volcanic glass readily alters in the presence of alkaline fluids, but the rate of alteration is reduced under dry conditions or in the presence of pure water (Lofgren, 1970). For example, hydration and devitrification
rates of feJsic voicaniclastic Facies increase one to Eve orders
of magnitude in the presence of seawater (Lofgren, 1970, 1971b). Another important aspect of burial-related alteration in volcanic and igneous rocks is that anhydrous primary igneous minerals that have crystallised at high temperatures (e.g. olivine and pyroxene) become unstable and alter to hydrous minerals at lower temperatures. The extent of these retrograde reactions depends on the availability of water and the rock permeability. The effects of diagenesis and burial metamorphism on thick, proximal volcanic successions are relatively poorly understood and documented, and detailed studies are almost exclusively limited to well-sorted, fine-grained felsic voicaniclastic facies. The Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) in fore-arc and back-arc basins in the western Pacific region has provided important information on the behaviour of volcanic components during early low-temperature alteration and lithification, and the factors controlling the intensity and depth of diagenetic alteration in Miocene to Recent felsic to intermediate sandstones (e.g. Hein and Scholl, 1978; Taylor and Surdam, 1981; Klein and Lee, 1984; Hay and Guldman, 1987; Marsaglia and Tazaki, 1992; Tazaki and Fyfe, 1992; Torres et al., 1995). Studies in mafic volcanic successions have generally been limited to seafloor alteration (e.g. Bonatti, 1965; Hay and Iijima, 1968a; Honnorez, 1978; Zhou and Fyfe, 1989). Limited work in uplifted and eroded ancient submarine successions provides data on diagenetic and burial metamorphic minerals, textures and zones that formed at depths greater than 1 km (e.g. in New Zealand, Coombs, 1954; Coombs et al., 1959; in Canada, Kuniyoshi and Liou, 1976; Starkey and Frost, 1990; in Australia, Smith, 1969; Smith et al., 1982; Gifkins and Allen, 2001; Gifkins et al., in press; and in Japan, Hay and Iijima, 1968a; Seki et al., 1969; Iijima and Utada, 1972; Utada, 1991). Active geothermal regions provide direct measurements of temperatures, alteration mineral assemblages and pore water
98 | CHAPTER 5
chemistry at relatively shallow depths, less than 2 km (e.g. Coombs et al., 1959; White and Sigvaldason, 1962; Viereck et al., 1982). In addition, experimental work on the alteration of natural and synthetic glasses by modified seawater provides estimates of alteration mineralogy, temperature ranges for mineral species, fluid-rock ratios, elemental variations in glass, and variations in fluid chemistry over time. Basalt-seawater experiments were performed by: Hajash (1975, 1977), Keene et al. (1976), Seyfried and Bischoff (1977), Mottl and Seyfried (1977), Seyfried et al. (1978), Hajash and Archer (1980), Seyfried and Mottl (1982), and Ghiara et al. (1993). Rhyolite-seawater experiments were conducted by: Ellis and Mahon (1964), Sakai et al. (1978), Hajash and Chandler (1981), Shiraki et al. (1987) and Shiraki and Iiyama (1990).
submarine volcanic successions. The result is low-pressure, high-temperature diagenesis and metamorphism, and the suppression of some facies or zones (e.g. pumpellyiteactinolite facies, Patuki ophiolite sequence, New Zealand, Sivell, 1984).
Definitions
The term spilite refers to an altered basalt or dolerite, commonly porphyritic and vesicular, in which Ca-plagioclase has been albitised and is accompanied by chlorite, calcite, epidote, prehnite or other low-temperature hydrous minerals typical of greenschist facies (e.g. Cann, 1969; Jolly and Smith, 1972; Grapes, 1976). Spilites are interpreted to result from seawater-basalt interaction during diagenesis on or near the seafloor (Coombs, 1974; Turner, 1980). Similarly, the term keratophyre, although originally restricted to lavas, has been applied to all felsic rocks that contain albite or albiteoligoclase, chlorite, epidote and calcite.
Physical conditions
Early studies assumed that burial-related alteration mineral assemblages and zonation patterns in submarine volcanic successions were controlled by pressure and temperature conditions. However, it is now believed that the composition and pressure of intergranular fluids and the composition of the primary facies are more important (e.g. Miyashiro and Shido, 1970; Surdam, 1973). Differences in the mineral assemblage, intensity, stratigraphic position and sequence of burial-related altered zones may be explained by variations in: primary rock composition, pore-fluid composition, pore-fluid pressure, geothermal gradient and hence temperature, burial history and sediment accumulation rate, interaction time or age, fluid-rock ratio, porosity and permeability, and tectonic setting (Hay, 1966; Surdam, 1973; Furnes, 1975; Boles and Coombs, 1977; Ratterman and Surdam, 1981; Lee and Klein, 1986; Marsaglia and Tazaki, 1992; Ghiara et al., 1993). Temperatures reached during diagenesis and burial metamorphism are directly related to the geothermal gradient and in submarine settings these range from 0C at the seafloor to 250C at a depth of 2-10 km (Alt and Honnorez, 1984; Morrow and Mcllreath, 1990; Alt, 1995b; Torres et al., 1995). In modern volcanic successions, measured geothermal gradients average 40C/km, although some are as high as 200C/km (Palmasson et al., 1979; Viereck et al., 1982). High geothermal gradients, associated with magmatism and regions of lithospheric extension such as back-arc basins and rifts, can enhance diagenetic reactions by increasing reaction rates (Boles, 1977; Surdam and Boles, 1979; Torres et al., 1995). The geothermal gradient may have varied in different parts of a geosyncline or basin; it was likely to have been lowest where the sediment was thickest and where sedimentation occurred most rapidly (Coombs et al., 1959). Taylor et al. (1990) proposed that examples of minimal diagenesis in some basins may be explained by rapid sediment accumulation rates that did not allow sufficient time for diagenetic reactions to occur at depth or for the development of porefluid gradients. In addition, magmatism provides heat to the geothermal system, locally increasing the geothermal gradient and compressing isograds near volcanic centres or large intrusions (e.g. Schiffman et al., 1984; Neuhoff et al., 1997). Coeval volcanism, plutonism and rapid burial may establish short-lived elevated geothermal gradients in many
5.2 | HYDRATION
Hydration of glass is typically the first stage of alteration of volcanic facies in submarine settings and occurs during lowtemperature (<50C) seafloor weathering and the early stages of diagenesis. Hydrated glasses (e.g. perlite or palagonite) are very susceptible to alteration (Lipman, 1965). Hydration facilitates subsequent reactions as it increases the alkalinity of the pore fluid, which assists glass dissolution, promotes crystallisation, and may produce perlitic fractures, which further increase porosity and permeability (Lofgren, 1970; Friedman and Long, 1984; Noh and Boles, 1989; Casey and Bunker, 1990). Hydration involves the diffusion of water into solid glass; typically accompanied by a volume change (e.g. reaction R5.1 from Noh and Boles, 1989). As water is rapidly absorbed on to glass surfaces, hydration initially affects the outer surfaces of glassy clasts, lavas or shallow intrusions, margins along fractures in glassy facies, pillow margins, and densely welded pyroclastic deposits. This is followed by the slow diffusion of water into the glass as hydration proceeds inwards along hydration fronts defined by strain birefringence, and changes in glass colour and refractive indices (Ross and Smith, 1955; Friedman et al., 1966; Lofgren, 1971a). The rate of diffusion is dependent on composition and temperature and, hence, the extent of alteration is dependent on the time that glass has been in contact with water (O'Keefe, 1984). Most glasses will not undergo hydration to great thicknesses unless parallel reactions relax the glass structure allowing water penetration (Casey and Bunker, 1990). dacitic glass + nH 2 O -^ perlitic glass + Na+ + (OH)- (R5.1) Hydration increases the H 2 O content of glass, reorganises the glass structure and may form palagonite or silica gels. Changes in the glass structure may include volume changes, and the formation of evenly spaced tiny bubbles and perlitic fractures. Boundaries between glass and hydrated glass are
typically sharp (Peacock, 1926; Lofgren, 1971a; Fisher and Schmincke, 1984).
Palagonite
Palagonite is a dull, resinous, yellow-orange to brown waxlike substance formed from hydrous altered sideromelane (basaltic) glass (Fig. 5.1). It is a mineraloid mixture of relict hydrated glass, nontronite, montmorillonite and other sheet silicates (Hay and Iijima, 1968b; Honnorez, 1969; Jakobsson and Moore, 1986). Eggleton and Keller (1982) described palagonite as a transitional alteration phase between volcanic
glass and smectite; however, the end product may not always be smectite. There are two main varieties: gel-palagonite and fibropalagonite (Peacock, 1926). Gel-palagonite is isotropic, dark brown and commonly banded, forming directly adjacent to unaltered glass (Peacock, 1926; Zhou and Fyfe, 1989). Fibropalagonite is orange-yellow, transparent and birefringent (Zhou and Fyfe, 1989). Palagonite is widespread in submarine basaltic facies and common around the edges of glassy grains in basaltic tuffs, in pillow rinds, along fractures in glass, and in originally glassy vesicle walls (Moore, 1966; Baragar et al., 1977; Friedman and Long, 1984). Partly altered basaltic pillows typically
A. Gel-palagonite in pillow basalt The sideromelane groundmass of this plagioclase + augite-phyric basalt is altered to yellow-brown palagonite adjacent to the vesicle (V). The gel-palagonite exhibits banding parallel to the vesicle wall and perpendicular contraction cracks. Plane polarised light. Sample 153254, Miocene Waitakere Group, Muriwai, Northland region, New Zealand.
B. Palagonite-altered basalt clast rind The basalt clast in this polymictic conglomerate has a thin palagonitised rind. The plagioclase-phyric clast is concentrically zoned with an unaltered sideromelane core (C), yellow-brown gel-palagonite altered zone (P) and a brown fibro-palagonite rim (R). The conglomerate matrix includes palagonitised basaltic shards and crystal fragments. Plane polarised light. Sample 131562, Tertiary Macquarie Plains volcanics, Bushy Park, Tasmania.
C. Banded palagonite The palagonite-altered rind on this basalt clast displays fine concentric banding. Plane polarised light. Sample 131562, Tertiary Macquarie Plains volcanics, Bushy Park, Tasmania.
1 0 0 | CHAPTER 5
have glassy cores successively surrounded by concentric zones of gel-palagonite and fibro-palagonite (+ smectite), which are enhanced by bands of fine Fe- and Ti-oxides (Fig. 5.2: Dimroth and Lichtblau, 1979; Zhou and Fyfe, 1989). Palagonites have variable compositions with 10-20 wt% H 2 O (Brey and Schmincke, 1980; Eggleton and Keller, 1982; Pichler et al., 1999). Compared with sideromelane, Fe2+ is oxidised, K 2 O, FeO, TiO 2 and Cl may be locally gained, and Na 2 O, Al2O3, SiO2 and CaO lost (Baragar et al., 1977, 1979; Jakobsson and Moore, 1986; Zhou and Fyfe, 1989). However, whole-rock compositions are not significantly changed, except for H 2 O. Palagonitisation is typically accompanied by the growth of authigenic minerals in open pore spaces (Fig. 5.2) and these commonly account for the elements lost from the glass (e.g. Baragar et al., 1979; Jakobsson and Moore, 1986).
increase in thickness with time and doubles for every 8C temperature increase (Moore, 1966; Jakobsson and Moore, 1986).
Perlite
Perlite is a textural term referring to networks of fine fractures or cracks that range from concentric arcuate fractures enclosing cores of glass (classical perlite; e.g. Fig. 5.3A and B) to long sub-parallel fractures linked by short cross fractures (banded or ladder perlite) (Fig. 3.2C and D: Ross and Smith, 1955; Friedman et al., 1966; Allen, 1988). Perlitic fractures are a common feature of glassy rock fragments, felsic lavas and synvolcanic sills, and also occur in the glassy rinds of mafic to intermediate lavas. Felsic perlites typically contain 2-6.5 wt% H 2 O compared with non-hydrated obsidian, which contains a few tenths of one percent (Ross and Smith, 1955; Noh and Boles, 1989). In addition to gains in H 2 O, perlites typically gain K 2 O, and lose Na 2 O and to a lesser degree CaO and SiO2 (Lipman et al., 1969; Fisher and Schmincke, 1984; Noh and Boles, 1989). Iron is oxidised, volatile components Cl2 and F2 may be lost, and 8O 18 isotope values modified by interaction with external fluids (Lipman, 1965; Jezek and Noble, 1978; Cerling et al., 1985). These compositional changes are most intense along the perlitic fractures (Jezek and Noble, 1978; Fisher and Schmincke, 1984).
Genesis of palagonite Zhou and Fyfe (1989) and others have proposed a twostage solution-precipitation mechanism for palagonitisation of sideromelane based on physical characteristics, chemical changes and the presence of etch or dissolution pits at alteration fronts. The first stage is Ti constant: glass is dissolved and gel-palagonite formed. There is a dramatic reduction in the glass volume due to the loss of greater than 60% of the SiO2, A12O3, MgO, CaO and Na 2 O. The second stage is volume constant: gel-palagonite is replaced by fibro-palagonite, and zeolites begin to fill adjacent fractures and vesicles. CaO and Na 2 O are lost, and K2O and SiO2, Al 2 O 3 and MgO are gained from solution. Titanium and Fe3+ are localised into nearby fracture-filling clay and oxide minerals. The rate of palagonitisation is temperature dependent and doubles with every 12C increase in temperature (Jakobsson and Moore, 1986). Palagonitisation proceeds rapidly at temperatures above 50C and up to 150C (Jakobsson, 1972, 1978). Jakobsson and Moore (1986) noted that palagonitisation of glass varied from less than 40% at 60C, through 90% at 100C and was complete at temperatures above 120C. They also found that both gel- and fibropalagonite occurred below 87C, but only fibro-palagonite occurred above this temperature. The thickness of palagonite rinds is time and temperature dependent. Palagonite rinds in pillow basalts systematically
Genesis of perlite A debate continues over the origin of perlite and the importance of hydration (Ross and Smith, 1955; Friedman and Smith, 1958; Friedman et al., 1966) versus cooling contraction (Marshall, 1961; Yamagishi and Goto, 1992). The formation of perlite is favoured by hydration of rapidly cooled glass (i.e. glass with a high degree of under cooling) either during cooling or later at low temperatures (Friedman etal, 1966; Noh and Boles, 1989; Drysdale, 1991). However, it is also possible that perlitic fractures form in response to strain inherited from rapid cooling contraction, during the conversion of melts to glass, and associated volume changes (Ross and Smith, 1955; Friedman et al., 1966; Davis and McPhie, 1996).
FIGURE. 5.2 | Sequence of palagonite alteration and zeolite cementation stages in phonolitic glass fragments (after Brey and Schmincke, 1980, in Fisher and Schmincke, 1984). (A) Glassy shards, perhaps with montmorillonite rim cements. (B) Hydration and development of perlitic fractures accompanied by partial dissolution and alteration of glass shards to gel-palagonite. (C) Complete dissolution and alteration of hydrated glass shards to gel-palagonite, accompanied by the precipitation of zeolites on to glass surfaces. (D) Alteration of gel-palagonite to fibro-palagonite and precipitation of zeolites into open spaces.
A. Perlite in thin section The glassy groundmass of this quartz latite exhibits classical perlitic fractures comprising intersecting and overlapping arcuate cracks. The perlitic fractures enclose cores of unaltered and locally oxidised glass. Arcuate glassy false shard textures occur where perlitic fractures intersect (arrow). Amygdales have been filled with zeolites. Plane polarised light. Sample ET7-4, Wereldsend Formation, Pilchard Gorge, Etendeka, Namibia.
B. Perlite in partly altered rhyolite Well-developed perlitic fractures are abundant in this partly glassy rhyolite. The perlitic fractures have been lined with fine-grained, dark green to brown smectites, enhancing the fracture pattern. Perlite cores have been partly altered to smectites and zeolites. Amygdales have been filled with cristobalite. Plane polarised light. Sample 147582, Miocene Nishikurosawa Formation, Hokuroku Basin, Green Tuff Belt, Odate, Japan.
C. Relict perlite and amygdales in altered rhyolite In this diagenetically altered rhyolite, relict perlitic fractures are conspicuous where glass adjacent to the fractures has been altered to dark green mixed layer smectite-chlorite. Elsewhere in the pervasively zeolite altered domains the perlitic fractures have been obscured. The amygdales have been filled with layers of cristobalite and fibrous chlorite. Plane polarised light. Sample J6-735 m, Miocene Nishikurosawa Formation, Hokuroku Basin, Green Tuff Belt, Odate, Japan.
D. Relict perlite in altered basalt In this hydro thermally altered jigsaw-fit basaltic breccia, perlitic fractures are only weakly discernable due to multiple overprinting alteration facies. The pervasive sericite + quartz + pyrite and nodular carbonate alteration facies obscure the perlitic fracture pattern. Plane polarised light. Sample 76833, Cambrian Que-Hellyer Volcanics, western volcanosedimentary sequences, Mount Read Volcanics, western Tasmania.
1 0 2 | CHAPTER 5
Alteration of perlite Perlite commonly undergoes subsequent alteration to diagenetic mineral assemblages that include smectite, Feoxides, zeolites, K-rich gel-like glass, low-cristobalite, Kfeldspar, chlorite, sericite and carbonate (Noh and Boles, 1989). Alteration begins by dissolution of hydrated glass and crystallisation of smectite, carbonate or Fe-oxides along perlitic fractures (e.g. Noh and Boles, 1989). This commonly accentuates the fracture pattern (e.g. Fig. 5.3B). As alteration progresses, glass dissolution with continued precipitation advances inwards and the perlitic fractures become diffuse and indistinct (e.g. Fig. 5.3C, D and Allen, 1988). Dissolution of remaining glassy cores is succeeded by formation of zeolites, such as clinoptilolite or mordenite, or gel-like glass, which are ultimately replaced by K-feldspar (e.g. Noh and Boles, 1989).
The process of dissolution involves corrosion or leaching of pre-existing phases (either glass or mineral phases), with or without minor replacement by new minerals (Morrow and Mcllreath, 1990). It is a complex process involving many distinct reaction steps and pathways. It can modify glass and most primary igneous minerals. Dissolution may ultimately lead to the formation of secondary porosity (e.g. dissolution vugs), replacement of glass and minerals, and development of solution seams or stylolites (Amstutz and Park, 1967; Marsaglia and Tazaki, 1992). Despite changes in mineral assemblage, many pre-existing textures (primary volcanic, high-temperature devitrification and hydration textures) are preserved and sometimes enhanced during diagenesis. Figure 5.4 shows some examples of textures in unaltered volcanic rocks, and their diagenetically altered and in some cases metamorphosed equivalents. Submarine diagenesis may involve multiple stages or episodes of diagenesis (Bohlke et al., 1980; Morrow and Mcllreath, 1990). Diagenesis of most ancient sedimentary successions involved repeated exposure to diagenetic realms as they underwent cycles of subsidence and uplift. Generally, however, the imprint of the first stages of diagenesis is preserved because of the large initial porosity reduction and lithification (Morrow and Mcllreath, 1990).
Diagenetic minerals
There are three main types of minerals typical of seafloor weathering and diagenesis in volcanic successions: layered silicates, zeolites and carbonates. Figure 5.5 provides estimates of their formation temperatures.
Layered silicates The layered silicates include clay minerals, mixed-layered minerals, micas, chlorite and prehnite. The common clay minerals in volcanic facies can be divided in to two groups: (1) smectites (e.g. montmorillonite, nontronite andsaponite), and (2) illite group clay minerals (e.g. celadonite, glauconite and illite). Smectites are swelling clay minerals that readily exchange Ca and Na cations. They typically result from the alteration of volcanic grains under alkaline conditions where Mg and Ca ions are available (Deer et al., 1966). Smectites form rims on glass surfaces, replace both felsic and mafic glass, and pseudomorph glass shards and olivine crystals (Sheppard and Gude, 1968; Schmincke and von Rad, 1976; Viereck et al., 1982). Smectites initially forms blebs and web-like arrays on glass surfaces, and become better crystallised as diagenesis proceeds (Hein and Scholl, 1978). The term bentonite refers to felsic tuff that is composed of almost pure smectite (Gary etal., 1974). In contrast, the illite group are K- and Al-rich minerals that typically form in neutral to alkaline conditions from the breakdown of feldspars and micas (Deer et al., 1966). They typically occur as vesicle fill and pseudomorphs of felsic glass shards and pumice (Schmincke and von Rad, 1976; Iijima, 1978). Celadonite and glauconite are less common than illite.
A. Flow banding This devitrified flow-banded plagioclase-phyric rhyolite contains alternating dark and light flow bands. The dark bands are dominantly obsidian, whereas the pale bands contain fine spherulites and lithophysae. Sample NG1, < 140 ka Ngongotaha lava dome, Hendersons quarry, Rotorua, New Zealand.
B. This diagenetically altered and metamorphosed flowbanded plagioclase-phyric rhyolite contains alternating orange albite + quartz and grey sericite-rich bands. In thin section, the orange bands contain relict spherulites, whereas the grey bands are microcrystalline. Sample 147481, Cambrian Central Volcanic Complex, Mount Read Volcanics, Mount Block, western Tasmania.
C. Spherulites In thin section, fresh spherulites consist of radial crystal fibres; typically feldspar intergrown with cristobalite, tridymite or clinopyroxene. Many of these spherulites enclose plagioclase phenocrysts and are separated by small cuspate lenses of dark brown obsidian. Plane polarised light. Sample NG4, <14O ka Ngongotaha lava dome, Hendersons quarry, Rotorua, New Zealand.
D. Recrystallised spherulites in this greenschist facies rhyolite are composed of albite, quartz and sericite. Fine sericite trails preserve a radial pattern within the spherulites. The boundaries between the spherulites are marked by concentrations of sericite. Plane polarised light. Sample 147528, Cambrian Central Volcanic Complex, Mount Read Volcanics, Mount Black, western Tasmania.
E. Tube pumice clasts This unaltered, semi-consolidated, dacitic pumice breccia contains glassy tube pumice clasts and plagioclase crystals in a matrix of fine glass shards. The pumice \ clast pictured here displays a fine fibrous texture, which may be preserved during subsequent alteration. Plane polarised light. Sample from the -1 Ma trachydacitic pumice breccias, Efate Pumice Tormation, Vanuatu.
1 0 4 | CHAPTER 5
F. Pumice clasts in this diagenetically-altered and metamorphosed rhyolitic pumice breccia preserve the fine tube vesicle structure. The originally glassy vesicle walls have been altered to albite + quartz + hematite, the vesicles have been lined with sericite and filled with albite. Plagioclase crystals in this sample have been completely replaced by albite and hematite. Plane polarised light. Sample 133815, Cambrian Hercules Pumice Formation, Central Volcanic Complex, Mount Read Volcanics, Hercules footwall, western Tasmania.
G. Many tube pumice clasts locally preserve round vesicles adjacent to phenocrysts. In this diagenetically altered pumice breccia, round and tube vesicles adjacent to a cluster of plagioclase phenocrysts have been filled with mordenite. As a result, the vesicles have retained their shapes during burial compaction. Plane polarised light. Sample OH8-369 m, Miocene Onnagawa Formation, Hokuroku Basin, Green Tuff Belt, Odate, Japan.
H. Similarly, this pumice breccia, which has been diagenetically altered and metamorphosed to greenschist facies, contains round and tube vesicles adjacent to hematite-altered plagioclase phenocrysts. The vesicles (V) have beeen filled with sericite and albite. Plane polarised light. Sample 147499, Cambrian Kershaw Pumice Formation, Central Volcanic Complex, Mount Read Volcanics, east Hercules, western Tasmania.
I. Palagonitised rinds on clasts The rim of this basalt clast has been altered to orangebrown palagonite. Palagonite has also formed rims around the vesicles in the clast. Plane polarised light. Sample 131562, Tertiary Macquarie Plains volcanics, Bushy Park, Tasmania.
J. The sericite + albite + hematite-altered rim (R) on this basalt clast may be the metamorphosed equivalent of a palagonite-altered rind. Plane polarised light. Sample 147572, Cambrian Sterling Valley Volcanics, Central Volcanic Complex, Mount Read Volcanics, Sterling Valley, western Tasmania.
FIGURE 5.4 | Photographs of unaltered and diagenetically altered volcanic textures, cont.
Carbonates Diagenetic carbonates are dominantly calcite and dolomite. They typically fill originally open spaces such as vesicles, occur as cements in volcaniclastic facies (e.g. Hay, 1977), as spheroids or nodules, and as euhedral crystals replacing palagonite (e.g. Dimroth and Lichtblau, 1979), rock fragments, olivine and plagioclase crystals.
Other diagenetic minerals Other diagenetic minerals include silica phases (e.g. lowcristobalite, opal CT, chert and quartz), Fe-oxides (e.g. hematite), Ti-rich minerals (e.g. leucoxene), anhydrite, pyrite, epidote and feldspars (albite and K-feldspar). These mainly replace glass, primary crystal phases and earlier alteration minerals. Silica phases and feldspars also occur as overgrowths on primary plagioclase and quartz crystals (e.g. Noh and Boles, 1989; Tsolis-Katagas and Katagas, 1989).
Diagenetic zones
Diagenetic mineral assemblages commonly show a thick vertical zonation (e.g. Fig. 5.6 and Section 5.5). Diagenetic zones have been described by a number of authors in modern and ancient submarine felsic to intermediate volcanic successions (e.g. Iijima, 1974; Walton, 1975; Iijima, 1978; Ratterman and Surdam, 1981; Sheppard et al., 1988; Williams et al., 1989; Utada, 1991; Passaglia et al., 1995; Ogihara, 1996). Sequences of diagenetic zones are between 500 m and 6 km thick, with individual altered zones varying from a few metres to several kilometres in thickness. This vertical zonation corresponds to progressive mineral reactions that occur in response to changes in pore water chemistry and temperature with depth of burial, and is very similar to burial metamorphism (Coombs, 1954). Some altered zones may be absent or combined.
FIGURE 5.5 | Temperature estimates for the growth of common diagenetic and burial metamorphic minerals, and palagonite (data from Thompson, 1971; Seki, 1972; Merino, 1975; Grapes, 1976; Kastnerand Gieskes, 1976; Seyfried and Bischoff, 1979; Bohlke et al., 1980; Munha et al., 1980; Boles, 1982; Viereck et al., 1982; Jakobsson and Moore, 1986; Bish and Aronson, 1993; Ogihara, 1996; Ylagan et al., 1996; Bodon and Cooke, 1998).
Diagenetic zones in felsic volcanic successions Diagenetic zones in felsic volcanic successions can be grouped into four main zones (Table 5.2): (I) partially altered zones, (II) alkali-rich zeolite zones, (III) late-stage zeolite + calcite zones, and (IV) albite zones. At depth Zone IV may pass in to a prehnite + pumpellyite zone, which represents the transition to greenschist facies metamorphic zones (Iijima, 1974, 1978; Utada, 1991). Partially altered zones are characterised by silica and clay minerals, they lack zeolites, contain unaltered and partly altered glass, and unaltered primary minerals such as plagioclase (Iijima, 1974, 1978). Alteration mineral assemblages are dominated by smectites (commonly montmorillonite) + lowcristobalite or opal-CT (Iijima, 1974, 1978; Walton, 1975; Sheppard et al., 1988; Passaglia et al., 1995). Primary pore spaces, such as vesicles, have typically been partially filled with low-cristobalite, glassy clasts have been coated in thin films of smectite, and some originally glassy shards and pumice clasts altered to smectite. Coherent facies were relatively unaltered.
Zeolites
Zeolites are hydrous Al-silicates containing Na and Ca (Table 5.1). The most common zeolites in marine settings are clinoptilolite, mordenite, phillipsite and analcime (Marsaglia and Tazaki, 1992). A variety of fibro-radiated and bladed zeolites fill pore spaces, cement volcaniclastic particles and replace glass in altered volcanic facies (Miyashiro and Shido, 1970; Schmincke and von Rad, 1976). Most zeolites precipitate in open space on to smectite or chlorite films or occur as overgrowths on detrital grains such as plagioclase crystal fragments (e.g. Schmincke and von Rad, 1976). Others crystallise directly from glass via dissolution reactions with smectite (e.g. Noh and Boles, 1989) and may pseudomorph glass shards (e.g. Walton, 1975).
1 0 6 | CHAPTER 5 TABLE 5.1 | Common zeolites and their occurrences in submarine volcanic facies. Zeolite formulas are from Deer et al. (1966).
Analcime
Na[AISi2O6].H2O
A Na-rich late stage zeolite, which replaces earlier alkali zeolites in both coherent and clastic volcanic facies of rhyolitic to basaltic composition (e.g. lijima, 1974; Ratterman and Surdam, 1981; Torres et al., 1995)
Restricted to mafic facies, typically replacing palagonite (e.g. Brey and Schmincke, 1980; Dimroth and Lichtblau, 1979) Occurs as a cement and replaces glass in felsic volcanic facies (e.g. Noh and Boles, 1989; Ratterman and Surdam, 1981; Torres et al., 1995)
Occurs as cements in felsic volcaniclastic facies (e.g. Ratterman and Surdam, 1981) A calcic zeolite, which occurs at depth in originally glassy felsic volcanic facies Only derived from felsic volcanic facies and commonly coexists with smectite and silica phases (i.e. opal, quartz, tridymite and cristobalite) (Noh and Boles, 1989; Ratterman and Surdam, 1981; Sheppard et al., 1988; Sheppard and Gude, 1968; Torres et al, 1995; Tsolis-Katagas and Katagas, 1989; Utada, 1970)
Phillipsite
(1/2Ca,Na,K)3[AI3Si5O16].6H2O
Occurs mainly in basaltic lavas and less commonly in volcaniclastic facies where it replaces basaltic glass and palagonite (Taylor and Surdam, 1981), it commonly contains inclusions of Feoxyhydroxides and smectites (Brey and Schmincke, 1980)
Wairakite
CaAI2Si4012.H20
A common alteration product in basaltic facies at depth in modern geothermal systems (e.g. Boles, 1977; Hay, 1977)
Table 5.2 | Common diagenetic zones and their alteration mineral assemblages for thick submarine volcanic successions.
Zone I: partially altered zone unaltered glass + palagonite + smectite + illite + low-cristobalite/ adularia + Fe/Mn/Ti oxides + unaltered glass Zone II: calcic-zeolite zone phillipsite/chabzite + phyllosilicate minerals (chlorite, smectite, sericite) + Fe/Mn/Ti-oxides K-feidspar
Zone II: alkali-rich zeolite zone (a) clinoptilolite + smectite (montmorillonite) + low-cristobalite/opal-CT
(b) Ca-clinoptilolite + mordenite + smectite + K-feldspar quartz Zone III: late stage zeolite + calcite zone (a) analcime + heulandite + clacite + phyllosilicate minerals (smectite, chlorite, mixed layer minerals) + K-feldspar quartz pyrite (b) analcime + laumontite + clacite + phyllosilicate minerals (illite, chlorite, smectite) + K-feldspar + quartz Zone IV: albite zone albite + phyllosilicate minerals (prehenite, pumpellyite, chlorite, sericite) + quartz K-feldspar laumontite calcite Zone IV: epidote zone epidote + chlorite + albite + calcite + sphene prehnite Zone III: late-stage zeolite zone analcime natrolite ( heulandite laumontite) + chlorite + Kfeldspar + Fe/Mn/Ti-oxides calcite
FIGURE. 5.6 | East-west schematic cross-sections showing the depth distribution of regional diagenetic zones and local hydrothermal zones associated with the Kuroko deposits in the Green Tuff Belt, Japan (after lijima, 1974,1978). (A) Odate Basin, Hokoroku district. (B) Odate to Hanawa Basin, Hokoroku district. (C) Diagenetic zones in the Neogene and Palaeogene formations of Hokkaido. Traces of cross-sections A and B are shown on the regional map of the Hokuroku Basin (Fig. 5.15).
1 0 8 | CHAPTER 5
These early clay-rich zones are associated with minor initial gains in K2O and Al2O3, and losses in Na 2 O and, to lesser degrees, CaO and SiO2 (Noh and Boles, 1989) Alkali-rich zeolite zones are commonly characterised by assemblages of clinoptilolite + mordenite + smectite (typically montmorillonite, saponite or mixed-layer illite/smectite) + low-cristobalite quartz opal K-feldspar. Opal-CT and low-cristobalite occur in the upper parts of these zones, whereas quartz and K-feldspar occur in the lower parts (Walton, 1975; Sheppard et al., 1988). Plagioclase is rarely altered. In general, clinoptilolite and mordenite has filled pore spaces such as primary vesicles and dissolution voids. Glassy clasts have been coated in montmorillonite or silica rims and completely altered to zeolites (e.g. mordenite), low-cristobalite, quartz, clay minerals and K-feldspar (Iijima and Utada, 1971; Iijima, 1974, 1978). The glassy groundmass of lavas and sills, and the cores of blocky clasts may have been partly altered. Pumice-rich facies in these zones contain dark green, variably flattened phyllosilicate-rich fiamme (e.g. saponite fiamme in pumice breccia in the Hokuroku Basin, Iijima, 1974). Tuffaceous mudstones may be rich in montmorillonite, low cristobalite and quartz. Alteration to alkali-zeolites and phyllosilicate minerals resulted in whole-rock gains of MgO and Fe2O3, and losses of SiO2, Na 2 O, K2O, and variable changes in CaO (Noh and Boles, 1989; Tsolis-Katagas and Katagas, 1989; Passaglia et al., 1995). Late-stage zeolite + calcite zones are characterised by mineral assemblages containing analcime and calcite (Iijima, 1974). In some successions, two late-stage zeolite + calcite zones have been defined (e.g. Iijima, 1978): (a) analcime + heulandite + calcite phyllosilicate minerals K-feldspar quartz pyrite, and (b) analcime + laumontite + calcite chlorite illite sericite K-feldspar. The phyllosilicate minerals are typically smectites, chlorite and mixed-layer minerals such as illite/smectite, saponite/chlorite or swelling chlorite. These mineral assemblages may also contain relict clinoptilolite and/or mordenite (Iijima, 1974; Walton, 1975; Sheppard et al., 1988). Plagioclase phenocrysts have remained unaltered or have been analcime calcite altered. Analcime has replaced mordenite- or clinoptilolite-altered felsic glass fragments and pumice clasts. Saponite, smectite, chlorite and mixedlayer mineral fiamme are typically common in pumice-rich rocks. Calcite may occur as euhedral crystals, concretions or veinlets. Albite zones are commonly characterised by albite + laumontite calcite + prehnite chlorite sericite pumpellyite quartz K-feldspar (Iijima and Utada, 1971; Iijima, 1974). Plagioclase phenocrysts have been extensively albitised, and albite + laumontite have replaced plagioclase crystals, originally glassy shards and pumice clasts, and filled pore spaces. Mass gains in CaO, SiO2, Na 2 O, Sr and Ba in these zones are consistent with seafloor albitisation (Boles and Coombs, 1977; Boles, 1982).
Diagenetic zones in mafic volcanic successions Diagenetic mineral assemblages in mafic volcanic successions contain palagonite, several species of calcic zeolites, Fe/Ti/Mnoxides and abundant clay minerals of the smectite-chlorite series typically distributed in four zones (Table 5.2: Baragar et al., 1979; Zhou and Fyfe, 1989; Utada, 1991). Partially altered zones contain some fresh basaltic glass and have alteration mineral assemblages of palagonite Fe/ Mn/Ti-oxides (e.g. maghemite or magnetite) + clay minerals (smectites, illites and mixed-layer minerals) low-cristobalite. Compositional changes include major gains of H 2 O, very minor gains of K 2 O, FeO, TiO 2 and Cl and losses of Na 2 O, A12O3, SiO2 and CaO (Baragar et al., 1977, 1979; Jakobsson and Moore, 1986; Zhou and Fyfe, 1989). Calcic-zeolite zones are characterised by phillipsite or chabazite chlorite + smectite + Fe/Mn/Ti-oxides + Kfeldspar. Whole-rock gains in MgO in these zones are consistent with the formation of smectite, chlorite and other Mgsilicates during diagenesis (cf. Hajash and Chandler, 1981; Shiraki and Iiyama, 1990). Late-stage zeolite zones are characterised by analcime laumontite natrolite chabazite + heulandite mesolite + chlorite + Fe/Mn/Ti-oxides + K-feldspar. Epidote zones are characterised by epidote + chlorite + albite + sphene calcite prehnite.
Stage 1: coating surfaces The initial stage of diagenesis in volcaniclastic facies is characterised by the precipitation of thin rim cements, which coat all originally glassy surfaces and some crystal surfaces (Fig. 5.9A and B). Rim cements help to preserve shard and clast outlines during subsequent replacement (e.g. Walton, 1975). Rim cements may be accompanied by dissolution of intermediate to mafic glass, alteration of rhyolitic glass to clay
minerals and minor precipitation of calcite or clinoptilolite cements (Fig. 5.9C and D: Marsaglia and Tazaki, 1992; Torres et al., 1995). In felsic volcaniclastic facies, the outer walls of most glass shards and vesicles in pumice clasts are lined with thin films of smectite, calcite, opal or rarely chlorite (e.g. Henneberger and Browne, 1988; Sheppard et al., 1988; Noh and Boles, 1989; Tsolis-Katagas and Katagas, 1989; Marsaglia and Tazaki, 1992; Torres et al., 1995). Only rarely are fine-grained, glassy fragments such as shards and pumice completely replaced by smectite. Smectite rims probably precipitate from alkaline fluids during the dissolution of hydrated glass surfaces. This may follow the reactions: perlitic glass + 3.88K+ + 0.65H+ + 15.4H2O - smectite + 9.5gel-like glass + 4.03Na+ + 0.25Ca2+ + 10.55H4SiO4 (Noh and Boles, 1989) (R5.2) or rhyolitic glass + Mg2+ + H 2 O Na-Ca montmorillonite + SiO2 + Na+ + K+ + Fe2+ (R5.3) The formation of smectite and other Mg-silicates during rhyolite-seawater interaction does not require significant gains in alkalis, but is favoured by high ratios of H/Na and K/Ca,
and high activities of Mg (Hay, 1978; Hajash and Chandler, 1981). The initial stage of diagenesis in basalts involves the palagonitisation of basaltic glass. Palagonitisation initiates on glass surfaces, along fractures and around vesicles in a similar way to the thin smectite coating on rhyolitic glass shards (e.g. Zhou and Fyfe, 1989). Associated with palagonitisation is the precipitation of Fe- and Ti-oxides, which coat all surfaces, thermal contraction cracks, vesicles, and the palagonitisation front (e.g. Dimroth and Lichtblau, 1979).
Stage 2: dissolution of glass and compaction Large-scale dissolution of glass and crystals is typically accompanied and followed by the precipitation of authigenic mineral cements and lithification after a few million years (Marsaglia and Tazaki, 1992; Torres et al., 1995). The dissolution of glass fragments, olivine and amphiboles occurs rapidly at shallow burial depths prior to extensive cementation and lithification (Smith, 1991; Marsaglia and Tazaki, 1992). With increasing depths of burial, dissolution of feldspar microlites and the glassy groundmasses of coherent facies occurs (Marsaglia and Tazaki, 1992). In contrast, plagioclase crystal fragments and phenocrysts undergo only minor dissolution early in the diagenetic history. Elements leached from the glass during dissolution reactions are consumed by the formation of new minerals.
FIGURE. 5.7 | Flow diagrams showing the successive development of alteration mineral assemblages in volcanic glass during diagenesis. (A) Alteration of silicic glass to day minerals, zeolites and silicates (after Hay, 1978; lijima, 1978; Utada, 1991). (B) Alteration of basaltic glass to palagonite, clay minerals, zeolites and oxides (Honnorez, 1978; lijima, 1978; after Brey and Schmincke, 1980; Viereck et al., 1982; Fisher and Schmincke, 1984).
FIGURE 5.8 | Schematic model for the microscopic textural evolution and reduction in porosity in non-welded pumice breccias during diagenesis (after Gifkins, 2001). (A) Stage 1: thin films of smectite (green lines) coat original surfaces, such as vesicle walls, crystals, shards and lithic clasts. (B) Stage 2: primary porosity is filled, and originally glassy shards and vesicle walls replaced or partly replaced by zeolites (bronze), clay minerals (green) or carbonates. Zeolite or K-feldspar overgrowths (orange) may develop on plagioclase crystals. (C) Stage 3: glass is dissolved, altered to clay minerals and compacted, producing phyllosilicate-rich fiamme. Clays, zeolites and Fe-oxides precipitate synchronously with the dissolution of glass, forming stylolites. After compaction, more stable diagenetic or metamorphic minerals replace any remaining glass and less stable minerals (i.e. Stage 4).
For example, Na released by the hydration and dissolution of rhyolitic glass (reactions 5.2 and 5.3) may be consumed by the precipitation of mordenite in vesicles (e.g. Fig.5.10E) or dissolution vugs (Sheppard et al., 1988). Dissolution may be accompanied by compaction that reduces the pore space geometry by rotating grains, deforming soft grains and crushing grains. This promotes lithification in volcaniclastic facies by pressure welding clasts so that their margins interpenetrate (Taylor et al., 1990; Marsaglia and Tazaki, 1992). Generally, lithification of volcaniclastic facies is associated with the formation of diagenetic clay mineral or carbonate rims, which act as cohesive binders: cements. However, Marsaglia and Tazaki (1992) in their study of modern partially altered sandstones at ODP Site 788 (Japan) suggested that lithification could be related to a combination of compaction and brown glass dissolution. Sandstones in a transitional zone, between the unlithified and cemented zones, appeared to be lithified as a result of compaction and/ or pressure welding with minor cementation by phillipsite and smectite/chlorite rim cements. The rim cements formed where sufficient glass had dissolved to produce favourable conditions for smectite or zeolite precipitation. Compaction may also bend and flatten clasts, particularly pumice clasts. Gifkins etal. (in press) suggested that compaction during burial of clay-altered pumice clasts flattened the clasts and modified tube vesicle structures resulting in beddingparallel phyllosilicate lenses (i.e. fiamme, Fig. 5.9G). They also proposed that stylolites in pumice breccias in the Mount Read Volcanics (western Tasmania) and the Green Tuff Belt (Japan) resulted from the dissolution of soluble components, particularly glass, and the precipitation of clays and Fe-oxides during compaction (Fig. 5.9H).
Stage 3: filling pore space and cementation Precipitation of low-cristobalite and zeolites as pore-fill cements follows the early rim cements in both felsic and mafic volcanic facies (e.g. Klein and Lee, 1984; Zhou and Fyfe, 1989). Zeolites also fill vesicles and dissolution voids in glass, and directly replace glass, forming shard pseudomorphs or altering the glassy cores of perlite (Dimroth and Lichtblau, 1979; Noh and Boles, 1989; Tsolis-Katagas and Katagas, 1989; Passaglia et al., 1995). Many of the zeolites filling vesicles have fibrous radiating textures (e.g. mordenite, Fig. 5.10A and B), which may be partly preserved during subsequent metamorphic recrystallisation (e.g. Fig. 5.IOC and D). Dimroth and Lichtblau (1979) described fibroradial textures defined by a dusting of fine oxides in Archaean basaltic hyaloclastite of the Noranda District (Canada), which suggest the former presence of fibro-palagonite or zeolites. The formation of alkali-rich zeolites as pore-fill cements involves hydration and dissolution of glass by saline, alkaline solutions (Ratterman and Surdam, 1981; Noh and Boles, 1989). For example, the formation of clinoptilolite from hydrated felsic glass in reaction R5-4, which consumes Ca and Si released during reaction R5.1: perlitic glass + 0.1Ca2+ + 0.1H4SiO4 + 0.1 H+ + H 2 O - clinoptilolite + 0.1K+ + 0.2Na+ (R5.4) The formation of rim and pore-fill cements results in a lithified rock. Cements reduce the porosity, strengthen the grain framework and reduce the amount of compaction. The initial 35-40% porosity of a well-sorted sandstone can be reduced to 15-20% by early clay mineral, carbonate or zeolite cements (Helmold and van de Kamp, 1984). In the clinoptilolite + mordenite zone, Henneberger and Browne (1988) found the porosity of pumice breccias was reduced by half, from 34-47% to 20-50%. Alteration in the quartz + adularia zone further reduced porosity to 423%.
A. Clay rim cement in pumice breccia Smectite films on all glass and crystal surfaces record the initial stage of diagenesis in this partially altered rhyolitic pumice breccia. Green-brown smectite has coated bubble-wall shards, plagioclase and quartz crystal fragments, and lined vesicles. Some originally glassy shards have been completely replaced by smectite; however, larger clasts are still glassy (G). Sample J6-295 m, Miocene Onnagawa Formation, Hokuroku Basin, Green Tuff Belt, Odate, Japan.
B. Clay-lined vesicles Round and elongate vesicles (V) in this pumice clast are coated in irregular, fine-grained, pale brown smectite films. Small vesicles have been completely filled wih smectite, larger vesicles are unfilled, and the originally glassy vesicle walls have been altered to mordenite. Sample FK5B, Miocene Tokiwa Formation, South Fossa Magna, Green Tuff Belt, Odawara, Japan.
C. Pore-filling cements In this pumice breccia sample, calcite cement binds the unaltered glassy and partly calcite-altered tube pumice clasts. Plane polarised light. Sample Y2A, Quaternary Yali pumice breccia, Yali Island, eastern Aegean, Greece.
D. In crossed nicols, the glassy pumice clasts are isotropic and the calcite cement, calcite-filled tube vesicles, and altered shards and pumice clasts are evident.
FIGURE 5.9 | Examples of textures that record the different steps in the evolution of pumice clasts during diagenesis.
1 1 2 I CHAPTER 5
E. Zeolite-filled vesicles in pumice The smectite-lined vesicles (V) in this pumice clast have been infilled with layered fibrous zeolites: mordenite and clinoptilolite. Originally glassy shards have been altered to smectite and vesicle walls to mordenite + smectite. Fine-grained nodules of analcime overprinted the mordenite and smectite altered tube pumice clast (P). Plagioclase and quartz crystals are unaltered. Sample OH8-537 m, Miocene Onnagawa Formation, Hokuroku Basin, Green Tuff Belt, Odate, Japan.
F. Clay-altered pumice clast Other pumice ciasts may be completely altered to clay minerals, like this dark green uncompacted smectitealtered pumice. Shards and fine-grained ciasts in the matrix have been altered to smectites (montmorillonite and saponite) + mordenite. Sample OH8-387 m, Miocene Onnagawa Formation, Hokuroku Basin, Green Tuff Belt, Odate, Japan.
G. Clay-altered and compacted pumice During burial, lithostatic pressure may lead to the flattening of soft clay-altered pumice ciasts. The mixed layer smectite-chlorite fiamme (F) in this pumice and lithic breccia roughly define a bedding-parallel compaction fabric. The fiamme have a fibrous internal texture, wispy terminations and flame-like shapes. Some fiamme are also plagioclase porphyritic. They are interpreted to be diagenetically altered and compacted pumice ciasts. Sample 147583, Miocene Nishikurosawa Formation, Hokuroku Basin, Green Tuff Belt, Odate, Japan.
H. Dissolution fabrics in pumice breccia The dissolution of glass commonly accompanies compaction during diagenesis. Solution seams and stylolites, like the one pictured here, are interpreted to record the dissolution of soluble components. This stylolite is an anastomosing sutured structure that concentrates clay minerals and oxides. Sample FK7, Miocene Wadaira Tuff Member, Tokiwa Formation, South Fossa Magna, Green Tuff Belt, Wadaira, Japan.
FIGURE 5.9 | Examples of textures that record the different steps in the evolution of pumice ciasts during diagenesis, cont.
A. Fibrous zeolites in vesicles B. In crossed nicols, radial extinction patterns accentuate the Vesicles adjacent to this plagioclase crystal in a pumice clast fibrous nature of the vesicle-filling zeolites. have been lined with smectite and filled with fibrous radiating mordenite. Plane polarised light. Sample 147580, Miocene Onnagawa Formation, Hokuroku Basin, Green Tuff Belt, Odate, Japan.
The vesicles (V) in this altered pumice clast are faintly visible in plane polarised light because they are lined with sericite. Sample 133815, Cambrian Hercules Pumice Formation, Central Volcanic Complex, Mount Read Volcanics, Hercules footwall, western Tasmania.
E. Fibrous feldspar in perlite cores In plane polarised light, perlitic fractures are conspicuous in the groundmass of this altered plagioclase-phyric rhyolite. Sample 147541, Cambrian Kershaw Pumice Formation, Central Volcanic Complex, Mount Read Volcanics, Murchison Highway, western Tasmania.
F. In crossed nicols, overlapping arcuate perlitic fractures are defined by concentrations of sericite and radial fibrous textures are preserved in the extinction pattern of the albite + quartz + sericite-altered perlite cores (C).
FIGURE 5.10 | Photomicrographs of relict fibrous textures in vesicles and originally glassy domains in diagenetically altered fades.
1 1 4 I CHAPTER 5
Stage 4: alteration and replacement of mineral phases Later reactions involve the dissolution and replacement of earlier diagenetic phases, remaining gel-like glass, and magmatic minerals such as plagioclase (Torres et al., 1995). With time and/or increasing temperature, zeolite assemblages are especially susceptible to replacement because zeolite crystallisation is controlled by temperature, fluid pressure, and rock and fluid composition. Transitions from unstable zeolites (e.g. phillipsite, clinoptilolite and heulandite) to more stable phases (e.g. mordenite, analcime, laumontite and Kfeldspar) are common. These changes reflect dehydration reactions (Ratterman and Surdam, 1981; Noh and Boles, 1989; Smith, 1991): 2.75clinoptilolite + 0.75Na+ + 3.0H4SiO4 - Na-clinoptilolite + 2.25mordenite + 0.13K+ + 0.27Mg2+ + 0.08H+ + 4.46H 2 O
(R5.8)
This is probably followed by either reaction R5.9 or R5.10, which fixes Mg from seawater. 12.5perlitic glass + 3.88K+ + 0.65H+ +15.4H 2 O - smectite + 9.5gel-like glass + 4.03Na+ + 0.25Ca2+ + 10.55H4SiO4 (R5.9) 2.79perlitic glass + 0.2Mg2+ + 0.2Fe2+ + 0.32H+ + 5.27H2O 1.27smectite + gel-like glass + 1.0Na+ + 0.12Ca2+ + 3.61H4SiO4
(R5.10)
The K liberated during zeolite forming reactions (e.g. reaction R5.4) is then fixed in K-feldspar formation. gel-like glass + 0.5K+ + 0.2H+ +0.2H 2 O 1.3K-feldspar + 0.1 Na+ + 0.1 Ca2 + 0.8H4SiO4 + 0.1 Mg2+ + 0.1Fe2+ (R5.ll) Albite is common as a replacement product of plagioclase and K-feldspar in rhyolitic to basaltic rocks (Munha et al., 1980; Boles, 1982; Torres et al., 1995). Albitisation of plagioclase occurs by dissolution and replacement (Boles, 1982; Shiraki and Iiyama, 1990; Torres et al., 1995). In many cases, albitisation appears to have progressed preferentially along plagioclase grain fractures and cleavage traces, suggesting that fluid films can infiltrate the crystal along lattice defects and planes of weakness, promoting albitisation (Boles, 1982). Microlites in the glassy groundmass of slowly cooled lavas and sills may serve as nuclei for the crystallisation of albite (Dimroth and Lichtblau, 1979). The replacement of plagioclase and K-feldspar by albite could reflect the exchange of K in the rock with Na in seawater at greater depths and temperatures (105-120C) (Iijima and Utada, 1972; Merino, 1975; Munha et al., 1980; Boles, 1982). The Na and Si required for albite crystallisation are supplied by diffusion from seawater and earlier diagenetic reactions (Boles and Coombs, 1977; Boles, 1982). 2SiO2 + 0.5H 2 O + H+ + Na+ + Ca-plagioclase albite + 0.5Al,Si,O s (OH) 4 + Ca2+
(R5.5)
Clinoptilolite and mordenite may also react with solution to form analcime, adularia, quartz and calcite (Iijima, 1974). mordenite + 2Na+ + CO 3 2 " analcime + 6SiO2 + CaCO 3 + 5H 2 O clinoptilolite + Ca2+ + 2HCO 3 " analcime + adularia + 5SiO2 + CaCO 3 + CO 2 8H 2 O
(R5.6)
(R5.7)
Increasing diagenesis may favour the formation of calcic zeolites, particularly in mafic facies, because of increased Ca/Na activity ratios due to albitisation of calcic plagioclase (Utada, 1991). In addition, chlorite and epidote may crystallise. Chlorite and epidote have been observed as direct alteration products of dacitic to basaltic glasses, and clays at relatively shallow depths (420 m) in modern geothermal regions (White and Sigvaldason, 1962). The development of epidote depends on the availability of Fe3+ and is probably controlled by the earlier formation of palagonite. Where palagonite is absent the reaction of basaltic glass to form chlorite releases Ca, which may be consumed by the precipitation of epidote (Baragar et al., 1979). Chlorite and epidote are also typical of low-temperature metamorphism and the growth of these minerals may bridge the boundary between diagenesis and metamorphism where glass and diagenetic clays are replaced by phyllosilicates. K-feldspar is common in diagenetically altered originally glassy volcanic facies. Munhaetal. (1980) suggested that below 150C, Na in glass might be exchanged for K in seawater, resulting in precipitation of K-feldspar and K-smectite. However, K-feldspar has not been reported as a direct product of glass alteration, thus some intermediate phases appear to be required. Iijima and Hay (1968), Surdam and Sheppard (1978) and Hay and Guldman (1987) recognised that Kfeldspar replaced earlier mordenite, analcime, clinoptilolite and phillipsite. In contrast, Noh and Boles (1989) proposed that K-feldspar crystallised from silicic glass via a series of hydration and dissolution reactions, which included an intermediate phase of K-rich gel-like glass.
(R5.12)
Albite is typically riddled with minute inclusions of clays, sericite and calcite, which form as by-products and consume Ca and Al released during this reaction.
pumpellyite, epidote, albite, K-feldspar, phyllosilicate minerals (smectites, chlorite, celadonite, sericite), calcite, siderite, quartz, apatite, sphene, pyrite and Fe-oxides (Surdam, 1973; Boles and Coombs, 1977).
Burial metamorphism
Burial metamorphism was defined by Coombs (1954) to cover progressive mineral changes that can be directly correlated with increases in temperature and burial depth in thick sedimentary or volcanic successions. It is a form of regional metamorphism that affects thick sedimentary or volcanic successions in subsiding basins, where the basal parts attain low-grade metamorphic conditions without the deformation or folding typical of regional metamorphism. Burial metamorphism, like diagenesis, rarely attains equilibrium mineral assemblages, and penetrative deformation fabrics are absent. Alteration minerals common to burial metamorphism in submarine volcanic successions are: zeolites (heulandite, stilbite, laumontite, analcime), prehnite,
FIGURE 5.11 | Pressure and temperature diagram showing the fields for regional metamorphic facies (after Turner, 1980; Bevins and Robinson, 1992). Boundaries between the fields are gradational. Abbreviations used are PA = pumpellyite + actinolite and PP = prehnite + pumpellyite.
1 1 6 I CHAPTER 5 Table 5.3 | Common burial and regional metamorphic facies and mineral assemblages for submarine volcanic successions (from Coombs, 1954; Humphris and Thompson, 1978; Turner, 1980; Sivell, 1984; Yardley, 1989).
Zeolite Prehnite + pumpellyite Pumpellyite + actinolite Lawsonite + albite + chlorite Blueschist Greenschist Amphibolite
Zeolites (laumonite, analcime, heulandite, stilbite, natrolite, mesolite, wairakite) + mixed-layer clays + quartz + calcite muscovite Prehnite + pumpellyite chlorite + albite + quartz epidote calcite sphene rare garnet Pumpellyite + actinolite + albite + chlorite + sphene + quartz + muscovite + calcite lawsonite Lawsonite + albite + chlorite + quartz pumpellyite epidote actinolite sphene + muscovite calcite Glaucophanic amphibole + albite + actinolite/phengite + quartz epidote chlorite sphene pumpellyite stilpnomelane calcite Actinolite + epidote + albite chlorite calcite tremolite talc + quartz sphene magnetite biotite Hornblende + plagioclase epidote garnet biotite quartz + muscovite + calcite sphene magnetite
Drilling in modern geothermal regions has revealed patterns of low-grade metamorphic zones that can be related directly to temperature and fluid composition at shallow depths (e.g. Fig. 5.13: Coombs et al., 1959; White and Sigvaldason, 1962; Vierecketal., 1982). It is generally assumed that higher-grade rocks formerly had mineral assemblages typical of lower grade zones, which were progressively altered as metamorphism proceeded. Near isograds, index minerals from the lower zones locally overgrow lower grade minerals. For example, in basaltic lavas and tuffs in east Greenland near the boundary between two zeolite facies burial metamorphic zones, the analcime and mesolite + scolecite zones, vesicles are lined with analcime and filled with mesolite (Neuhoff et al., 1997). The generalised sequence of burial metamorphic facies with increasing depth is (e.g. Fig. 3.13): zeolite, prehnite + pumpellyite, pumpellyite + actinolite, lawsonite + albite + chlorite, blueschist, and greenschist facies (Coombs, 1954; Coombs et al., 1959; Turner, 1980). Departures from this pattern are common.
is diagnostic of the zeolite facies as mineral assemblages are sensitive to primary rock composition, fluid composition, burial history and geothermal gradient. Typically the zeolite facies contains heulandite, laumontite, analcime, quartz, albite and smectites + prehnite and pumpellyite (Turner, 1980; Vierecketal., 1982). Fyfe et al. (1958) and Coombs (1954), in studies of Triassic submarine volcano-sedimentary rocks of Tarinagatura Hills (New Zealand), divided the zeolite facies into three mineral assemblages that correlate with increasing depth: (1) heulandite + analcime + quartz (montmorillonite + celadonite + sphene), (2) laumontite + albite + quartz chlorite, and (3) quartz + albite + adularia. However, at Hokonui Hills, 50 km east of Tarinagatura Hills, Boles and Coombs (1975) found no correlation between mineral assemblage and depth of the zeolite facies rocks. In contrast, Neuhoff et al. (1997) divided the zeolite facies in the Tertiary flood basalts of east Greenland into five diagenetic and burial metamorphic zones based on the index minerals: (1) chabazite + thomsonite, (2) analcime, (3) mesolite + scolecite, (4) heulandite + stilbite and (5) laumonite (Fig. 5.12).
FIGURE 5.12 | Cross-section in the Borggraven region, east Greenland, showing the regional extent and vertical distribution of burialmetamorphic zeolite zones (after Neuhoff et al., 1997). The thin discontinuous lines represent the dips of selected lavas in this section.
117
FIGURE 5.13 |
zones and average temperature measurements for the boundaries in the Wairakei geothermal field, Taupo Volcanic Zone, New Zealand (modified from Coombs etal., 1959, after Steiner, 1953; Banwelletal., 1957).
reactions R5.13 and R5.15, below (Coombs, 1954; Boles and Coombs, 1977). Rocks in the Tarinagatura Hills record two stages of zeolite facies alteration: an upper heulandite + analcime diagenetic stage and a lower laumonite + albite + quartz burial metamorphic stage (Coombs, 1954). In the upper part of the succession, volcanic glass has been replaced by heulandite and, less commonly, analcime (Fig. 5.14). These zeolites coexist with newly crystallised quartz and fine-grained smectite. In the lower part, analcime has been replaced by albite and heulandite by laumonite + quartz. Smectite, chlorite, sericite and mixed-layer minerals occur and prehnite and pumpellyite appear as accessory minerals. These stages can be summarised by the reactions: heulandite > laumontite + quartz + 2H 2 O analcime + quartz > albite + H 2 O laumontite + calcite * prehnite + quartz + H 2 O + CO 2 (R5.13) (R5.14)
(R5.15)
Some successions lack textural evidence for shallow diagenetic and zeolite zones as precursors to higher-grade mineral assemblages, suggesting that metamorphism to higher grades is not always progressive (e.g. Neuhoff et al., 1997) or that early textures are destroyed.
FIGURE 5.14 | Down-hole mineral distributions at Tarinagatura Hills, New Zealand (after Coombs, 1954).
1 1 8 I CHAPTER 5
Geological setting
The Hokuroku Basin is a 30 x 30 km submarine basin containing a 3 to 6 km thick bimodal volcanic succession of calc-alkaline rhyolites and tholeiitic basalts with some locally abundant andesites (Figs 5.6 and 5.15: Dudas et al., 1983; Urabe, 1987). Here, the Nishikurosawa and Onnagawa Formations dominate the stratigraphy.
The lower Nishikurosawa or Hotakizawa Formation is up to 650 m thick and includes intercalated basaltic lavas and breccias, rhyolitic lavas, and laminated mudstone (Tanimura et al., 1983). The upper Nishikurosawa Formation is a thick (<400 m) succession of rhyolitic lavas, domes and interbedded pumice-rich facies and mudstone (Fig. 5.16: Ishikawa, 1983; Urabe, 1987; Yamagishi, 1987). The upper Nishikurosawa Formation hosts the Kuroko VHMS deposits and is conformably overlain by the Onnagawa Formation (Nakajima, 1988). The Onnagawa Formation comprises a sequence of pumice-rich breccia, sandstone, siltstone and black mudstone with abundant felsic synvolcanic intrusions and local basaltic lavas (Fig. 5.16: Ohmoto and Takahashi, 1983; Tanimura et al., 1983; Nakajima, 1988). The lower pumice breccia is extensive and has been correlated across the Hokuroku Basin (Urabe, 1987). The volcanic succession is relatively undeformed but has undergone regional diagenesis and local hydrothermal alteration and mineralisation (Utada, 1970; Tanimura et al., 1983). Generally the stratigraphy has a gentle dip with open, N-S-trending folds (Tanimura et al., 1983).
Noquchi depression
LEGEND
Funakawa Formation Onnagawa Formation Nishikurosawa Formation Daijima Formation Rhyolite Andesite Dolerite Quartz diorite Other rocks Drill holes in this study Major mine Township Major fault Railway
FIGURE 5.15 | Geology of the Hokuroku Basin showing the major lithostratigraphic units and inset the distribution of the Green Tuff Belt in Japan (after Sato, 1974; Tanimura et al., 1983). The trace of Ijima's (1974) cross-section A (in Fig. 5.6) is represented by solid line AA', B by the dashed line BB' and our cross-section (Fig. 5.18) by the dotted line BC.
119
FIGURE 5.16 | Graphic log of drill core OH-8 in the Odate Basin, western Hokuroku Basin (Japan) showing lithology, bedforms, and diagenetic and hydrothermal zones in pumice-rich facies of the Upper Nishikurosawa and Onnagawa Formations.
have been altered to montmorillonite and vesicles are empty or have been partly filled with low-cristobalite. The clinoptilolite + mordenite zone is 160250 m thick and widely distributed in the shallower part of the Odate Basin in the upper Onnagawa Formation. Regionally it overlies the analcime zone, but in the east of the Odate Basin it is repeated below the analcime + heulandite zone (Figs 5.6B and 5.17). In the upper part of this zone, some glass shards and pumice clasts are unaltered (e.g. data sheet HK1). Typically the surfaces of shards, pumice clasts and vesicles have been coated in a thin film of smectite or low-cristobalite. Vesicles were filled sequentially with mordenite and clinoptilolite. Originally glassy shards and clasts have been altered to smectite (montmorillonite, saponite or mixed-layer illite/smectite) mordenite. In the lower part of this zone, dark green saponite
1 2 0 I CHAPTER 5
FIGURE 5.17 | Schematic cross-section of the western Hokuroku Basin (Japan) showing lithology and altered zones. The locations of the six data sheets are marked on the section.
or mixed-layer smectite/chlorite and pale green mordenite domains are common in the pumice-rich rocks (e.g. data sheet HK2). Plagioclase crystals are typically unaltered. The analcime zone is at least 7 km wide and 150-200 m thick, and occurs in the Upper Nishikurosawa and lower Onnagawa Formations (below the Ml mudstone). It is approximately equivalent to the ore position, grading into the hydrothermal montmorillonite zone and overlying the sericite + chlorite zone (e.g. data sheets HK5 and 6) associated with the Kuroko VHMS deposits (Figs 5.6 and 5.17). In the east of the Odate Basin, an analcime + calcite zone occurs within the clinoptilolite + mordenite zone (Fig. 5.6A: Iijima, 1974). However, it is different from the regional analcime zone, containing disseminated pyrite and calcite concretions and veinlets, and is considered to result from hydrothermal alteration related to Kuroko mineralisation (Yoshida and Utada, 1968; Iijima, 1974). The regional analcime zone is characterised by analcime, which has completely replaced some shards, and rounded crystals of analcime that have replaced clinoptilolite- and mordenite-altered shards and pumice clasts (e.g. data sheets HK 3 and 4). The internal structure of analcime-altered uncompacted tube pumice clasts is not as well preserved as those in the clinoptilolite + mordenite zone. Plagioclase
crystals are unaltered or have been partly analcime and calcite altered. Dark green saponite, saponite + chlorite and chlorite fiamme are common in this zone. They are interpreted as altered and compacted pumice clasts (Gifkins et al., in press). Analcime-filled solution seams are common in the lower part of this zone. The albite + laumontite zone occurs beneath the sericite + chlorite zone at depth in the Odate Basin (Fig. 5.6). It is characterised by albite + laumontite calcite chlorite + sericite (Iijima and Utada, 1971). Laumontite has replaced plagioclase crystals, originally glassy shards and pumice clasts and filled pore space (Iijima, 1974). Albite has replaced plagioclase crystals.
121
Diagenetic zones
ZONE!
I | Partially altered zone lacking zeolites ZONE II I I Clinoptilolite + mordenite zone ZONE III Analcime + calcite zone Hydrothermal zones ^B Montmorillonite and transitional zones Bi Sericite + chlorite zone with plagioclase I | Sericite + chlorite zone lacking plagioclase
f.-' .'] Gravel I ? I Dacitic lava I T l Basaltic lava/sill Massive sulfide ore i i Felsic volcanic facies
FIGURE 5.18 | Model for the development and deformation of the altered zones in the Hokuroku Basin from the Middle Miocene to Recent (after lijima, 1974). (A) Late Nishikurosawa stage (Middle Miocene). (B) Onnagawa stage with deposition of the M1 mudstone. (C) Late Funakawa stage (Late Miocene). (D) Recent.
Zone III are considered to result from compaction that took place when the volcanic facies were most deeply buried. Thus the diagenetic zones probably formed before the end of deposition of the upper Miocene Funakawa Formation, which overlies the Onnagawa Formation (lijima, 1974). The development of the diagenetic zones can be described in four stages (Fig. 5.18): late Nishikurosawa stage, Onnagawa stage, late Funakawa stage and recent (lijima, 1974). During these stages, mineralogical changes progressed with depth as successive reactions between volcanic glass and interstitial modified seawater occurred, originally forming zeolites and then albite as the temperature and pressure increased (Utada, 1991). These mineralogical changes were accompanied by textural and compositional changes. During the late Nishikurosawa stage (Fig. 5.18A) in the middle Miocene, felsic glass was hydrated and began to alter to montmorillonite and low-cristobalite (lijima, 1974). This resulted in a shallow, regionally extensive partly altered zone. Submarine hydrothermal activity associated with VHMS mineralisation also commenced (lijima, 1974). The clinoptilolite + mordenite zone formed during the late Nishikurosawa and early Onnagawa stage (Fig. 5.18A and B), when partly altered facies were buried to a depth
of approximately 100 m (lijima, 1974). This increased the alkalinity of the fluid resulting in the dissolution of felsic glass and the precipitation of alkali clinoptilolite and mordenite in vesicles, interstitial voids and dissolution cavities. Simultaneous reactions altered glassy clasts and tube pumice walls to saponite. Reaction rates were possibly accelerated as a result of hydrothermal fluids circulating within the succession increasing the geothermal gradient and concentrations of Na and K in the fluid. By the end of the Onnagawa stage the hydrothermal sericite + chlorite and montmorillonite zones associated with the ore deposits had formed (lijima, 1974). During the late Funakawa stage (Fig. 5.18C), clinoptilolite and mordenite reacted with solution to form analcime, adularia, quartz and calcite (Ogihara, 1996). As a result, the analcime + heulandite zone was superimposed on the deeper part of the clinoptilolite + mordenite zone (lijima, 1974). The Funakawa stage corresponds to the time of deepest burial and compaction of altered pumice clasts to form fiamme (lijima, 1974). The diagenetic analcime + heulandite zone formed contemporaneously with hydrothermal zones surrounding the Kuroko VHMS deposits (lijima, 1978; Ohmoto, 1978). Since the Funakawa stage, the altered zones have been mildly deformed and eroded (Fig. 5.18D: lijima, 1974).
1 2 2 | CHAPTER 5
HK1
Alteration textures
HK2
1 2 4 | CHAPTER 5
HK3
Primary composition rhyolite Lithofacies Interpretation Alteration minerals Alteration textures massive syneruptive, mass-flow emplaced pumice breccia smectite-chlorite + mordenite + analcime + sericite + pyrite analcime solution seams, smectite-chlorite fiamme, mordenite filled vesicles, analcime replacing mordenite + smectite-altered pumice clasts pervasive good subtle early diagenetic
HK4
1 2 6 | CHAPTER 5
HK5
Primary composition rhyolite Lithofacies Interpretation Alteration minerals Alteration textures graded bed syneruptive, mass-flow emplaced pumice breccia quartz + K-feldspar + sericite + chlorite+ pyrite pseudomorphs after plagioclase crystals and clasts in pervasive crystalline matrix, quartz-filled dissolution vugs pervasive poor strong early hydrothermal
HK6
nil
clasts?
Primary composition rhyolite Lithofacies Interpretation Alteration minerals Alteration textures Distribution Preservation Alteration intensity Timing Alteration style graded bed synemptive, mass-flow emplaced pumice breccia chlorite + sericite + pyrite + montmorillonite dissolution vugs after crystals, sericite + chlorite fiamme, disseminated pyrite pervasive poor moderate early hydrothermal
1 2 8 | CHAPTER 5
Geological setting
For a detailed description of the geology of the Mount Read Volcanics refer to Section 1.5. The northern Central Volcanic Complex is exposed in an approximately 30 by 6 km area located north and west of the Henty fault, and east of the Rosebery fault (Fig. 1.5). It includes three compositionally and texturally different formations (Fig. 5.19): the Sterling Valley Volcanics, the Mount Black Formation, and the Kershaw (or Hercules) Pumice Formation (Gifkins, 2001). The Sterling Valley Volcanics (>1.5 km thick) are composed of dacitic to basaltic lavas and sills, and polymictic mafic volcaniclastic facies interpreted as resedimented syneruptive hyaloclastite, autobreccia, pillow lava and scoria. The Mount Black Formation is a laterally extensive (>20 km), thick succession (>1.6 km) of mainly feldspar-phyric massive, flowbanded and autobrecciated lavas, domes, cryptodomes and synvolcanic sills (e.g. data sheets CVC1 CVC5 and CVC6). The Kershaw Pumice Formation, which conformably overlies the Mount Black Formation, is a laterally extensive (>16 km), relatively thick (>800 m) succession dominated by non-welded pumice breccia (e.g. data sheets CVC3 and CVC4), pumice-rich sandstone and shard-rich siltstone, with lesser proportions of pumice-lithic clast-rich breccia and sandstone, and massive, flow-banded and brecciated rhyolitic and dacitic lavas and intrusions (e.g. data sheet CVC2). The upper part of the Kershaw Pumice Formation and the base of the overlying White Spur Formation host the Rosebery and Hercules VHMS deposits. Abundant spherulites, lithophysae, micropoikilitic texture and relict perlite indicate that volcanic rocks in the northern Central Volcanic Complex were initially partly crystalline and partly glassy (Gifkins and Allen, 2001).
FIGURE 5.19 | Geology of the northern Mount Read Volcanics in western Tasmania, showing the major lithostratigraphic units and altered zones in the northern Central Volcanic Complex (after Gifkins, 2001). Locations of the six data sheets are marked on the map.
FIGURE 5.20 | Detailed cross-section in the Rosebery hanging wall (western Tasmania) showing the complex distribution of volcanic and alteration fades (after Gifkins and Allen, 2001).
FIGURE 5.21 | Schematic cross-section of the northern Central Volcanic Complex stratigraphy and altered zones, western Tasmania (after Gifkins, 2001).
Stage 3: Continuing diagenetic alteration and compaction synchronous with deposition of the White Spur Formation
Dissolution and alteration of glass to clays, sericite and chlorite occurred synchronous with compaction. Replacement of earlier zeolites by Kfeldspar occurred below 150C, albitisation of plagioclase phenocrysts and albite replacement of K-feldspar occurred at temperatures between 100 and 190C. Large volumes of fluid were probably displaced as a result of compaction under the weight of the accumulating White Spur Formation. Rapid and variable sedimentation rates may have over-pressured the pore fluid, promoting lateral fluid flow along permeable layers. Weak hanging wall alteration developed during continued hydrothermal alteration associated with the formation of the Rosebery deposit.
FIGURE 5.22 | Model for the post-depositional evolution of the northern Central Volcanic Complex, western Tasmania (after Gifkins, 2001). Schematic crosssections are not to scale.
1 3 2 | CHAPTER 5
chlorite + sericite and sericite + hematite + chlorite replaced zeolites and clays that filled pore space and altered glass, prior to and synchronous with diagenetic compaction. In pumicerich facies, a bedding-parallel stylolitic foliation reflects the dissolution of glass during compaction and fiamme are interpreted as diagenetically altered and flattened pumice clasts (Gifkins et al., in press). Diagenetic alteration involved significant mineralogical and textural changes but only minor changes in composition consistent with the interaction of rhyolitic and basaltic glass with seawater during burial. The chlorite + epidote alteration mineral assemblage may be transitional between diagenesis and burial metamorphism. It developed after lithification and compaction but pre-dated regional deformation associated with peak metamorphism. The chlorite + epidote facies replaced earlier clay or chlorite + sericite-rich facies and filled any remaining pore space. Negligible absolute and total mass changes associated with chlorite + epidote alteration suggest that it grew in response to increasing temperature with increasing depth of burial late in the diagenetic history (Gifkins, 2001).
Mineral assemblages in these diagenetic zones reflect the reaction of glass with interstitial fluid at elevated temperatures. The albite zone probably formed at temperatures between 100 and 190C (cf. Iijima and Utada, 1971; Thompson, 1971; Merino, 1975; Munha et al., 1980; Boles, 1982). The epidote zone is characterised by chlorite + epidote, chlorite + sericite and albite + quartz + sericite indicating formation at temperatures of at least 200C (cf. Seki, 1972; Kristmannsdottir, 1976). The regional diagenetic alteration and metamorphism of the northern Central Volcanic Complex can be described in five successive stages (Fig. 5.22): (1) the onset of diagenesis; (2) formation of diagenetic cements, and synchronous hydrothermal alteration and mineralisation; (3) diagenetic alteration and compaction synchronous with emplacement of the White Spur Formation; (4) replacement of early diagenetic minerals and remaining glass by more stable mineral assemblages; and (5) regional Devonian metamorphism and deformation.
CVC1
Primary composition rhyolite Lithofacies massive Interpretation Alteration minerals Alteration textures coherent facies albite + quartz + sericite + chlorite + hematite albite + quartz sericite chlorite pseudomorphs of plagioclase, micropoikilitic albite + quartz, interstitial chlorite, disseminated hematite pervasive excellent subtle pre-S2 diagenetic
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 AI2O3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO Na2O 74.58 K2O 0.27 P2O5 13.85 S 2.08 Total 0.01 0.38 Rb 0.13 Sr 3.54 Ba 4.34 0.03 <0.01 100.32 Cu Pb Zn Th Zr 136 Nb 96 Y 988 2 3 17 22 270 17 41 Al CCPI Ti/Zr 56 22 5.98
Photomicrograph (ppl)
1 3 4 | CHAPTER 5
CVC2
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 AI2O3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO Na2O 74.01 K2O 0.23 P2O5 12.21 S 2.17 Total 0.09 0.49 Rb 2.41 Sr 4.07 Ba 1.82 0.03 0.01 100.61 Cu Pb Zn Th Zr 76 Nb 113 Y 513 2 4 19 12 258 16 36 Al CCPI Ti/Zr 26 29 5.31
Photomicrograph (xn)
135
Moderate, domainal albite + quartz + sericite with sencite + hematite chlorite alteration facies
Sample no. Alteration facies Alteration zone Location Formation Succession Volcanic facies Relict minerals Relict textures 147410 moderate, domainal albite + quartz + sencite albite zone 120R-524.5m Kershaw Pumice Formation Central Volcanic Complex graded, plagioclase-phyric pumice breccia plagioclase
CVC3
tube pumice clasts, fiamme, plagioclase crystal fragments, blocky rhyolite clasts Primary composition rhyolite Lithofacies Interpretation Alteration minerals Alteration textures normally graded syn-eruptive, mass-flow-emplaced pumice breccia albite + quartz + sericite + chlorite + hematite + calcite sericite fiamme, hematite styioiites, albite veins, recrystallised albite + quartz + sericite pumice clasts and matrix, albite + sericite + calcite altered plagioclase domainal poor moderate pre-S2 diagenetic
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 AI2O3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO Na2O 76.08 0.19 10.66 1.67 0.09 0.47 2.39 4.71 K2O
P2O5
S Total Rb Sr Ba
Cu Pb Zn Th Zr Nb Y
1 4 27 10 210 13 37
Al CCPi Ti/Zr
16 26 5.43
Photomicrograph (xn)
1 3 6 | CHAPTER 5
CVC4
tube pumice ciasts, bubble wall shards, plagioclase crystal fragments, fiamme Primary composition rhyolite Lithofacies normally graded Interpretation Alteration minerals Alteration textures Distribution Preservation Alteration intensity Timing Alteration style syn-eruptive, mass-flow-emplaced pumice breccia sericite + albite + calcite + chlorite + hematite sericite fiamme, hematite stylolites, disseminated calcite rhombs, albite + sericite altered pumice ciasts and shards pervasive good weak pre-S2 diagenetic
Geochemistry SiO2 70.91 K2O TiO2 0.31 P2O5 AI2O3 14.08 S Fe2O3 2.78 Total MnO 0.07 MgO 0.77 Rb CaO 1.66 Sr Na2O 2.68 Ba
Cu Pb Zn Th Zr 124 Nb 87 Y 786
4 2 48 251 13 28
Al CCPI Ti/Zr
48 36 7.41
Photomicrograph (ppl)
CVC5
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 AI2O3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO Na,0 67.53 K2O 0.52 P2O5 14.51 S 4.37 Total 0.06 1.3 Rb 2.38 Sr 3.56 Ba 3.95 0.13 0.01 99.51 Cu Pb Zn Th Zr 102 Nb 242 Y 958 4 4 51 15 216 12 34 Al CCPI Ti/Zr 47 41 14.48
I
Hand specimen photograph Photomicrograph (ppl)
1 3 8 | CHAPTER 5
CVC6
glomeroporphyritic, perlitic fractures, jigsaw-fit clasts Primary composition dacite Lithofacies Interpretation massive in situ hyaloclastite albite + quartz + chlorite + epidote microcrystalline groundmass with domainal albite + quartz and chlorite + epidote facies, plagioclase phenocrysts albite or chlorite epidote altered, hornblende altered to chlorite + epidote domainal good weak pre-S2 diagenetic
Geochemistry SiO2 67.93 TiO2 0.59 AI2O3 14.32 Fe2O3 4.57 MnO 0.06 MgO 1.33 CaO 2.67 Na2O 4.97
Cu Pb Zn Th Zr 41 Nb 151 Y 826
10 3 28 201 12 31
Al CCPI Ti/Zr
31 44 17.68
Photomicrograph (ppl)
139
The spatial and genetic associations between intrusions and altered zones are widely appreciated in porphyry and epithermal districts (Lowell and Guilbert, 1970; Titley, 1982; Henley and Brown, 1985). Similar relationships also exist in VHMS districts, where synsedimentary or synvolcanic intrusions are commonly altered and surrounded by halos of altered rocks. In some VHMS districts (e.g. Snow Lake and Sturgeon Lake, Canada), there are spatial associations between synvolcanic intrusions and broad-scale, semi-conformable altered zones and clusters of VHMS deposits in the overlying successions (Spooner and Fyfe, 1973; Campbell et al., 1981; Gibson and Watkinson, 1990; Galley, 1993; Hannington et al., 2003a). It has been suggested that synvolcanic intrusions were heat sources (Spooner and Fyfe, 1973; Ohmoto and Rye, 1974; Solomon, 1976; Cathles, 1977; Franklin et al., 1981; Polya et al., 1986; Galley, 1993; Large et al., 1996), and perhaps also volatile and metal sources (Urabe and Sato, 1978; Stanton, 1990; Yang and Scott, 1996; Hannington et al., 1999) for subseafloor hydrothermal systems that formed altered zones and VHMS deposits. Synvolcanic intrusive sills, cryptodomes, dykes and subvolcanic plutons are volumetrically important in submarine volcanic successions (Polya et al., 1986; McPhie and Allen,
1992; Doyle and Huston, 1999; Galley, 2003). They may be composite intrusions of variable volumes up to 1000 km3, typically emplaced at depths up to 4 km below the seafloor (Nielsen et al., 1981; Galley, 2003; Whalen et al., 2004). Intrusions and intrusion-related altered zones that significantly post-date volcanism are also common in ancient submarine volcanic successions; however, they are not the focus of this chapter. Alteration can occur within intrusions (deuteric and local hydrothermal alteration), locally in the immediate host rocks (contact alteration) or regionally in the host succession (regional hydrothermal alteration) (Fig. 6.1). This chapter describes the role of intrusions in generating regional hydrothermal systems, regional hydrothermally altered zones, altered zones within intrusions and contact altered zones around both small-volume, near-seafloor and larger, deeper intrusions in submarine volcanic successions. The final section presents a case study of contact altered zones associated with the Darwin Granite in the southern Mount Read Volcanics, western Tasmania. The recognition of altered zones related to synvolcanic intrusions can provide insights into fluid-flow and thermal histories of VHMS districts, and thereby assist mineral exploration.
FIGURE 6.1 | A cartoon of the variety of altered zones associated with synvolcanic intrusions. (A) A deuteric altered zone within the top of a large volume intrusion. (B) A fracture-controlled hydrothermally altered zone at the margins of an intrusion and in the surrounding host rocks. (C) Contact-altered zones around synvolcanic sills emplaced into unconsolidated sediment immediately below the seafloor. (D) Concentric contact-altered zones around a large volume intrusion emplaced at depth. (E) Regional hydrothermally altered zones related to emplacement of a subvolcanic pluton. (F) Afootwall alteration pipe beneath a VHMS deposit.
1 4 0 I CHAPTER 6
the role of intrusions (e.g. Lydon and Jamieson, 1984; Alt et al., 1986; Gillis and Robinson, 1990; Bettison-Varga et al., 1992; Kelley et al., 1992). The convection cell model for hydrothermal systems and the formation of VHMS deposits is based on observations from VHMS deposits and the upper part of the Cretaceous Troodos Massif in Cyprus, where hydrothermal convection was driven by emplacement of late, high-level gabbro stocks into the fractured and permeable crust (e.g. Spooner et al., 1974; Lydon and Jamieson, 1984; Bettison-Varga et al., 1992). This model involves the circulation of seawater in approximately 10 km diameter cells to depths of 3-5 km within the crust (Fig. 6.2). Initially, increased temperatures in the host succession drive dehydration and decarbonation reactions, and fluids migrate away from the intrusion. Buoyant heated connate seawater rises through the permeable volcanic succession, drawing down cold seawater, which is heated as it descends. In this way, magma drives convective circulation of seawater between the seafloor and the intrusion (Norton, 1984; de-Ronde et al., 1994; Galley, 2003). Fluid flow is focused along joints, fractures and faults formed during extension or in response to intrusive pressures (Bettison-Varga et al., 1992). Alternatively, the multi-tiered convection model involves a high-temperature (450-700C) cell, which circulates recycled modified seawater in plutonic rocks at depth, overlain by a low-temperature (350-400C) cell (Gregory and Taylor, 1981; Norton et al., 1984; Alabaster and Pearce, 1985; Kelley et al., 1992). Submarine hydrothermal systems comprise three parts: a down-flow or recharge zone; a high-temperature reaction zone; and an up-flow or discharge zone (Fig. 6.3: Spooner and Fyfe, 1973; Alt, 1999). The locations of the recharge and discharge zones are commonly controlled by faults (Schardt et al., in press). Seawater percolates down through the recharge zone, and is slowly heated and chemically modified by lowtemperature reactions (White, 1970; Gibson et al., 1983; Galley, 1993; Alt, 1999). The reaction zone is a porous reservoir near the heat source where heated seawater reacts with the host rocks, exchanging some elements (Norton, 1984; de-Ronde et al., 1994; von Damm, 1995; Butterfield, 2000; Schardt etal., in press). Hot buoyant hydrothermal fluid (modified seawater) ascends rapidly to the seafloor through the discharge zone, which is characterised by cooling of the fluid, alteration of the host rock, and mineral precipitation (Skirrow and Franklin, 1994; Schardt et al., in press). The rising hydrothermal fluid cools by adiabatic decompression, conductive heat loss, and mixing with cold seawater in the shallow subsurface (Mottl, 1983; Butterfield, 2000). In well-
FIGURE 6.2 | Simple convection cell model for the genesis of the Cyprus VHMS deposits (modified after Heaton and Sheppard, 1977, and Spooner, 1977, in Lydon and Jamieson, 1984).
established hydrothermal systems, the discharge zone may be focused, intensely altered and veined. Surface discharge onto the seafloor may produce high-temperature (150350C) features such as black smokers (Goodfellow and Franklin, 1993; Rona et al., 1993). The temperature of the discharging fluids on the seafloor initially increases, and then gradually decreases to ambient temperatures, in a time scale of 100 to 10,000 years (Ohmoto, 1996). Regional hydrothermal systems are interpreted to be related to large volume intrusions, as the volume of circulating fluid in a hydrothermal system theoretically cannot be greater than the volume of the intrusion (Cathles, 1981). However, small-volume near-seafloor intrusions, which are unlikely to generate significant hydrothermal systems, may be related to larger plutons or stocks at depth that were capable of generating hydrothermal convection (e.g. Bettison-Varga et al., 1992).
Recharge zones
Very little is known about altered zones associated with recharge. They are rarely recognised except in studies of modern crustal alteration beneath mid-ocean ridges (e.g. Mottl, 1983; Saccocia et al., 1994; Alt, 1999), hydrothermal
alteration studies in ophiolites (e.g. Schiffman et al., 1987; Schiffman and Smith, 1988), and studies of O- and S-isotope compositions in ancient hydrothermally altered systems (e.g. Cathles, 1993; Davidson and Kitto, 1997). Rocks in modern recharge zones are pervasively altered at low to moderate temperatures. At less than 150C, oxidation, the fixation of alkalis (mainly Ca and Na), and Mg-metasomatism produces sericite, hematite and clays (Alt, 1999). At higher temperatures (150-350C) anhydrite precipitates, alkalis are leached and Mg is consumed by chlorite in the rock (Alt, 1999). Schiffman and Smith (1988) proposed that the distribution of epidosites in the Troodos ophiolite represent areas of high-temperature alteration involving high fluid-rock ratios. Epidosites are granoblastic, fine- to medium-grained rocks, with little or no relict igneous textures, composed of epidote, quart and chlorite. They are inferred to record reaction zones in which circulating modified seawater reacted with host rocks to form metal-rich hydrothermal fluids, and appear diagnostic of the up-welling and deep recharge parts of the hydrothermal system beneath VHMS deposits. Co-incident whole-rock O-isotope patterns support their formation in proximal recharge zones and up-flow conduits beneath VHMS deposits. Regionally extensive, depth-dependent 618O profiles in the sheeted dyke complex reflect oxygen exchange during prograde regional hydrothermal alteration involving diffuse down-welling of cold seawater (Fig. 6.4). However, surfaces of equal whole-rock 618O are not horizontal but nearly vertical in the central epidosite zone. This suggests up-flow of hot modified seawater within the epidosite zone. The spatial association between gabbro intrusions and the epidosite zones in the sheeted dyke complex indicates a genetic link between the emplacement of these intrusions and focused high-temperature hydrothermal up-flow (Richardson et al., 1987; Bettison-Varga et al., 1992).
Discharge ZOneS Discordant footwall alteration pipes and feldspar-destructive zones that directly underlie VHMS deposits are widely interpreted as discharge zones through which metal-bearing hydrothermal fluid ascended to the seafloor (Sangster, 1972; Large, 1977; Lydon, 1984; Galley, 1993; Skirrow and Franklin, 1994; Brauhart et al., 1998). They are characterised
FIGURE 6.3 | Model of an active geothermal system illustrating the recharge, reaction or reservoir and discharge zones. Seawater is drawn down in broad recharge zones or along faults and reacts at increasing temperatures. Hightemperature reactions (>350C) occur in the reaction zone above a subvolcanic intrusion and hot (>300C) buoyant fluids rise towards the surface in focused or diffuse discharge zones (modified after Alt, 1995a). Not to scale.
FIGURE 6.4 | Cross-section of the Solea graben, Troodos ophiolite, Cyprus, showing surfaces of equal whole-rock d 18 0. Regionally these surfaces are subhorizontal, but in the central epidosite zone they are nearly vertical indicating up-flow of hot, modified seawater during convection. Modified after Schiffman and Smith (1988).
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by Mg-Fe enrichment and Na-Ca depletion and assemblages that include chlorite, sericite, quartz or rare talc (Lydon, 1984; Eastoe et al., 1987; Skirrow and Franklin, 1994; Brauhart et al., 1998). The characteristics and compositional changes associated with discordant footwall alteration pipes are discussed in Section 7.3. Although discordant altered zones typically cut across the regional, deep, semi-conformable altered zones (Galley, 1993; Brauhart et al., 1998), in some successions, they grade laterally into deep, semi-conformable altered zones (Skirrow and Franklin, 1994; Hudak et al., 2000). Gibson et al. (2000) suggested that whether or not deep, semi-conformable altered zones are cut by or transitional with pipe-like altered zones, depends on whether the host succession (footwall) is dominated by coherent volcanic or volcaniclastic facies respectively, or timing of alteration.
Deep, semi-conformable altered zones typically extend for up to 20 km laterally and 1-4 km depth beneath paleoseafloors and VHMS deposits (Gibson et al., 1983, 2000; Cathles, 1993; Galley, 1993; Skirrow and Franklin, 1994). They comprise vertically stacked, sub-horizontal altered zones (Galley, 1993; Skirrow and Franklin, 1994). Generally these are (Fig. 6.5): an upper background K-Mg metasomatic zone; a transitional Na-Mg metasomatic zone; a central silicified zone; and a basal Ca-Fe metasomatic and base metal-leaching zone (Galley, 1993). In many systems only one or two of these altered zones are recognised. The alteration minerals in the semi-conformable altered zones reflect the primary host rock composition, bulk-rock composition established during synvolcanic hydrothermal alteration, and the subsequent metamorphic grade (Paradis et al., in press). In greenschist facies metamorphosed felsic rocks, these zones are typically, from base to top: albite or carbonate zone, silica or sericite zone and sericite or chlorite zone (Gibson et al., 1983; 2000). In mafic rocks, the zones are: albite zone, silica zone and clinozoisite/epidote + quartz zone (Galley, 1993; Skirrow and Franklin, 1994; Gibson et al., 2000; Hannington et al., 2003a). At higher metamorphic grades, such as in the Snow Lake District, mineral assemblages can include kyanite, staurolite, sillimanite, chlorite, biotite, quartz, plagioclase cordierite, amphibole, epidote and garnet (Paradis et al., 1993, in press; Bailes and Galley, 1999). The semi-conformable altered zones are interpreted to be synvolcanic because they have undergone the same degree of tectonic deformation as the surrounding rocks, have prograde mineral assemblages, are spatially associated with VHMS deposits, and are commonly truncated by unaltered synvolcanic intrusions (Gibson et al., 1983; Paradis et al., 1993; Skirrow and Franklin, 1994). At Snow Lake, Paradis et al. (1993) recognised that deep, semi-conformable altered zones were superimposed on low-temperature (possibly diagenetic) altered zones and also cross cut by discordant feldspar-destructive zones associated with VHMS deposits.
PROCESS AND COMPOSITIONAL CHANGES K-Mg metasomatism + Mg, K, Fe -Na, Ca, Cu, Pb, Zn, Si
Silicification or sericitisation + Si, Na -Fe, Mg, Mn,Zn Ca Ca-Fe metasomatism + Ca - M g , Mn, Na, K Fe, Si
Quartz + albite
FIGURE 6.5 | A schematic compilation of regional-scale, deep, semi-conformable altered zones and their characteristics. There is a progression, with increasing depths in submarine volcanic successions, from the background Mg-K metasomatic zone to a transitional Na-Mg metasomatic zone characterised by feldspar alteration, a central silicified zone and a basal Ca-Fe metasomatic and base-metal leaching zone that typically includes epidote or chlorite, After Gibson et al. (1983), Galley (1993), Skirrow and Franklin (1994), and Brauhart etal. (1998).
They suggested that regional hydrothermal alteration postdated the onset of diagenetic alteration, and pre-dated footwall alteration associated with hydrothermal alteration and mineralisation. In some Canadian examples and at Panorama in western Australia, deep, semi-conformable altered zones are gradational with discordant footwall alteration pipes suggesting that regional hydrothermal alteration was synchronous with the VHMS-related alteration (Gibson et al., 1999). Deep, semi-conformable altered zones are commonly spatially and temporally associated with subsurface synvolcanic intrusions (Galley, 1993, 2003). These intrusions can be individual granitic or porphyritic plutons or sheeted
dyke swarms (e.g. Gibson et al., 1983; de-Ronde et al., 1994; Brauhart et al., 1998). The tops of the subvolcanic intrusions and associated dykes may be included in the basal semiconformable altered zone (e.g. Galley, 1993; Brauhart et al., 1998). One of the best-documented examples of the spatial association between a subvolcanic intrusion, regional-scale semi-conformable altered zones and VHMS deposits comes from the Panorama district in Western Australia. Discordant chlorite + quartz zones directly beneath the VHMS deposits, are spatially associated with feldspar-destructive sericite + quartz zones in the top of the Strelley Granite pluton
FIGURE 6.6 | Geology and altered zones within part of the Strelley succession, Panorama district, Western Australia (modified after Brauhart et al., 1998).
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1994). In the Snow Lake district Skirrow and Franklin (1994) estimated that approximately 1.1 x 107 metric tons of SiO2 was added by a minimum 12 km3 of hydrothermal fluid at 1 2 km depth. Interactions between large volumes of modified seawater and volcanic successions at depth are supported by geochemical and geophysical research at active ocean spreading ridges (e.g. Spooner and Fyfe, 1973; Bischoff andDickson, 1975). Deep, semi-conformable altered zones are characterised by mineral assemblages that reflect the reactions of glass and both primary and secondary minerals with seawater at temperatures up to 400C (Galley, 1993).
Background K-Mg metasomatic zones These zones are often described as the least-altered or diagenetically altered zones. At low temperatures (50-140C) in the shallow subseafloor, the interaction of abundant seawater with the volcanic succession produces Mg-K-rich alteration assemblages (Seyfried and Bischoff, 1977; Galley, 1993). In felsic rocks these mineral assemblages include adularia and Mg-smectite, whereas in mafic rocks they are dominated by zeolites and Mg-smectite. Seawater becomes enriched in Si, Fe3+, Mn and lesser amounts of Ca, Mg and sulfur (Seyfried and Bischoff, 1977). Current mineral assemblages reflect the regional metamorphic grade. For example, at Snow Lake the diagenetically altered zone is characterised by quartz + biotite + garnet, Fe2O3, MgO and K2O gains and CaO, Na 2 O, Cu, Pb, Zn losses (Paradis et al., in press). These compositional changes are consistent with low-temperature seawater-dominated diagenesis of felsic volcanic facies to clays and zeolites (Section 5.3). The current mineral assemblage reflects the overprint of amphibolite facies metamorphism. In the Panorama district the background alteration mineral assemblage includes feldspar + calcite ankerite + quartz + pyrite sericite consistent with greenschist facies metamorphism of clays and zeolites in felsic volcanic rocks (Brauhart et al., 1998).
FIGURE 6.7 | Schematic section of the geology and altered zones in the Kangaroo Caves footwall succession, Panorama district, Western Australia (modified after Brauhart et al., 1998). See Figure 6.6 for legend.
(Figs 6.6 and 6.7; Brauhart et al., 1998). Faults bounding the discordant chlorite + quartz zone in the footwall of the Kangaroo Caves deposit (Fig. 6.7) controlled the distribution of the feldspar-destructive sericite + quartz zone in the Strelley Granite (Brauhart et al., 1998). The variations in alteration mineral assemblage down through the semi-conformable altered zones correspond to geochemical gradients in which there are gradual decreases in the Mg/Ca, Mg/Na and Na/Ca ratios of the altered rocks with increasing depths (Galley, 1993). Oxygen-isotope compositions suggest that the altered rocks are 18O enriched with respect to unaltered volcanic rocks (Munha and Kerrich, 1980; Barringa and Kerrich, 1984). The geochemical gradients and O-isotope data are consistent with metasomatic alteration resulting from the interaction of volcanic rocks with seawater (Muehlenbachs and Clayton, 1972; Lagerbald and Gorbatschev, 1985; Cathles, 1993). Although modified seawater is interpreted to be the main component, magmatic fluids may have also contributed to the hydrothermal fluid (Lagerbald and Gorbatschev, 1985). The spatial association between altered zones and subsurface intrusions suggests a genetic link where intrusions may have provided heat and or fluid to the hydrothermal system. The extent and intensity of deep, semi-conformable altered zones implies that very large volumes of fluid must have reacted with the host volcanic rocks (Skirrow and Franklin,
Transitional zone or Na-Mg metasomatic zones With increasing stratigraphic depth there is a transition from K-rich zones to Na-rich zones (Munha et al., 1980; Munha and Kerrich, 1980; Lagerbald and Gorbatschev, 1985; Schiffman and Smith, 1988; Brauhart et al., 2001). The NaMg metasomatic zones are characterised by the occurrence of feldspar, usually albite. Greenschist facies assemblages typically include chlorite, sericite, albite, epidote and quartz in mafic rocks, and albite, quartz, sericite chlorite carbonate (calcite or dolomite) in felsic rocks (Gibson et al., 2000). In the Panorama district, felsic rocks in the feldspar zone have the assemblage K-feldspar or albite + sericite + quartz + ankerite + leucoxene pyrite (Brauhart et al., 1998). The transition to Na-rich zones reflects the behaviour of Na and K in seawater at elevated temperatures. Between 140 and 200C there is a transition between K- and Na-metasomatism (Seyfried and Bischoff, 1977). Munha et al. (1980) suggested that at lower temperatures (<150C), Na in glass is exchanged for K in seawater, resulting in precipitation of K-rich zeolites
and possibly K-feldspar. At higher temperatures, K in the rock is exchanged for Na in seawater, resulting in the formation of albite. Thus at moderate temperatures (140300C), metasomatic reactions between modified seawater and the volcanic succession result in Na-Mg alteration assemblages (Seyfried et al., 1988). Regardless of the rock type, alteration mineral assemblages include Mg-smectite + chlorite + quartz + albite, and compositional changes are Na 2 O and MgO gains, and CaO, Zn and Cu losses (Gibson et al., 2000). The removal of Mg from seawater lowers the pH of the fluid and seawater evolves from a moderately alkali, Mg-K-Na-SO4rich fluid to a hot acidic Si-Na-Ca-rich hydrothermal fluid (Bischoff and Seyfried, 1978; Seyfvied et al., 1988). Silicified zones In greenschist facies felsic and some mafic rocks, the central altered zone is typically silicified, with assemblages of quartz
+ plagioclase or albite (Skirrow and Franklin, 1994; Gibson et al., 2000). In some mafic rocks, the central zone is sericitic, dominated by sericite + quartz chlorite (Gibson et al., 2000). Central silicified or sericite zones overprint regional albite zones (Galley, 1993). At Snow Lake the silicified zone is spatially and temporally associated with VHMS deposits and is zoned laterally from a silica zone to epidote and FeMg-metasomatic zones (amphibolite grade; garnet + chlorite biotite staurolite) (Skirrow and Franklin, 1994). Silicified zones are typically spatially associated with synvolcanic intrusions and the intensity and pervasiveness of alteration increases with proximity to the intrusions (Skirrow and Franklin, 1994; Paradis et al., in press). Silicified zones commonly contain patches of quartz + feldspar-altered rock, quartz-altered clasts in volcaniclastic facies, and quartz veins (e.g. Fig. 6.8A: Gibson et al., 1983; Skirrow and Franklin, 1994). The patches of quartz + feldsparaltered rock are restricted to flow-top breccias, and flow-
A. Central silicified zone Moderate, patchy quartz alteration in this andesite from the central silicified zone resulted in a fine-grained, pale rock, which resembles a rhyolite. Amulet Formation, Noranda district, Buttercup Hill, Canada.
B. Epidote + quartz zone This approximately one metre-wide patch of epidote + quartz alteration facies in the upper Amulet andesite has an irregular shape typical of patchy alteration in the basal episite + quartz zone. The groundmass has been pervasively epidote + quartz altered. Amulet Formation, Noranda district, Canada.
C. Epidote + quartz zone Amygdales in this patch of epidote + quartz-altered andesite from the basal epidote + quartz zone have amoeboid shapes and were lined with Fe-oxides and filled with epidote + quartz. Amulet Formation, Noranda district, Canada.
FIGURE 6.8 | Photographs from deep semi-conformable alteration zones in the Noranda district, Canada.
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banded and vesicular lavas (Gibson et al., 1983). In mafic volcanic rock the originally glassy groundmass, elsewhere typically altered to chlorite, is altered to quartz in this zone (Gibson et al., 2000). This led to intensely silicified andesites in the Noranda sequence being misinterpreted as rhyolite: the Amulet rhyolite (Gibson et al., 1983). With increasing depth, seawater carries larger amounts of Si as Si solubility increases with temperature and pressure, and is enhanced in NaCl solutions or where the fluid is in contact with free Si or glass (Kennedy, 1950; Fournier, 1985). The Si-rich hydrothermal fluid is rapidly heated beyond the temperature of the quartz solubility maximum: 340-400C at pressures below 900 bars (Fig. 6.9: Kennedy, 1950; MacGeehan, 1978; Skirrow and Franklin, 1994). The result is gains in SiO2 and Na 2 O, due to the precipitation of silica within pore spaces and albitisation, and losses in FeO, MgO, CaO, K 2 O, MnO and other metals from the volcanic rocks (Gibson et al., 1983, 2000; Lagerbald and Gorbatschev, 1985; Galley, 1993; Skirrow and Franklin, 1994). The Fe3+, Mg and possibly Zn leached from the silicified zone may have been transported laterally away from this environment, thereby producing semi-conformable Fe-Mg-metasomatised zones (Skirrow and Franklin, 1994). A second silicified zone is common directly beneath the seafloor in the Snow Lake, Noranda and Matagami Lake districts, where it is directly overlain by exhalites. This nearseafloor, silicified zone is related to low-temperature silicification during the hydrothermal alteration and devitrification of glass in cooling pillow basalts and andesites (Skirrow and Franklin, 1994; Galley et al., 2002).
Basal Ca-Fe metasomatic zones Mineral assemblages in basal semi-conformable altered zones are dependent on the host-rock composition and porosity. In felsic rocks, basal zones are typically sericite or chlorite zones, whereas in mafic rocks they are clinozoisite or epidote + quartz zones (Gibson et al., 2000; Hannington et al., 2003a). Sericite zones are characterised by sericite + quartz Mgchlorite assemblages (Gibson et al., 2000). Chlorite zones are characterised by chloritoid + Fe-chlorite Fe-carbonate assemblages (Gibson et al., 2000). Epidote + quartz zones are characterised by epidote + quartz + calcite + actinolite + chlorite assemblages (Galley, 1993). Two alteration textures are persistent in epidote + quartz zones: pervasive and patchy. Pervasive epidote + quartz occurs as selective pervasive replacement of plagioclase phenocrysts or the groundmass by epidote, crystallisation of fine quartz patches in the groundmass (e.g. Fig. 6.8B), and replacement of Fe-Ti-oxide grain rims by sphene (Skirrow and Franklin, 1994). Patchy epidote + quartz occurs as less than 1 cm to 2 m irregular ovoids or amoeboid patches that infill vesicles and gas cavities within mafic lavas (e.g. Fig. 6.8C: Gibson et al., 1983; Skirrow and Franklin, 1994). These patchy textures are similar to the epidote + quartz metadomains described in spilites by Smith (1968, 1974, 1977; Smith et al., 1982). These basal zones may grade into the discordant (discharge) altered zones that cut through the overlying semiconformable and background altered zones (Brauhart et al., 1998). Epidote + quartz zones are enriched in CaO and Sr and depleted of MgO, Na 2 O, K 2 O, FeO MnO, Ba and base metals (MacGeehan, 1978; Gibson et al., 1983; Richardson et al., 1987; Schiffman and Smith, 1988; Skirrow and Franklin, 1994). Unlike the Canadian examples, the epidote + quartz zone in the Panorama district does not appear to have been the source of leached base metals (Brauhart et al., 2001). At high temperatures (300-500C), Ca-Fe-S-base metalrich hydrothermal fluid reacts with the volcanic succession and possibly also with parts of the subsurface intrusion forming mineral assemblages typical of the basal Ca-Femetasomatic zones. Experimental work suggests that epidote + quartz alteration involved modified seawater (Mg-depleted, Ca-Na-K-Cl fluid) at temperatures of 35O-5OOC and low water-rock ratios of less than three (Gibson et al., 2000). This zone is interpreted to represent the high-temperature interaction between modified seawater and the host volcanic facies to form metal-rich hydrothermal fluid at the deepest part of the hydrothermal convection system. Hence, it represents the roots of up-welling fluid discharge zones (Galley, 1993). Alternatively, Smith (1968, 1977) interpreted these district-scale zones of albitised basalt with Ca-rich epidote + quartz and pumpellyite + quartz metadomains to have formed during heterogenous burial metamorphism where local fluid flow promoted redistribution of elements. In some cases, he noted that the alteration was focussed suggesting that it was related to local hydrothermal systems and subseafloor fluid circulation.
FIGURE 6.9 | Calculated solubilities for quartz in water up to 900C at pressures between 200 and 1000 bars (after Fournier, 1985). The shaded area outlines the conditions for retrograde solubility.
have anomalous mineral assemblages and alkali contents for igneous rocks (e.g. Fig. 6.11; Hughes, 1973), which suggest metasomatic rather than metamorphic origins (Gibson et al., 1983; Galley, 1993). Gibson et al. (1983) documented a vertically stacked sequence of altered zones in the Noranda sequence, from top to bottom: albite zone (spilites), silicified zone, and epidote + quartz zone (Fig. 3.16). This is consistent with a progression from low-temperature diagenesis to moderate- and hightemperature metasomatism with depth in the stratigraphy. Munha and Kerrich (1980) referred to this process of temperature and hence depth dependent metasomatism as 'hydrothermal metamorphism', a term that reflects the combined processes that operated in the subseafloor. In areas of volcanic and hydrothermal activity, it is probable that there is a spectrum of alteration between diagenesis and hydrothermal alteration where these processes operate in combination. Hydrothermal activity in the depositional basin would accelerate and intensify the process of diagenesis by contributing additional fluid and heat, and by promoting convection (Iijima, 1974; Marsaglia and Tazaki, 1992). Deep, semi-conformable altered zones are assumed to be the products of hydrothermal alteration within regional subseafloor hydrothermal systems (Gibson et al., 1983; Galley, 1993). These hydrothermal systems involve the largescale convection of modified seawater through the permeable volcanic successions (Spooner and Fyfe, 1973; Galley, 1993). The distribution of altered zones and spatial association with subsurface intrusions suggests that subsurface intrusions, augmented by heat from the cooling volcanic succession, may be the driving force for hydrothermal convection (Campbell et al., 1981; Lesher et al., 1986; Cathles, 1993; Galley, 1993; Skirrow and Franklin, 1994). Where the upper contacts of subsurface intrusions are sub-parallel to the volcanic-strata, the overlying isotherms are also semi-conformable with the strata and progressive temperature-dependent seawater-rock
FIGURE 6.10 j The relationships between fluid convection, diagenesis, metamorphism and regional hydrothermal alteration in submarine volcanic successions that host VHMS deposits. (A) Diagenetic-metamorphic system, where there is a progression from diagenesis to isochemical metamorphism with increasing temperature and depth in the subseafloor. This transition reflects the maximum depth to which seawater circulates and reacts with the host rocks. (B) Diagenetic-hydrothermal system, where a subsurface intrusion promotes deep circulation of fluid via the recharge, reservoir and discharge zones. The depth progression from diagenesis to regional hydrothermal alteration (deep, semi-conformable alteration) is dependent on temperature and fluid circulation.
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FIGURE 6.11 | Alkali ratios for altered andesite samples from the Amulet rhyolite, Noranda district, Canada (after Gibson et al., 1983). Fields for the primary and metasomatised (albite-altered) andesites and basalts are from Hughes (1973).
reactions form a series of semi-conformable altered zones (Galley, 1993). In axial mid ocean ridge hydrothermal systems, downwelling seawaters traverse extremely steep temperature gradients in the upper crust, from less than 50C near the seafloor to more than 250C at 1-2 km depth (Mottl, 1983). Thus, vertically stacked deep, semi-conformable altered zones result from metasomatic reactions that take place at progressively higher temperatures with depth in the succession (Galley, 1993). The decrease in pervasiveness of alteration, from widespread nearly uniform diagenesis to more restricted and patchy silicification and Ca-Fe metasomatism, may reflect decreasing permeability with depth. The distribution, relative timing, and spatial association with VHMS deposits suggest a genetic link between regional hydrothermal alteration and mineralisation. Some authors have proposed that the deep, semi-conformable altered zones acted as reservoirs from which metals and sulfur were leached (e.g. Gibson et al., 1983; Lagerbald and Gorbatschev, 1985; Galley, 1993; Skirrow and Franklin, 1994). As such they represent much larger exploration targets than the discordant altered footwall zones (Galley, 1993).
subaerial and submarine successions (Honnorez et al., 1979; Bohlke et al., 1980; McConnell et al., 1995). Sederholm (1929) originally defined deuteric alteration as the alteration that takes place 'in direct continuation of the consolidation of the magma' and thus it is considered a magmatic alteration process. It is the earliest alteration style and is a shortlived process, typically occurring as intrusions cool from temperatures of several hundred degrees centigrade (Ade-Hall etal., 1968; Honnorez etal., 1979). Small volume synvolcanic intrusions typically cool too rapidly to experience deuteric alteration (cf. Gromme et al., 1969). In contrast, granitoids and large-volume sills may have altered zones in their upper parts resulting from reactions between rising magmatic fluids and the cooling intrusions (e.g. Fig. 6.1A). Deuteric textural changes are minimal (Wilshire, 1959). Phenocrysts, particularly feldspars and mafic minerals, such as pyroxene or olivine, may be pseudomorphed by amphibole, chlorite or smectite (Fuller, 1938; Bohlke et al., 1980; Destrigneville et al., 1991). Open spaces, such as vesicles, mariolitic voids, and quench fractures, are lined or filled with smectite, zeolites, carbonate, biotite, chlorite and oxides (Wilshire, 1959; Furbish and Schrader, 1980; Destrigneville et al., 1991). High-Ti minerals, such as titanomagnetite, are oxidised and altered to low-Ti minerals, such as ilmenite hematite (Butler and Burbank, 1929; Ade-Hall et al., 1968; Surdam, 1968; Sherwood, 1988). Deuteric alteration does not involve major chemical composition changes; some components may be locally redistributed at sub-millimetre scales or undergo oxidation state changes (e.g. Fe2+/Fe3+ ratio, Scott and Hajash, 1976) that may alter rock thermomagnetic properties (Ade-Hall et al., 1968; Sherwood, 1988). The changes are quantitatively unimportant when compared to the products of long-lived diagenesis and hydrothermal alteration and may be difficult to distinguish from those of other alteration styles.
Hydrothermal alteration
Altered zones within synvolcanic intrusions may also result from reactions with seawater or modified seawater circulating through the intrusion, either during the prograde hightemperature stage of hydrothermal activity or during cooling. If the hydrostatic pressure is high enough (at sufficient depths) seawater will be forced into thermal contraction fractures in the cooling intrusion (Burnham, 1979). The time interval for seawater-intrusion interaction may be limited by the rapid development of a local intrusion-related hydrothermal system in the host succession, which would result in the lithification and filling of primary pore space inhibiting fluid flow. Thereafter, episodic seawater-intrusion interaction would occur only if the fluid pressure exceeds the tensile strength causing the altered rock adjacent to the contact to fracture (Secor, 1965, in Fournier 1985; Phillips, 1973; Henley and McNabb, 1978). Alteration follows the advancing front of brittle fracturing to deeper and deeper levels within the intrusion (Burnham, 1979; Giggenbach, 1997). The resulting altered zones may be pervasive, occur along cooling fronts or more commonly as selective-pervasive alteration adjacent to fractures or veins. Alteration minerals fill vesicles, miarolitic voids and fractures, cement hydraulic
Deuteric alteration
Deuteric alteration, also referred to as autohydration or autometamorphism, is the alteration of recently crystallised magma by trapped magmatic fluid exsolved from the same cooling magma (Honnorez et al., 1979; Destrigneville et al., 1991). It has been recorded in intrusions and lavas in both
breccias, and pseudomorph primary magmatic minerals (Mevel and Cannat, 1991; Gillis et al., 1993; Kelley and Gillis, 1993; Nehlig, 1993; Davidson, 1998; Galley, 2003). Polya et al. (1986) and Davidson (1998) described proximal zones of hydrothermal alteration within the Cambrian Murchison Granite, western Tasmania. They described narrow, texturally destructive intense K-feldspar zones, associated with calcite veins, irregularly distributed in the margins of the granite and patchy selective-pervasive chlorite zones with chlorite pseudomorphs after biotite and hornblende or patches of chlorite pyrite sphene. The significant mineralogical, compositional and isotopic changes associated with proximal hydrothermal alteration within intrusions are consistent with seawater-rock interaction (Gregory and Taylor, 1981; Stakes and Taylor, 1992; Cathles, 1993; Galley, 2003). Galley (2003) identified three types of early hydrothermal and magmatic alteration within subvolcanic intrusions in the Snow Lake, Noranda and Sturgeon Lake districts. The earliest, a greenschist alteration facies in quartz diorite intrusions, is manifest as pervasive epidote + quartz, and epidote + actinolite + quartz + albite + magnetite sulfides, which replaced primary minerals and infilled miarolitic cavities, vesicles and fractures. Mass change calculations suggest CaO, Sr, Pb and CO 2 were gained and Fe2O3, MgO, Cu, Zn, Mo, Na 2 O, K2O and Ba lost. Galley (2003) interpreted this facies to be the product of hightemperature hydrothermal-magmatic alteration resulting from emplacement of quartz-diorite intrusions into a seawatersaturated succession. The second chlorite-rich alteration facies is characterised by quartz + chlorite + sericite and chlorite + sulfide-filled fractures and vein selvages. It is most intense near the margins of intrusions and directly beneath VHMS deposits. The chlorite-rich zones gained Fe2O3, MgO, Cu Pb, K2O, Ba, and Zn, and lost CaO, Na 2 O, Sr SiO2, Ba and CO 2 and are interpreted to result from hydrothermal alteration (Galley, 2003). Overprinting both of these zones is a biotite-rich alteration facies associated with silicification, and Cu-Mo-rich veins and breccia, which is interpreted as a magmatic alteration facies associated with late stage dykes (Galley, 2003). Hydrothermal alteration may also result from the absorption of fluid from and assimilation with sediment inclusions incorporated into the magma as it was emplaced into wet unconsolidated sediment. Wilshire and Hobbs (1962) described hydrothermal alteration in the margin of a peperitic latite intrusion in a submarine volcaniclastic succession, near Port Kembla in New South Wales. Alkali feldspar + chlorite + carbonate-rich zones coincide with abundant sediment inclusions and quench fractures in the margin of the intrusion, and the sedimentary inclusions have been chlorite zeolites carbonate altered. The altered latite gained Na 2 O and volatiles, and lost SiO2, A12O3, Fe2O3, K 2 O, MgO and CaO, whereas the sediment inclusions lost Na2O and volatiles, and gained CaO and MgO K 2 O.
150 | CHAPTER 6
FIGURE 6.12 | Cartoons of the variety of contact altered zones around intrusions. (A) Cross-section showing two sills that were emplaced into wet unconsolidated sediment at shallow levels beneath the seafloor. The sills both have single low-grade indurated zones, which have a lower porosity than the surrounding host turbidites (after Einsele et al., 1980). (B) Schematic crosssection through roughly concentric zeolite and clay zones around a granite emplaced into felsic volcanic fades in the Green Tuff Belt, Japan. These zones are, from the intrusion outwards: a zeolite zone, devitrified zone, and leastaltered zone (after Utada, 1991). (C) Schematic section of the asymmetric altered halo around the Rustenberg Layered Suite intrusions in the Rooiberg felsic volcanic rocks of the Bushveld Complex, Africa (after Schweitzer and Hatton, 1995). Above the intrusion is a thick (>1.4 km) halo comprising biotite hornfeis and quartz + sericite + albite zones, which are enriched in K2O, MgO and base metals. Beneath the intrusion is a thinner (<400 m) granoblastic zone, in which primary volcanic textures are overprinted by metamorphic textures without significant compositional changes. Schweitzer and Hatton (1995) postulated that the reason for the asymmetrical zonation was that heated fluid convected freely above the intrusion and hydrothermal alteration dominated, whereas buoyant convection was inhibited beneath the intrusion acting as a seal, and thermal metamorphism dominated. (D) Map view of the prograde olivine, pyroxene and actinolite + chlorite zones associated with emplacement of the Skaergaard intrusion into mafic volcanic rocks, east Greenland (after Manning and Bird, 1991,1995). In the outer pyroxene zone and adjacent to fractures in the pyroxene and olivine zones, high-temperature mineral assemblages are overprinted by actinolite + chlorite, suggesting retrograde metamorphism occurred as temperatures dropped and cooler hydrothermal fluids migrated inwards through fractures.
rate of cooling; and the subsequent regional metamorphic grade. Although it is difficult to generalise about the mineralogy of contact altered zones, there are a few indicator minerals that are almost exclusively generated by intrusionrelated hydrothermal alteration (i.e. minerals associated with magmatic systems such as biotite, diaspore, fluorite, kaolinite, magnetite, pyrophyllite, rutile, topaz and tourmaline). Typically altered halos associated with small-volume intrusions emplaced at shallow depths below the seafloor comprise low-grade altered zones adjacent to the intrusion, which grade into partially altered zones at the peripheries. Low-grade altered zones may be manifest as indurated sediment (e.g. Einsele et al., 1980; Kano, 1989), fused glass (e.g. Ross and Smith, 1960; Smith, I960; Christiansen and Lipman, 1966; Schmincke, 1967; McPhie and Hunns,
1995), devitrified glass (e.g. Schweitzer and Hatton, 1995; WoldeGabriel et al., 1999), palagonite or clay minerals in mafic volcanic rocks (e.g. Upton and Wadsworth, 1970; Jakobsson, 1972; 1978) or zeolite and clay minerals in felsic volcanic rocks (e.g. Iijima, 1978; Utada, 1991). In contrast, high-grade altered zones tend to be associated with large volume subvolcanic intrusions and include hightemperature (up to 1000C) mineral assemblages. For example, Seki et al. (1969) reported five high-grade altered zones around a large intrusion in the Neogene Green Tuff Belt, Japan. From the contact to the margin they were: amphibole zone, actinolite zone, pumpellyite + prehnite + chlorite zone, laumonite + mixed-layer chlorite zone, and clinoptilolite + vermiculite zone.
Indurated or fused zones Thin contact altered zones of fused or secondary welded volcanic glass are common adjacent to intrusions and lavas in subaerial volcanic successions (e.g. Ross and Smith, I960; Smith, 1960; Christiansen and Lipman, 1966; Schmincke, 1967; WoldeGabriel et al., 1999), and also occur around intrusions in ancient submarine volcanic successions (e.g. Ito etal., 1984, in Kano, 1989; McPhie and Hunns, 1995). Christiansen and Lipman (1966) used the term fused for the induration and deformation of glassy clasts resulting from heating by adjacent lava, but emphasised that the term should not be taken to imply that melting (fusion) had occurred. They described altered subaerial tuffs adjacent to the Combs Peak rhyolite lavas and domes near Fortymile Canyon, southern Nevada. Three altered zones were developed parallel to the lava contact: an outer red zone characterised by the oxidation of glass, a middle indurated or partially fused zone and an inner densely fused zone characterised by fiamme and eutaxitic texture (Figs 6.13 and 6.14). In this case, eutaxitic texture was interpreted to result from the re-heating and accompanying load compaction of originally glassy pumice clasts in tuffs beneath the lava as a result of its emplacement (Christiansen and Lipman, 1966). The minimum temperature required for this partial welding is 535C (Smith, 1960). Typically, indurated or fused zones closely parallel lava or intrusion contacts and may be several millimetres to tens of metres thick (e.g. Christiansen and Lipman, 1966; Einsele, 1985; Keating and Geissman, 1998). They are commonly associated with thin (< 1100 m) intrusions that have peperitic or irregular contacts indicating emplacement into wet unconsolidated sediments (Kokelaar, 1982; Branney and Suthren, 1988; McPhie and Hunns, 1995; Keating and Geissman, 1998). Induration of sediment adjacent to contacts and around juvenile clasts in peperite is typically accompanied by changes in colour associated with thin (cm scale) carbonate, quartz or Fe-oxide altered halos (Fig. 6.15A: Schmincke, 1967; Kokelaar, 1982; Kano, 1989; Hunns and McPhie, 1999). The most significant textural changes in this zone are contact-parallel fiamme and eutaxitic textures in pumice-rich facies (Fig. 6.15B: McPhie and Hunns, 1995).
FIGURE 6.13 | Distribution of the fused zone adjacent to the Combs Peak rhyolite, near Fortymile Canyon, southern Nevada (modified after Christiansen and Lipman, 1966).
FIGURE 6.14 | Idealised relationships between the Combs Peak rhyolite (Nevada), the three fused zones and overprinting devitrified zones (modified after Christiansen and Lipman, 1966).
Devitrified zones Devitrified zones are characterised by high-temperature devitrification textures such as spherulites, lithophysae and micropoikilitic texture (Christiansen and Lipman, 1966; McPhie and Hunns, 1995). It is important to note that devitrification textures generated from re-heating of glassy volcanic facies by intrusions are indistinguishable from those formed during first cooling (Lofgren, 1971a, 1971b). Narrow zones oriented parallel to intrusion contacts may be completely or partially devitrified (e.g. Keating and Geissman, 1998; WoldeGabriel et al., 1999). They may overprint fused zones. For example, Christiansen and Lipman (1966) described superposition of three devitrified zones on to three fused zones in bedded rhyolitic tuffs (Fig. 6.14): an outer porous glassy zone, a middle dense glassy zone (vitrophyre that is commonly perlitic), and an inner crystalline zone with microlites, spherulites and lithophysae.
Compositional changes associated with devitrification are usually negligible. WoldeGabriel et al. (1999) found that devitrification in felsic volcaniclastic rocks in a 10m thick contact zone around a basaltic intrusion at Grants Ridge, New Mexico, was associated with minor gains in K2O and losses in H 2 O, Na 2 O, F, Fe2O3. The margins of the intrusion were slightly enriched in SiO2, K2O and P 2 O 5 and depleted in Fe2O3. They concluded that the thermal effects of the intrusion induced devitrification, dehydration and vapourphase expulsion in the contact zone. Vapour-phase expulsion of fluoride, chloride, hydroxide, sulfide, and CO 2 from silicic glass may have been responsible for the subtle chemical variations during devitrification (cf. Weaver et al., 1990).
Zeolite, clay or palagonite zones Low-temperature altered zones characterised by palagonite, zeolite and clay minerals in mafic volcanic rocks (e.g. Upton and Wadsworth, 1970), and zeolite and clay minerals in felsic volcanic rocks (Utada, 1991) are common around shallow synvolcanic intrusions in submarine volcanic successions. Mineral assemblages in these zones typically reflect the host rock compositions. For example, altered zones around granitoids in the felsic volcanic rocks of the Green Tuff Belt contain calcic zeolites (Iijima, 1978; Utada, 1991). In contrast, palagonite dominates altered zones around dykes in
1 5 2 | CHAPTER 6
A. Indurated siltstone in peperite The irregular clasts of indurated and silicified siltstone (grey) are mixed with feldspar-phyric rhyolite (green) clasts in this peperitic contact between rhyolite and siltstone. Away from the rhyolite contact, the host siltstone is green-grey, but fades to cream or pale green silicified siltstone in a zone about 1-2 cm wide adjacent to the rhyolite clasts in the peperite. This local colour change and silicification result from the thermal metamorphism of the unconsolidated silt in contact with hot rhyolite.
Early Permian Berserker beds, Mount Chalmers district, Queensland.
B. Fused pumice breccia Well-developed fiamme (F) and eutaxitic texture characterise the fused zone in this pumice breccia immediately adjacent to a rhyolitic sill. Away from the rhyolite, fiamme in the pumice breccia are indistinct and parallel to bedding, whereas in the fused zone they parallel the pumice breccia-rhyolite contact. The fiamme and eutaxitic texture result from the partial welding and compaction of glassy pumice clasts during heating associated with emplacement of the rhyolite (McPhie and Hunns, 1995).
Early Permian Berserker beds, Mount Chalmers district, Queensland.
Figure 6.15 | Photographs of hand specimens from the indurated and fused zones adjacent to rhyolite sills near the IVIount Chalmers VHMS deposit, Queensland.
submarine basaltic hyaloclastite at Surtsey (Jakobsson, 1972, 1978; Jakobsson and Moore, 1986), and chabazite, analcime, thomsonite, mesolite, phillipsite and natrolite characterise the zeolite zone associated with a swarm of sills in basaltic lavas and breccias at Piton des Neiges volcano on Reunion Island (Lacroix, 1936; Upton and Wadsworth, 1970). Zeolites in these zones may be accompanied by chlorite, epidote, carbonate and clay minerals. Compositional changes in the zeolite, clay or palagonite zones include K2O and MgO gains, and SiO2 and CaO losses (Hart, 1969; Thompson, 1973; Honnorezetal., 1979). These are consistent with low-temperature (<150C) reactions with seawater promoting oxidation, fixation of alkalis, and exchange of seawater-Mg for rock-Ca to form smectite (Alt, 1999).
Rustenburg Layered Suite in the felsic Rooiberg volcanic rocks of the Bushveld Complex (Fig. 6.12C). The asymmetric aureole contains a biotite hornfels zone (immediately above the Rustenburg Layered Suite), and an overlying quartz + sericite + albite zone, which grades up into least-altered, devitrified volcanic rocks. In the quartz + sericite + albite zone, hornblende or chlorite replaced mafic phenocrysts, and quartz + chlorite + epidote replaced the glassy groundmass. Primary compositions may be significantly modified in greenschist facies zones. They are commonly enriched in K2O and MgO and depleted in CaO, Fe2O3, Na 2 O and MnO (Schweitzer and Hatton, 1995; Large et al., 1996). The behaviour of SiO2 is variable. The mineralogical and compositional changes reflect high-temperature (300-450C) seawater-rock interactions similar to some proximal altered zones associated with VHMS ore deposits (Galley, 2003).
Greenschist facies zones Silicified zones Synvolcanic granitoids, large composite intrusions and clusters of sills or dykes commonly have altered zones with epidote-, chlorite-, sericite-, biotite- or K-feldspar-bearing mineral assemblages characteristic of greenschist facies metamorphism (Polya et al., 1986; Boulter, 1993; Neuhoff et al., 1997; Galley, 2003). For example, Schweitzer and Hatton (1995) described a 1.4 km thick greenschist facies aureole above the mafic Silicified zones are typically pale grey in colour and can be massive pervasive or patchy in texture, filling vesicles and fractures, or cementing breccias (Humphris and Thompson, 1978; Skirrow and Franklin, 1994; Gifkins and Allen, 2001). They comprise chalcedony, cristobalite, quartz, quartz + feldspar, or quartz + sericite dominated alteration mineral assemblages.
Skirrow and Franklin (1994) described 10 cm to 2 m thick silicified contact aureoles associated with unaltered plagioclase- and quartz + plagioclase-phyric porphyry dykes in the submarine volcanic rocks beneath the Chisel Lake VHMS deposit in the Snow Lake district. The weakly silicified mottled zones consist of irregular light grey patches of quartz + plagioclase + hornblende + magnetite biotite, which coalesce into massive quartz + plagioclase rock in intensely silicified zones. Compositional changes include gains in total mass and SiO2, which may be accompanied by gains in K2O or Na 2 O, and losses in Fe2O3, MgO, CaO and Zn (MacGeehan, 1978; Skirrow and Franklin, 1994; Gifkins and Allen, 2001). Silicification is a common feature of hydrothermal alteration and incorporates both the addition of Si (largely as vein infill) and the redistribution of Si that was originally in glass or cristobalite (Henley and Ellis, 1983). Circulating heated seawater can leach Si from the intrusion or felsic volcanic glass in the host succession, resulting in a solution supersaturated with Si. Silica precipitation from this solution can occur by several mechanisms: cooling by conduction or mixing, decompression associated with boiling, heating into the temperature range for retrograde Si solubility, or a pH change (Dickson and Potter, 1982; Fournier, 1985). The solubility of Si generally increases with increasing temperature (Fig. 6.9); however, if a supersaturated solution is heated at constant pressure (<900 bars) it will either boil or reach a solubility maximum and may precipitate quartz upon further heating (Fournier, 1985). A supersaturated saline fluid may precipitate quartz at temperatures between 300 and 55OC (Fournier, 1985). Thus Si-saturated seawater would deposit quartz on encountering temperatures greater than 300C in the intrusion or the immediate host rocks adjacent to the intrusion. MacGeehan (1978) proposed this process, of Si leaching from volcanic glass and heating of the fluid into the retrograde solubility temperature range, to explain silicification in pillow basalts adjacent to synvolcanic gabbro sills in the Matagami district.
FIGURE 6,16 | Development of a contact metamorphic-hydrothermal system in a submarine volcanic succession after the emplacement of a synvolcanic intrusion. (A) Initial fluid expulsion and migration away from the intrusion as heat from the intrusion drives dehydration and decarbonation reactions in the host succession. A combination of thermal metamorphism and hydrothermal alteration, by seawater and magmatic volatiles and fluid, may produce a contact altered zone. Seawater heated by the intrusion is buoyant and rises towards the seafloor either by diffuse flow or along fractures and faults. (B) In response, cold seawater is drawn down and heated in the vicinity of the intrusion, promoting hydrothermal convection and alteration between the intrusion and the seafloor. (C) Hydrothermal convection collapses as the intrusion cools. Cold seawater may be drawn down along fractures to produce proximal zones of hydrothermal alteration within the intrusion, and retrograde zones that overprint higher temperature contact altered zones adjacent to the intrusion.
The volume of an intrusion influences the temperature and longevity of the alteration system. Large volume intrusions (e.g. plutons and thick sills) influence the temperature of the host rocks and the alteration system for longer than smaller volume intrusions (e.g. synvolcanic sills, cryptodomes and dykes). A small volume sill (-30 m thick) may cause the temperature at the sill-sediment contact to rise as high as 400C (Einsele et al., 1980). However, calculations suggest
1 5 4 | CHAPTER 6
that the temperature at the contact will drop below boiling within five years. This will significantly reduce convection and remaining heat will be lost mainly by conduction through the contact. Generally relatively small volume intrusions have thermal effects restricted to several metres or hundreds of metres from the contacts (Utada, 1973). Although the contact temperatures may be high, high-temperature altered zones are rare because the isotherms dip sharply away from small volume intrusions (Reyes, 1990). In contrast, large volume intrusions, such as the Skaergaard intrusion in east Greenland, which had an estimated volume of 180 km3, may take 500,000 years to cool to ambient temperatures (Norton and Taylor, 1979; Norton, 1984). They may result in thick, high-grade contact metamorphichydrothermal altered zones (Seki et al., 1969) and may drive regional convection of modified seawater.
FIGURE 6.17 | Geological map of the Jukes-Darwin area in the southern Mount Read Volcanics (western Tasmania), showing the limited surface extent of the Darwin granite and the thick hydrothermally altered halo around the granite (modified after Wyman, 2001). The locations of the six data sheets are shown.
Geological setting
The Darwin Granite is an I-type magnetite series equigranular granitoid pluton dominated by pink granite intruded by subordinate white granite, microgranite and quartz porphyry phases (Wyman, 2001). The surface extent of the pluton is approximately 5 x 1 km (Fig. 6.17). However, modelling of gravity and aeromagnetic data along the eastern margin of the Mount Read Volcanics has suggested that a semicontinuous body of granite extends subsurface approximately 100 km northwards to the Murchison Gorge (Leaman and Richardson, 1989; Payne, 1991; Large et al., 1996). In the Darwin-Jukes area, the Central Volcanic Complex includes feldspar-phyric dacite, quartz + feldspar-phyric rhyolite (e.g. data sheet DG1), pumice breccia, tuffaceous sandstone, blocky rhyolite breccia, and minor sedimentary facies (Jones, 1993; Wyman, 2001). A thick, columnar jointed, micropoikilitic or spherulitic rhyolite hosts the Jukes Cu-Au Prospect and altered zones. The emplacement age of Darwin Granite is constrained to the Cambrian as it intruded the Middle Cambrian Central Volcanic Complex, and both the granite and Central Volcanic Complex are unconformably overlain by late Middle Cambrian Tyndall Group volcaniclastic rocks, which contain pebbles of granite near Mount Darwin (Corbett, 1979, 1981, 1992; Jones, 1993; Wyman, 2001).
<20
Pervasive, hornfels
K-feldspar + chlorite
400
Intense
DG2
Silicified
Strong to intense
DG3
K-feldspar + quartz
200
Strong to intense
Moderately texturally destructive, pervasive, cryptocrystalline , pseudomorphs plagioclase, veins and vein envelope
DG4
Chlorite + magnetite
300
Moderate to intense
Moderate preservation, chlorite pseudomorphs plagioclase, domainal replacement of groundmass and matrix textures, infill in hydraulic breccias and veins, vein envelope
Fe2O3, MgO and K2O gains SiO2, AI2O3, Na2O and net mass losses
DG5
Sericite
Weak to strong
Sericite partially to completely replaces plagioclase and is disseminated in the groundmass and matrix
DG6
1 5 6 | CHAPTER 6
FIGURE 6.18 | Schematic cross-section of the Darwin Granite and altered zones, illustrating relationships between the Mount Darwin and Jukes Prospect alteration systems, and surface maps presented in the data sheets (Large et al., 1996; Wyman, 2001).
seawater in reaction zones around the hotter portions of the discharge zones to form K- and Fe-rich alteration assemblages above the granite (Wyman, 2001). The K-feldspar, chlorite and sericite zones in the Jukes area all show depletions in Na 2 O and CaO, which reflect the breakdown of plagioclase and mafic minerals during alteration by modified seawater. Large et al. (1996) suggested that the distribution, composition and zonation of alteration facies around the Darwin Granite, regional zonation of metals with respect to the granite, distribution of Cu-Au-rich VHMS deposits in the Mount Lyell field and pre-Tyndall Group timing of both the granite and mineralisation support a genetic link between the granite and these deposits. Furthermore, magnetite + apatite pyrite veins in the Prince Lyell deposit are similar to those adjacent to and within the Darwin Granite and are consistent with magmatic fluid contributing to their formation. These authors proposed a model for the genesis of the Mount Lyell Cu-Au and related Pb-Zn-Cu massive sulfide deposits (Fig. 6.19), which involves seawater convection deep into the Central Volcanic Complex where it mixed with Fe, Cu, Au and P-rich magmatic fluids exsolved from the granite. The mixed magmatic-seawater hydrothermal system produced altered zones, magnetite veins (e.g. Jukes Prospect) and subseafloor Cu-Au deposits (e.g. Prince Lyell) close to the granite, and contemporaneous Pb-Zn-Cu massive sulfide deposits on the seafloor (e.g. Lyell-Comstock).
FIGURE 6.19 | Model of the zones of hydrothermal alteration and ore deposits in the Mount Lyell field and their relationship to the Darwin Granite, southern Mount Read Volcanics, western Tasmania (after Large et al., 1996).
157
DG1
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 AI2O3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO 76.17 0.31 13.30 3.35 0.10 o.67 0.11 Na2O K2O P2O5 S Total (
voLfree
Rb Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Th
129 22 822 4 20 21
Zr Nb Y Al Ti/Zr
280 13 39 64 38
6 .6
39 CCPI
Photomicrograph (ppl)
1 5 8 | CHAPTER 6
DG2
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 AI2O3 Fe2O3 71.35 0.27 14.59 2.96 Na2O K2O P2O5 S 0.30 9.27 0.04 0 Rb Sr Ba Cu 259 80 2463 8
^
Nb y
223
1g 46
A]
g7
MnO
MgO CaO
0.01
0.01
Total
99.72
Zn
Pb
89 Th
31
Ti/Zr
ccp|
7 3
2J
0 . 9 2 free) (vol.
25
Photomicrograph (ppl)
DG3
143237
strong, foliated quartz + sericite + pyrite Slate Spur Central Volcanic Complex Mount Read Volcanics feldspar + quartz-phyric rhyolite schist quartz + plagioclase (15%, 1-5 mm) porphyritic, microcrystalline, partly spherulitic and possibly perlitic rhyolite foliated unknown quartz + sericite + pyrite + hematite plagioclase replaced by sericite, pervasive microcrystalline groundmass of quartz + sericite + pyrite, hematite stylolites, quartz overgrowths, schistosity local poor strong syn- to post-intrusion proximal intrusion-related hydrothermal alteration
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 AI2O3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO 81.77 0.17 10.23 1.37 0.01 0.29 0.01 Na2O K2O P2O5 S Total (vol. 1.54 4.51 0.03 0 99.92 free) Rb Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Th 145 35 889 3 16 22 19 Al CCPI Ti/Zr 76 20 7.2 Zr Nb Y 142 11 33
Photomicrograph (xn)
1 6 0 | CHAPTER 6
DG4
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 AI2O3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO Na2O 73.74 0.27 12.10 5.51 0.03 0.53 0.01 0.13 K2O 7.60 P2O5 0.04 S 0 Total 99.97 (vol. free) Rb Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Th 161 38 2449 215 17 57 17 Zr Nb Y Al CCPI Ti/Zr 257 11 40 98 42 6.3
Photomicrograph (ppl)
161
DG5
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 AI2O3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO 72.77 Na2O 0.37 K2O 13.23 P2O5 7.11 S 0.04 Total 1.15 (vol. free) 0.05 0.15 5.06 0.05 99.97 Rb Sr Ba Pb Zn Th 167 18 1323 234 6 19 Al Ti/Zr 97 59 7.8 114 CCPI Zr Nb Y 284 13 27
0 Cu
Photomicrograph (ppl)
1 6 2 | CHAPTER 6
DG6
Geochemistry
SiO 2 TiO 2
75.23 13.52
Na2O P2O5
Rb Ba Pb Zn Th
173 1232 4 3 35 21
Zr Y Al CCPI Ti/Zr
278 13 41 86 41 6.5
5.18 Sr 0 Cu
22 Nb
AIA
Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO
Photomicrograph (ppl)
I 163
An understanding of the mineralogical and chemical zonation of hydrothermally altered rocks around submarine massive sulfide deposits is vitally important to both ore genesis studies and to assist and focus mineral exploration. It has led to a vast amount of literature on hydrothermal alteration around VHMS deposits, which various workers have summarised (e.g. Franklin et al., 1981; Barriga et al., 1983; Urabe et al., 1983;Lydon, 1984; 1988; Large, 1992; Madeisky and Stanley, 1994; Barrett and MacLean, 1994b; Galley, 1995; Carvalho et al., 1999; Sanchez-Espana et al., 2000, 2002; Gemmell and Herrmann, 2001; Large et al., 2001c). Since the pioneering work in the 1950s and 1960s, when geologists first recognised the critical link between volcanicmagmatic processes and massive sulfide genesis (e.g. Stanton, 1955, 1959; Oftedahl, 1958; Gilmour, 1965; Horikoshi, 1969), it became widely accepted that these deposits form on the seafloor from hydrothermal activity generated during periods of local quiescence between volcanic eruptive cycles (Sangster, 1972; Solomon, 1976; Franklin et al., 1983; Ohmoto and Skinner, 1983). The discovery of seafloor black smokers and related sulfide chimneys on the presentday seafloor has further stimulated research and contributed to an improved understanding of ore forming processes in the ancient deposits (Rona and Scott, 1993). Over the last 15 years, many researchers have questioned whether all massive sulfide deposits form by exhalation on the seafloor. Although it has been recognised for some time that stringer zones and the lower parts of some massive sulfides formed by replacement (e.g. Large, 1997), several authors now consider that replacement of particular volcanic units below the seafloor maybe be a key process for massive sulfide formation (e.g. Barriga and Fyfe, 1988; Khin Zaw and Large, 1992; Allen, 1994b; Bodon and Valenta, 1995; Hannington et al., 1999; Doyle and Allen, 2003). This chapter is not a summary of VHMS ore genesis, but it highlights the features of alteration halos associated with VHMS deposits, particularly in the Mount Read province, western Tasmania, and fits the deposits and their alteration halos in to the broad range of ore deposits that are found in volcanic and volcano-sedimentary successions. In the later part of this chapter we provide descriptions, including data sheets depicting typical alteration facies, of examples from the Mount Read province and Mount Windsor Subprovince in
eastern Australia that illustrate the range in alteration styles and zonation associated with the spectrum of submarine volcanic-hosted base metal ores.
7.1
VHMS deposits display the following features: They are hosted by submarine volcanic or volcanosedimentary successions. They are the same age as the host volcanic succession (i.e. the deposits are approximately synvolcanic and/or synsedimentary). The host rocks vary from coherent to clastic volcanic or sedimentary facies and range in composition from basalt through andesite and dacite to rhyolite. Most deposits are hosted in thin volcaniclastic units (<100 m thick) between major volcanic formations. The economic parts of the deposits typically comprise massive sulfide, principally pyrite, subordinate sphalerite, chalcopyrite and galena. The term massive implies greater than 80 wt% sulfides (Sangster, 1972). Massive sulfide lenses are commonly, but not always, aligned parallel to volcanic strata. Stringer (or stockwork) sulfide zones commonly underlie the massive sulfides and may contain economic Cu grades. Metal contents and metal ratios vary considerably. Deposits include Cu-rich, Au-rich, Cu-Zn, and polymetallic (CuZn-Pb-Ag-Au) types, but all contain more Zn than Pb. Ore metals are typically vertically zoned within sulfide deposits from Cu at the stratigraphic base to Zn, Pb, Ag, Au and Ba in general order towards the top. Nevertheless, there are many exceptions to this zonation pattern and some deposits have no Ba. Intense hydrothermal alteration of the footwall volcanic rocks stratigraphically below the massive sulfide, to chlorite, sericite and quartz is common. By comparison, the hanging wall rocks are weakly altered or unaltered. Over 700 VHMS deposits have been recorded around the world. They range in size from less than 100,000 tonnes to
1 6 4 | CHAPTER 7
over 510,000,000 tonnes (RioTinto, Iberian pyrite belt). The top 50 deposits, in terms of tonnes of contained Cu + Zn + Pb metal, are listed in Figure 7.1. Most of these deposits are from seven major VHMS provinces or districts (Fig. 7.2), from oldest to youngest: Abitibi belt in Canada, Skellefte district in Sweden, Mount Read province in Australia, Bathurst mining camp in Canada, Southern Urals in Russia, Iberian pyrite belt in Spain and Portugal, and Hokuroku district in Japan.
40
FIGURE 7.2 | Locations of the major VHMS provinces around the world.
LOCAL HYDROTHERMAL ALTERATION RELATED TO VHMS DEPOSITS | 1 6 5 These zones are typically fine grained, dark and massive, preserving no volcanic or sedimentary textures. In many deposits these zones host pyrite + chalcopyrite stringer veins (e.g. Woodlawn deposit in eastern Australia and most Noranda district and Iberian pyrite belt deposits). Chlorite zones are commonly deformed during tectonic events, resulting in chlorite schist zones, which may be strung-out or dislocated from the massive sulfide ore (Sangster, 1972). Studies of chlorite composition from Canadian, Australian and Japanese deposits indicate that the inner chlorite zones are dominated by Mg-rich chlorite, with a general increase in Fe/Mg ratio passing from the inner chlorite zone to the outer edge of the sericite zone (e.g. Riverin and Hodgson, 1980; Urabe et al., 1983; Paulick et al., 2001). Nevertheless, reverse trends have been recorded, where chlorite becomes more Fe-rich towards the core (e.g. Eastoe et al., 1987; Lentz et al., 1997). Variations in chlorite composition are discussed in more detail in Section 4.2.
Sericite zones Sericite zones surround the inner chlorite zones and are characterised by assemblages of sericite + chlorite + quartz + carbonate + pyrite (e.g. data sheets HE3, RB3, WT3, WT6, HR6 and HN5). At Hellyer, rocks in the sericite zone are strongly to intensely altered, with up to 70 wt% sericite and sparse relict primary textures. In other deposits, the alteration intensity in the sericite zone decreases towards the outer margin, where altered rock grades into the least-altered footwall rocks. In many cases, the sericite zones are laterally extensive and merge with stratabound altered zones away from the central pipe (e.g. Mount Chalmers, Large and Both, 1980). Minor disseminated sphalerite or stockwork Zn may occur in the sericite zone, whereas Cu-enrichment is more common in the chlorite zone.
FIGURE 7.3 | Cross-section of idealised mineralisation and alteration zonation patterns in a footwall alteration pipe beneath a typical VHMS deposit (modified after Gemmell and Large, 1992; Lydon, 1997). (A) Sulfide mineral zones and geology. (B) Hydrothermally altered zones.
Siliceous core zones The siliceous core zones are composed of quartz + pyrite and quartz + pyrite + sericite chlorite assemblages (e.g. data sheets HE6, RB4, TH4, WT7, HR8, HN6 and HN7). They may not always be present, and have only been described from a few deposits (e.g. Hellyer, Gemmell and Large, 1992; Brunswick No. 12 and other deposits in the Bathurst mining camp, Zhang et al., 2003). Siliceous core zones are the most intensely altered rocks in the centre of the pipes, and are commonly intersected by networks of pyrite + chalcopyrite stringer veins (Fig. 7.3). All primary rock textures within these zones have been completely destroyed due to the intensity of alteration. In some cases, quartz-rich alteration assemblages have overprinted earlier chlorite-rich alteration assemblages creating pseudobreccia textures. Mass-change calculations indicate that gains of 50-100 g/100 g, mainly due to Si addition, are common within siliceous core zones (Gemmell and Large, 1992, Fig. 11). Lentz and Goodfellow (1996) reported SiO2 gains of up to 300% in the siliceous core zone in the centre of the alteration system below the Brunswick No. 12 massive sulfide deposit. The siliceous core represents the zone of maximum hydro thermal fluid flow and highest temperatures.
Albite zones Some authors have described weakly altered zones of albite + chlorite sericite that surround the main sericite zones (e.g. Iijima, 1974; Green et al., 1981; Urabe et al., 1983; Relvas et al., 1997; Goodfellow and McCutcheon, 2003). Although albite zones have not been widely described or accepted in all districts they are discussed here because of their significance to mineral exploration. It may be difficult to distinguish hydrothermal albite facies from the background diagenetic alteration facies, as within albite zones primary volcanic textures are commonly preserved. In the Hokuroku district this zone has an albite + sericite + chlorite assemblage (Iijima, 1974; Urabe et al., 1983). In some deposits of the Iberian pyrite belt an outermost halo of Na-sericite has been recognised (Relvas et al., 1997). In the Bathurst mining camp, Goodfellow and McCutcheon (2003) described an outermost altered zone of albite + Mg-rich chlorite surrounding the footwall alteration pipe. They described an increase in patchy albite, which replaced K-feldspar phenocrysts, in proximity to the pipe. Similar albite-altered rocks have been recognised adjacent to the Hercules footwall alteration pipe in the Mount Read province (Large et al., 1996). Further research is required
Chlorite zones Chlorite zones are dominated by chlorite (>50 wt% and commonly >80 wt%), with subordinate quartz + pyrite + sericite carbonate (e.g. data sheets HE4, RB5 and HR7).
1 6 6 | CHAPTER 7
to characterise the features of these outermost albite + chlorite + sericite altered zones and to distinguish them from regional diagenetic albite alteration facies.
Variations in alteration zonation The three main hydro thermally altered zones (siliceous core, chlorite and sericite) are not present in all footwall alteration pipes beneath VHMS deposits, and in some cases additional zones, such as carbonate or talc zones, exist. Some variations from the idealised alteration pipe model outlined in Figures 7.3 and 7.4A are:
The Kuroko deposits do not have an inner chlorite zone. Shirozu (1974) described intensely altered volcanic rocks below the massive sulflde ore and surrounding the siliceous Cu-stockwork ore, as strongly silicified with abundant sericite and very little chlorite (Fig. 7.4B). Deposits in the Noranda district and the Iberian pyrite belt commonly have intense chlorite core zones surrounded by sericite zones (Fig. 7.4C), but without siliceous core zones (Franklin et al., 1983; Carvalho et al, 1999; SanchezEspana et al., 2000). In the Iberian pyrite belt, Relvas et al. (1997) recognised a Na-bearing sericite (paragonite) zone extending beyond and above the main sericite zone at both the Neves Corvo and Aljustrel deposits. In the Mattagami district in Canada, the intensely altered central core of the footwall alteration pipe is talc-rich (Fig. 7.4D) and surrounded by chlorite and sericite zones (e.g. Large, 1977; Roberts and Reardon, 1978). In several eastern Australian deposits, Mg- and/or Febearing carbonates are common in the alteration mineral assemblages (Large et al., 2001c). At Hellyer a chlorite + dolomite zone occurs below the massive sulflde near the top of the chlorite zone (Fig. 7.4A, data sheet HE5, Gemmell and Large, 1992). A more massive dolomite zone is developed at the western margin of the altered stringer pipe at Mount Chalmers (Large and Both, 1980). Carbonate-rich zones are common in the footwall of many Iberian pyrite belt deposits, either marginal to the massive sulflde or distributed throughout the footwall alteration systems (e.g. Rio Tinto, Williams et al., 1975, Solomon et al., 1980; La Zarza, Strauss et al., 1981; Tharsis, Tornos et al., 1998). Lydon (1988, Fig. 8) included an Fe-oxide zone at the top of the pipe below the massive sulflde in his footwall alteration pipe model, compiled from a number of deposits, but there are few examples of this facies.
FIGURE 7.4 | Different patterns of mineral zonation in footwall alteration pipes. (A) Generalised model. (B) Hokuroku district model. (C) Noranda district and Iberian pyrite belt model. (D) Mattagami district model.
deposits (e.g. Tharsis, Tornos et al., 1998; Neves Corvo, Relvas et al., 2000). Stratabound altered footwall zones have similar alteration mineral assemblages to footwall alteration pipes, but the zones are distributed parallel to stratigraphy, rather than at right angles. In some cases, the siliceous core and chlorite zones are confined to the immediate footwall of the thickest Cu-rich part of the massive sulfide lens (e.g. Rosebery and Thalanga). In contrast to the pipes, the sericite zones of stratabound altered footwall zones are the volumetrically dominant zones being both laterally and vertically extensive. Massive carbonate zones are more common in stratabound than pipe-like alteration systems (Large et al., 2001c), typically occurring immediately along strike from the massive sulfide ore lenses (e.g. Rosebery, Thalanga and Mount Chalmers). From an exploration perspective stratabound altered footwall zones typically present broader targets than footwall alteration pipes; however, they tend to be more diffuse and thus create challenges when searching for the associated VHMS deposits.
FIGURE 7.5 | Examples of stratabound altered footwall zones (modified after Ashley et al., 1988; Large, 1992; Large et al., 2001c). (A) Scuddles, Western Australia, in plan view. (B) Teutonic Bore, Western Australia, in cross-section. (C) K lens at Rosebery, western Tasmania, in cross-section. (D) Thalanga, Queensland, in cross-section. Abbreviations are: FW = footwall and HW = hanging wall.
deposits, there are a few examples where albite zones exist in the hanging wall of the deposit. At the Henty gold deposit albite + quartz is a common hanging wall alteration mineral assemblage (see Section 7.8, data sheet HN3), and at Hellyer albite forms one of the altered zones in the hanging wall alteration plume (Fig. 7.6C, data sheet HE8). In addition to these examples of obvious altered hanging wall zones, some recent detailed lithogeochemical
1 6 8 | CHAPTER 7
(R7.1)
FIGURE 7.6 | Examples of cross-sections through altered hanging wall zones associated with VHMS deposits. (A) Cu-Au deposit (modified after Large et al., 2001c). (B) A stacked ore system (after the Millenbach deposit, Knuckey etal., 1982). (C) Hellyer hanging wall alteration plume (modified after Gemmell and Fulton, 2001).
This reaction is typical of sericite replacing albite in the outer part of the alteration system. The reaction involves a gain in K from hydrothermal fluid and loss of Na in the rock as albite is replaced. Silica is conserved by the deposition of quartz. Overall, the reaction leads to an increase in fluid pH due to the consumption of H+. Reactions in the sericite zone also involved sericitisation of K-feldspar and plagioclase in addition to albite. In the chlorite zone, there are two potential reactions (Pisutha-Arnond and Ohmoto, 1983):
studies have defined subtle geochemical halos in otherwise least-altered hanging wall volcanic rocks, which may extend several hundreds of metres above the massive sulfide ore (Large et al., 2001b). For example, at Rosebery a hanging wall alteration halo can be defined using three geochemical parameters that may be applied during exploration: (1) wholerock Ba/Sr ratio, which outlines a halo extending about 100 m into the hanging wall; (2) Mn content of carbonate, which is anomalous over the same interval; and (3) whole-rock Tl content, which forms a halo that extends over 200 m into the hanging wall volcanic rocks. More detail of the Rosebery alteration system is provided in Section 7.6.
Note, these reactions can be written with H4SiO4(aq) or SiO2 (quartz) + 2H 2 O. Both of these reactions involve the addition of Mg and 2+ Fe from the fluid and the loss of alkalies (Na or K) and H from the rock. However, the replacement of albite by chlorite
involves Si loss as H 4 SiO 4 , compared to the replacement of sericite by chlorite, which involves Si gain. Mass transfer calculations in chlorite zones invariably indicate significant loss of Si (e.g. Gemmell and Large, 1992; Barrett and MacLean, 1994b) suggesting that reaction R7.2 is the key reaction. Also both of these chlorite replacement reactions (R7.2 and R7.3) involve a release of H+ to the fluid and will cause an increase in fluid acidity. This means that continued chloritisation of volcanic rocks over an extensive area might produce moderately acidic fluids, which may subsequently cause silicic (quartz + sericite), or in the extreme case, argillic (pyrophyllite kaolinite sericite) alteration assemblages upflow from the chlorite zone. Examples of this occur at the Neves Corvo and Lagoa Salgada deposits in the Iberian pyrite belt where Relvas et al. (1994, 1997) have reported dombassite and pyrophyllite in the chlorite-rich central stockwork zones below the massive sulflde ores. Other reactions in the chlorite zone, not listed here, include chloritisation of mafic minerals such as biotite and amphibole. In the siliceous core zone at the centre of the hydro thermal system, three reactions are proposed:
Most reactions in the altered footwall zone involve the breakdown of feldspar and loss of Na (and usually Ca) to the fluid. Major gains include K in the sericite zone, Mgand Fe in the chlorite zone and Si in the siliceous core zone. In addition to Na and Ca, other losses include Si in the chlorite zone, and very rarely Al in the siliceous core. The fluid pH does not show any systematic unidirectional change. Initially mildly acidic fluids will become less acidic during sericitisation, but more acidic during chloritisation. Intense siliceous core zones may be related to rapid cooling, fluid mixing or intense fluidrock interaction of Si-saturated fluids during the peak of the hydrothermal activity.
Quartz is the main alteration mineral in this zone and is associated with minor sericite and chlorite. Mass balance calculations indicate that considerable SiO, gains. Aluminium is commonly immobile (Gemmell and Large, 1992; Barrett and MacLean, 1994b), but is significantly diluted by large Si gains. Quartz is probably deposited in the siliceous core zone according to reaction R7.4, as this involves mass gain of Si without loss of Al. Enrichment of Si in the hydrothermal fluid may be due to leaching of Si from the footwall volcanic rocks during chloritisation (reaction R7.2). Leached Si is then deposited in the hydrothermal vent immediately below the seafloor. Silica deposition may be caused by rapid conductive cooling (Fournier and Potter, 1982), mixing with seawater, or intense fluid-rock interaction at high-fluid-rock ratios. Replacement of both chlorite and albite by quartz (reactions R7.5 and R7.6) requires a strongly acidic fluid and results in loss of Al as Al(OH)3(aq). Aluminium mobility of this type is rare in VHMS systems, but may occur in intensely silicified zones associated with acid alteration. Mass balance calculations suggest this was the case in the siliceous core zone of the Henty volcanogenic gold deposit (Callaghan, 2001, see also Section 7.8). In summary, by writing simple chemical reactions to describe replacements in the major altered zones, it is possible to gain some idea of the chemical processes, elemental gains and losses, and variations in pH of the hydrothermal fluid.
FIGURE 7.7 | The AI-CCPI Alteration box plot showing trends for altered footwall zones. These data are based on case studies presented in Large et al. (2001a).
1 7 0 | CHAPTER 7
increasing pyrite and chlorite in the rock (segment BC). The final segment CD represents the chlorite zone, where CCPI reaches its maximum (80-100), due to the abundance of chlorite and pyrite proximal to massive sulfide ore. Although quartz is not plotted on the Alteration box plot, due to the absence of SiO2 from the two alteration indices, samples from the siliceous core zone commonly plot in the CD segment due to the presence of minor chlorite and pyrite. If carbonate is present in the chlorite zone, as at Hellyer and Thalanga, the samples typically plot between F and D. In cases where the footwall comprises mafic volcanic rocks, ED is the common trend from the edge to centre of the footwall alteration pipe. This difference is due to the fact that mafic rocks generally have higher Fe and Mg contents, and thus greater initial values of CCPI compared with felsic rocks (Fig. 2.10). Consequently, chlorite is generally more abundant in the outer sericite zone and the combination of increasing chlorite and pyrite gives a trend along ED toward the core of the footwall alteration pipe (e.g. Hellyer, Section 7.5).
up, and becomes more acidic due to fluid-rock interaction, metals are leached from the volcanic succession (e.g. Kajiwara, 1973; Spooner and Fyfe, 1973; Solomon, 1976; Large, 1977; Ohmoto, 1996). Alternatively, metal-rich magmatic fluid may be derived from the crystallisation of a magma, which is also the source of volcanism (e.g. Urabe and Sato, 1978; Henley and Thornley, 1979; Sawkins and Kowalik, 1981; Stanton, 1985, 1990). For supporting evidence and relative merits of these two models the reader is referred to recent discussions by Lydon (1996) and Ohmoto (1996). Recent research suggests that both fluids and metals are probably derived from magmatic and seawater sources (e.g. Fig. 7.8C). Distinguishing criteria for the source includes the deposit style, proximity to volcanic centres, alteration mineralogy, metal ratios of the deposits and the salinity and composition of primary fluid inclusions. For example, Large (1992) suggested that relatively soluble chloride-metal complexes, such as Zn, Pb and Ag, are probably derived principally from seawater leaching of the volcanic succession, whereas the less soluble metals, such as Cu, Bi and Sn, may be sourced directly from the magma chamber. Gold could be derived either by seawater leaching of volcanic rocks as a bisulfide-Au complex, or directly from magma as a chloride complex or in a volatile phase (Fig. 7.8C). Goodfellow and McCutcheon (2003) proposed a similar dual metal source for the massive sulfide deposits of the Bathurst mining camp, with the largest deposits having a major magmatic-metal component. Recently Solomon et al. (2004) have compared the salinity and composition of fluid inclusions in the stringer zones of the Hellyer VHMS deposit with those of porphyry Cu deposits, and concluded that the metals at Hellyer had a magmatic source.
Source considerations There are two competing models for the source of fluids and metals that form VHMS deposits (Fig. 7.8A and B): (1) evolved seawater, and (2) magmatic fluid. The first model involves seawater convecting through a volcanic succession above an intrusion or magma chamber. As the seawater heats
Fluid-rock interaction in the alteration pipe The concept that the alteration zonation in footwall alteration pipes is a function of decreasing temperatures and fluid-rock ratios has recently been tested by Schardt et al. (2001) using a thermodynamic model of fluid-rock interaction between heated evolved seawater and an andesitic precursor (Fig.
FIGURE 7.8 | Models for fluid flow and metal source in VHMS hydrothermal systems (after Large, 1992). (A) Metals are derived from deep seawater leaching of the volcanic succession and basement. (B) Metals are sourced directly from the magmatic vapour plume, with no significant leaching of volcanic rocks. (C) A mixture of volcanic and magmatic sources, with low-solubility metals (i.e. Cu and Au) provided from magma and high-solubility metals (i.e. Zn, Pb and Ag) from seawater leaching of volcanic rocks.
LOCAL HYDROTHERMAL ALTERATION RELATED TO VHMS DEPOSITS | 1 7 1 7.9). This modelling was based on geochemical data from the Hellyer deposit. The classical sequence of altered footwall zones observed in many VHMS deposits (from the core to the margin of the pipe: quartz * chlorite > sericite) was reproduced by simulating the reaction between a 250350cC fluid, with a pH of 4.55.0, and andesite under conditions of decreasing fluid-rock ratio and temperature. Simulated cooling from 350 to 100C reproduced the full range of footwall alteration mineral assemblages. The pH of the fluid showed little variation, from 4.5 to 4.0 (Schardt et al., 2001). Mg-rich chlorite formed in the inner chlorite zone, and Ferich chlorite developed in the outermost part of the sericite zone, similar to the pattern observed at many massive sulfide deposits. This modelling was carried out using a Mg-bearing fluid, with the assumption that a component of seawaterderived Mg was incorporated into the fluid at depth. The modelling has shown that sericite zones form at temperatures below 250C from the reaction of andesitic rocks with mildly acidic solutions (pH = 4.04.5). Extensive Mg-chlorite zones are favoured by higher temperatures (250 300C) and less acidic fluids (pH = 4.5-5.5). At lower pH, kaolinite and pyrophyllite are likely to develop in the sericite zone. At higher pH and lower temperatures (<200C), Kfeldspar is developed at the outer margin of the sericite zone and in least-altered andesitic rocks (Schardt et al., 2001). Although carbonate alteration was not taken into account by this modelling, it is likely that chlorite + carbonate assemblages, such as those developed adjacent to massive sulfides or at the
FIGURE 7.9 | Thermodynamic model of fluid-rock interaction between heated evolved seawater and Hellyer andesite (modified after Schardt et al., 2001). (A) Modelled mineralogical variations resulting from fluid-rock interaction with decreasing temperatures. (B) Schematic representation of simulated water-rock interaction as a function of temperature.
1 7 2 | CHAPTER 7
periphery of many footwall alteration systems, are indicative of more alkaline conditions. These may develop where hot, near-neutral hydrothermal fluids have mixed with and heated seawater, leading to saturation of carbonate at the margins of the hydrothermal up-flow zones (Large et al., 2001c).
A model for the development of footwall alteration pipes Using the results of the thermodynamic modelling of Schardt et al. (2001), numerical fluid-flow modelling by Yang and Large (2001), and previous thermodynamic modelling of metal-sulfide growth by Huston and Large (1989), it is possible to speculate on the progressive development of subseafioor zoned alteration pipes (Fig. 7.10). Stage 1 (Fig. 7.10): Initial hydrothermal fluid flow is upwards along a sub-vertical permeable fault zone towards the seafloor. As the rising hydrothermal plume approaches within 1 km of the seafloor, secondary near-surface seawater convection above the plume head may enhance normal diagenetic reactions in volcanic rocks adjacent to the fault, causing increased formation of zeolites, smectites and Mg-rich chlorite, and albite replacement of primary feldspars. During ongoing diagenesis and subsequent metamorphism this will produce an outer albite zone (albite + sericite + chlorite), which is commonly difficult to distinguish from regional diagenetic and metamorphic mineral assemblages.
Stage 2 (Fig. 7.10): As low-temperature and mildly acidic hydrothermal fluids, (T<250C, pH = 4.0-4.5) continue to move upwards to the seafloor, sericite-rich alteration overprints the early albite zone and expands out from the fluid conduit to form a pipe-like sericite zone. During this stage sphalerite + galena + pyrite massive sulfides deposit on the seafloor above the sericite zone. Minor pyrite + sphalerite + galena stringer mineralisation may also occur in the core of the sericite zone at these temperatures (Eldridge et al., 1983). Convective near surface reflux of seawater leads to an albite + chlorite zone extending laterally into the least-altered volcanic rocks surrounding the sericite zone. Stage 3 (Fig. 7.10): As the hydrothermal system intensifies and the temperature of the discharging fluid rises above 250C, Mg-chlorite is stabilised adjacent to the main conduit and a chlorite zone develops in the core of the footwall alteration pipe. Under these high-temperature conditions, the fluid is capable of carrying significantly more Cu (e.g. Huston and Large, 1989), which is deposited in stringer veins in the central chlorite zone and in the base of the massive sulfide. Within the massive sulfide mound, Cu progressively displaces Zn upwards. Eldridge et al. (1983), Huston and Large (1989) and Hannington and Scott (1989) described this zone refining process. As the alteration system evolves, the pH of the fluid initially increases during formation of the sericite zone (from 4 to 5.5) due to consumption of H+ (reaction R7.1), and subsequently falls during the formation of the chlorite zone (reactions R7.2 and R7.3).
FIGURE 7.10 | Model for the evolution of the footwall alteration pipe in a mound-style massive sulfide deposit. Stage 1: an initial lowtemperature hydrothermal system produces an albite zone. Stage 2: increasing temperature results in the development of the sericite and Zn + Pb-rich sulfide zones. Stage 3: higher temperatures produce the chlorite and Cu + Zn +Pb-rich sulfide zones. Stage 4: maximum temperatures and low pH result in the siliceous core and Cu + Pb + Zn-rich sulfide zones. This model does not apply to all VHMS deposits, some of which may form in brine pools (Solomon and Groves, 1994; Solomon and Quesada, 2003).
LOCAL HYDROTHERMAL ALTERATION RELATED TO VHMS DEPOSITS | 173 Stage 4 (Fig. 7.10): With increasing temperature (300 to 35OCC) during chloritisation, Si is continually leached from the volcanic rocks (reaction R7.2) and the fluid becomes supersaturated in Si. Consequently, quartz is precipitated (reaction R7.4) in the upper-central part of the alteration pipe, forming a siliceous core zone. Maximum metal precipitation in both the stringer zone and massive sulfide is commonly associated with this stage. Subsequently, the hydrothermal system wanes and collapses with an influx of heated near-surface seawater that leads to overprinting by lower temperature mineral assemblages, which are commonly dominated by carbonates or barite, depending on the oxidation level of the overlying water column. Some previous workers have suggested that the zonation in alteration pipes, from Mg-Fe chlorite in the core to sericite at the margins, relates to the entrainment and mixing of Mg-bearing seawater with a Mg-poor hydrothermal fluid below the massive sulfide (e.g. Roberts and Reardon, 1978; Lydon and Galley, 1986). However, Riverin and Hodgson (1980) suggested that the presence of Mg-rich chlorite in the central and most intensely altered zone of the alteration pipe, and the abundance of Mg-chlorite in pyrite + chalcopyrite veins in the stringer zone, is consistent with Mg derived from hydrothermal fluid rather than seawater. In the model outlined in Figure 7.10, we have assumed the hydrothermal fluid is Mg-bearing, possibly either due to entrainment of seawater at considerable depth (>1 km) below the seafloor or due to the leaching of Mg from mafic volcanic rocks deep in the volcanic succession. Although near-surface entrainment of seawater is considered to be important in stages 1 and 2 of our model, it is likely to result in an increase in the rate and consequent grade of diagenetic alteration. This would lead to Na-Mg metasomatism and albite + chlorite formation at the margins of the alteration pipe, rather than Mg metasomatism and chlorite development within the core of the pipe, as previously proposed (cf. Franklin et al., 1981). In the thermodynamic modelling of Schardt et al. (2001), temperature and pH were shown to be the principal factors controlling the balance between chlorite and sericite zones in the footwall alteration pipe. However, two other factors also need consideration: (1) the composition of the immediate footwall volcanic rocks, and (2) the initial chemistry of the modified seawater as it rises up the conduit (e.g. Large, 1977). In the first case, particularly at low fluid-rock ratios, chlorite alteration is favoured in mafic host rocks and sericite alteration in felsic host rocks. However, at high fluid-rock ratios typical of the central parts of the hydrothermal pipe, the alteration mineral assemblage is controlled by fluid chemistry rather than rock chemistry. In the second case, seawater-rock interactions in deep rhyolite-dominated footwall volcanic successions, similar to those in the Hokuroku district and southern Mount Read province, will generate modified seawater hydrothermal solutions enriched in K and Si, but generally depleted in Mg, Fe and Ca. These fluids will result in sericite zones as they approach the seafloor. In contrast, footwall volcanic successions dominated by andesite and basalt, similar to those in the northern Mount Read province and the Abitibi belt, will generate evolved seawater fluids enriched in Mg, Fe and Ca, with lesser K and Si, and are more likely to develop zoned chlorite-sericite alteration pipes. In summary, the footwall alteration mineral assemblages in VHMS systems are probably controlled by three factors: (1) the initial composition of the convective seawaterdominated ore fluid, which is constrained by the relative abundance of mafic versus felsic volcanic rocks deep in the succession; (2) the temperature and pH regime during fluidrock interactions in the footwall discharge zone (i.e. lower temperature, acidic conditions favour sericite development, whereas higher temperature and/or more neutral pH conditions favour chlorite formation); and (3) the composition of the immediate footwall host rocks.
Genesis of stratabound altered footwall zones Stratabound altered footwall zones (e.g. Rosebery, Scuddles and Teutonic Bore; Fig. 7.5) are interpreted to result from hydrothermal-fluid flow parallel to volcanic strata (Fig. 7.11), rather than at right angles to the stratigraphy as in the case for footwall alteration pipes. Alteration pipes are commonly developed in relatively impermeable footwall volcanic rocks (e.g. the coherent or clastic facies of lavas and synvolcanic intrusions) where fluids are focussed along sub-vertical synvolcanic faults (Fig. 7.10). In contrast, stratabound altered footwall zones are more commonly developed in volcanic rocks with moderate- to high-stratal permeability (e.g. volcaniclastic facies such as pumice breccia and volcanic
FIGURE 7.11 | Genetic models for the formation of stratabound altered footwall zones related to VHMS mineralisation. Fluid flow below and parallel to the seafloor and stratigraphy is controlled by the distribution of permeable volcanic facies (e.g. volcaniclastic units), or impermeable cap-rocks (e.g. sills or lavas). (A) Stratabound subseafloor replacement mineralised and altered zones (e.g. Mount Lyell deposit, Mount Read province and TAG deep Cu zone, Middle Valley, Juan de Fuca Ridge). (B) Stratabound ore lens and altered zones confined below an impermeable volcanic unit such as a sill (e.g. K lens at Rosebery, Mount Read province).
1 7 4 | CHAPTER 7
sandstone). In high-permeability rocks, hydrothermal fluids move laterally along the strata, sub-parallel to the seafloor, and metals are deposited due to the mixing of hydrothermal fluids with seawater and/or cooling. In these cases, fluids are poorly focussed and alteration tends to be of lower intensity and greater in lateral extent (Fig. 7.11). Sericite-altered rocks dominate stratabound altered footwall zones, and chloritic and siliceous zones are restricted to the immediate proximity of massive sulfides, where temperatures and fluid-rock ratios were at a maximum. At K lens in the Rosebery deposit, Allen (1994b) proposed that rising hydrothermal fluids were constrained to flow laterally below an impermeable quartz porphyry sill. As a result, stratabound massive sulfide and associated stratabound altered zones developed beneath the sill by replacement of more permeable and chemically reactive felsic pumice breccias (Fig. 7.1 IB).
There are two ways that acidic fluids may be generated to stabilise kaolinite or pyrophyllite in VHMS systems. The first is by acid-producing fluid-rock reactions, such as the replacement of albite (and volcanic glass) by Mg-Fe chlorite (reaction R7.2). This may result in a reduction in fluid pH by about 1 unit (from 5.5 to 4.5); however, buffering by sericite + chlorite assemblages in the rock will generally prevent the pH dropping below 3.5, which is needed for kaolinite and pyrophyllite formation. These acidic alteration minerals can only form by this method in volcanic rocks that contain negligible K (e.g. tholeiitic basalts) and thus contain no sericite to buffer the pH. The second method is by the introduction of magmatic volatiles at some stage during the life of the hydrothermal system (Ohmoto, 1996). Cooling of a magmatic gas containing SO2 at temperatures below 400C will increase fluid acidity to levels below pH = 3.5 by a reaction similar to R7.7 (Burnham and Ohmoto, 1980): 4SO2(g) + 4H2O(1) - H2S(aq) + 3H+ + 3HSO4~ (R7.7)
Researchers have recently argued that the presence of pyrophyllite or kaolinite in VHMS altered zones supports the theory that these deposits are not simply the products of seawater convection, but that their genesis involves input of a magmatic-derived, low-pH fluid (e.g. Sillitoe et al., 1996; Huston and Kamprad, 2001).
FIGURE 7.12 | Stability relations among selected silicate minerals at 500 bars pressure (modified after Beane and Titley, 1981).
LOCAL HYDROTHERMAL ALTERATION RELATED TO VHMS DEPOSITS | 1 7 5 TABLE 7.1 | Mineral assemblages recorded in medium- to high-grade metamorphosed hydrothermally altered zones local to VHMS deposits.
Chloritoid + siderite + andalusite Quartz + chloritoid + andalusite + kyanite Cordierite + anthophyllite Mg-chlorite + biotite + kyanite Anthophyllite + cordierite
Bi
Franklin et al. (1977) Franklin et al. (1977) Whitmore (1969) Franklin etal. (1981) Beaty and Taylor (1979)
x
Geco
Balcooma Balcooma Dry River South Skellefte district Boliden
Stanton (1984)
Chlorite Sericite Sericite Chlorite Central zone
'
Huston etal. (1992) Huston etal. (1992) Huston et al. (1992) Weihed et al. (2000) Nilsson (1968)
including temperature and salinity of the hydrothermal fluid; oxidation and H 2 S/SO 4 characteristics of the hydrothermal fluid and seafloor environment; composition of volcanic and sedimentary rocks deep in the succession; permeability of the footwall volcanic rocks; and depth of seawater control the metal carrying capacity of the fluid, and the chemical reactions that occur beneath and at the seafloor, leading to a broad range of deposit styles and associated local alteration halos. The spectrum of VHMS deposits found in submarine volcanic successions indicates that there may be continuum of deposit styles between the end members that form the basis for the current deposit classification in volcanic arc and rift environments: VHMS Cu-Zn-Pb, porphyry Cu-Au, epithermal Au-Ag and SEDEX Zn-Pb-Ag deposits. Recent workers have emphasised the possible continuum between VHMS and epithermal deposits (e.g. Lydon, 1996; Sillitoe et al., 1996). Large (2000, 2004) and Large et al. (2001c) extended this approach to include porphyry and SEDEX deposits. Sillitoe et al. (1996) introduced high-sulfidation and low-sulfidation VHMS deposits based on mineralisation style, hypogene alteration and sulfide mineralogy, seawater depth, and volcano-magmatic setting. High-sulfidation VHMS deposits develop in shallow-water environments, proximal to volcanic centres, and tend to be associated with zones containing argillic alteration minerals (e.g. pyrophyllite, allunite, kaolinite, diaspore) and high-sulfidation sulfide minerals (e.g. enargite, luzonite, bornite, tennantite). For most geologists the high-sulfidationlow-sulfidation classification scheme has proven difficult to embrace because these terms were originally based on the chemistry of the ore fluid and environment of mineral deposition, rather than a series of geological criteria that could be measured and applied in the field or in drill core. For this reason we do not endorse adoption of the high-sulfidationlow-sulfidation terminology for VHMS deposits. An alternative approach, suggested by Large et al. (2001c) and expanded here, is to place individual deposits within a range of features defined for ores in volcanic arcs and rifts. A diamond-shaped diagram (Fig. 7.14) shows deposits plotted
in terms of their attributes relative to end-member deposit models for VHMS, epithermal Au, porphyry Cu and SEDEX Zn-Pb deposits. The main eastern Australian deposits described in this chapter, and the Bathurst 12 deposit from the Bathurst mining camp, are plotted on the diagram. Hellyer plots very close to the ideal VHMS deposit end member. This is because the deposit exhibits most of the features of the idealised VHMS alteration-mineralisation system outlined in Figure 7.3. Mount Lyell (Western Tharsis, Section 7.7) and HighwayReward (Section 7. 10) plot toward the porphyry end of the spectrum with a significant magmatic component. This is because these deposits are Cu-Au-rich subsurface replacement ores that formed in proximal volcanic environments dominated by synvolcanic rhyolitic intrusions. Mount Lyell also contains alteration minerals typical of an acid fluid or high-sulfidation epithermal environment (pyrophyllite and zunyite), which may suggest that magmatic fluid was involved (Huston and Kamprad, 2001). These Cu-Au-rich massive sulfide deposits and others like them (e.g. Mount Morgan, Boliden, Bousquet) are considered to be hybrid VHMS-epithermal-porphyry deposits that are not easily classified as end members in the VHMS-epithermal-porphyry spectrum (Large, 2004). Henty is a gold-rich, base-metal-poor volcanic-hosted deposit within the Mount Read province (Section 7.8). The gold ore occurs in a stratabound subseafloor replacement zone surrounded by concentric altered zones dominated by quartz, sericite, carbonate and albite. The deposit is neither a typical VHMS nor an epithermal deposit, but has some features of both, and is best described as a hybrid VHMS-epithermal deposit. Rosebery is a Zn-Pb-Ag-Au massive sulfide deposit (Section 7.6). It differs from the classic VHMS deposit in its low Cu content, sheet-like stratiform nature with no stringer zone, and lack of a well-defined footwall alteration pipe. It is hosted in proximal and distal volcanic facies dominated by pumice breccia, volcanic sandstone and siltstone, and black shales. Rosebery and other sheet-like Zn-Pb-rich deposits, such as those in the Bathurst mining camp, have many features similar to SEDEX deposits even though they are in volcanic
1 7 6 | CHAPTER 7
FIGURE 7.13 | Schematic representation of the various shapes and alteration zonation pattens associated with VHMS deposits (modified after Large, 1992).
successions. Recognising their hybrid natures and range in features we have plotted the Rosebery and Brunswick No. 12 deposits on the boundary between VHMS and SEDEX deposits (Fig. 7.14).
enveloped by phyllic zones (quartz + sericite + pyrite), and finally propylitic zones (carbonate + chlorite + epidote) at the margins, which merge with the regional diagenetic or metamorphic facies. Hybrid massive sulfide Cu-Au deposits (Fig. 7.15B) exhibit similarly shaped, but less extensive, altered hanging wall zones compared to porphyry Cu deposits. Although they lack potassic zones, they comprise siliceous and/or chlorite core zones, which contain Cu-Au ore, and are surrounded by sericite zones and propylitic halos. Alteration minerals characteristic of highly acidic alteration (e.g. pyrophyllite, kaolinite, zunyite, topaz) may occur in the sericite zone in a similar pattern to porphyry systems. Classic mound or lens-shaped Cu + Zn Pb-rich VHMS deposits have both massive sulfide and footwall stringer zones with well-zoned footwall alteration pipes (Fig. 7.15Q and
subordinate hanging wall altered zones, unlike the previous members of the spectrum where altered rocks dominate the hanging wall. Mg-bearing altered zones (Mg-chlorite or talc) are common features of these deposits dependent on the chemistry and temperature of the fluids. Sheet style VHMS deposits are Zn-rich, strata parallel and have extensive stratabound altered zones (Fig. 7.15D). Stringer zones are less common, but where present they are stratabound rather than pipe-shaped. Carbonates are common alteration minerals, particularly around the margins of the massive sulfide ore. SEDEX Zn-Pb-Ag deposits are at the distal end of the massive sulflde spectrum in terms of proximity to volcanic centres, ratio of sedimentary to volcanic host rocks, and temperature of formation (Fig. 7.15E). Alteration halos are
FIGURE 7.15 | Variations in alteration halos for the spectrum of deposits from porphyry Cu-Au to SEDEX Zn-Pb-Ag. (A) Classical porphyry Cu-Au deposit (e.g. El Salvador, after Gustafson and Hunt, 1975; McMillan and Panteleyev, 1998). (B) Hybrid Cu-Au massive sulfide deposit (e.g. Mount Morgan, Mount Lyell, or Highway-Reward, after Large et al., 2001c). (C) Classic mound-style VHMS Cu-Zn or Cu-Zn-Pb deposit (e.g. Hellyer, after Gemmell and Fulton, 2001). (D) Sheet-style VHMS deposit (e.g. Rosebery, after Large et al., 2001b). (E) Classic SEDEX deposit (e.g. HYC, after Large et al., 2000).
1 7 8 | CHAPTER 7
commonly stratigraphically controlled and dominated by carbonate minerals (ferroan-dolomite, ankerite and siderite, Large et al., 2001c). Chlorite and siliceous zones are rare, and a sericite zone is usually restricted or entirely absent. Manganese and Tl are common alteration halo indicators in SEDEX and sheet style VHMS deposits, but are less common in the mound-style VHMS, hybrid Cu-Au deposits and porphyry Cu deposits (Large et al., 2001c).
7.4 | COMPARISONS BETWEEN ARCHAEAN, PALAEOZOIC AND CAINOZOIC VHMS ALTERATION SYSTEMS
Australian Palaeozoic VHMS alteration halos
The altered zones around eastern Australian Palaeozoic VHMS deposits have diverse morphologies and mineral assemblages related to variations in their volcanic settings and modes of formation (Large, 1992; Large et al., 2001c). Welldefined footwall alteration pipes are relatively uncommon, or perhaps unrecognised because of subsequent deformation. In Australian deposits, footwall alteration pipes are mainly associated with synvolcanic faults (e.g. Mount Morgan, Taube, 1986) and with relatively impermeable footwall rocks (e.g. Hellyer and Highway-Reward, Gemmell and Large, 1992; Large, 1992; Doyle, 2001). Laterally extensive stratabound altered footwall zones are more typical, especially beneath sheet-like Zn-rich polymetallic deposits, such as Rosebery, Hercules and Thalanga. Stratabound altered footwall zones are attributed to non-focussed discharge and lateral migration of hydrothermal fluids in permeable volcaniclastic units in the footwall (e.g. Rosebery, Green et al., 1981). Quartz + sericite + pyrite assemblages are volumetrically dominant in all types of alteration halos. The proximal altered footwall zones are typically quartz rich, containing less than 20% phyllosilicates but greater than 5% pyrite in disseminations and veins. Much broader footwall feldspardestructive altered zones, with mineral assemblages dominated by sericite or sericite + chlorite, a lower proportion of quartz, and a few percent of disseminated pyrite, envelop them. Chlorite-rich assemblages tend to be restricted to small zones immediately beneath ore lenses (e.g. Rosebery and Thalanga, Green et al., 1981; Paulick et al., 2001), and in several cases are associated with carbonate (e.g. Hellyer, Thalanga and Woodlawn, Davis, 1990; Herrmann and Hill, 2001) . Where there are footwall alteration pipes, chlorite exists in the medial zones, usually between a quartz-rich core and a surrounding sericite zone (e.g. Hellyer and Highway-Reward, Gemmell and Large, 1992; Doyle, 2001). However, the chlorite-rich footwall alteration pipes that are characteristic of many Canadian Archaean deposits do not seem to be present in the Australian Palaeozoic deposits. Several of the Tasmanian examples are virtually devoid of chlorite, such as Henty, Boco and Chester (Boda, 1991; Green and Taheri, 1992; Callaghan, 2001). These are base-metal-poor systems; some
of them contain aluminous minerals such as pyrophyllite and kaolinite. Recent interpretations suggest they are analogous to seafloor acid-sulfate epithermal systems, and possibly involve significant magmatic fluid in their formation (Large et al., 2001c). The sheet-like Zn-rich deposits do not have extensive visually recognisable hydrothermally altered hanging wall zones, although there may be subtle hanging wall geochemical halos (e.g. Rosebery, Large et al., 2001b). However, some deposits with vertical pipe-like footwall alteration and/or mineralised zones exhibit altered hanging wall zones that extend for several tens to hundreds of metres above the deposit. For example, the 200 m thick basalt unit overlying the Hellyer deposit contains an upward flaring plume of distinctive green, Cr-bearing muscovite (fuchsite), which is more or less concentrically enclosed by discontinuous chlorite + carbonate and quartz + albite and sericite zones (Gemmell and Fulton, 2001). A stratabound quartz + albite ( chlorite) altered zone up to 100 m thick exists above the pyritic zones at Henty (Halley and Roberts, 1997). The altered hanging wall zones at Hellyer and Henty contain only traces of pyrite, which suggests that they formed from fluids of very different composition to those in the footwall. In contrast, the quartz + sericite + pyrite zones extending above the Highway and Reward massive sulfide bodies are essentially similar to the footwall stringer zones. This supports the interpretation that these deposits formed entirely below the seafloor (Doyle and Huston, 1999). Carbonate alteration facies are common features of the Australian Palaeozoic polymetallic deposits. They are typically thin stratabound zones that enclose, lie immediately above, or are laterally equivalent to, the sulfide lenses (e.g. Rosebery, Henty and Thalanga, respectively). Except at Henty, the hydrothermal carbonates are generally not calcic; they have various Ca-Mg-Fe-Mn compositions, which in some cases vary systematically towards ore (e.g. Rosebery, Large et al., 2001b).
FIGURE 7.16 | Idealised cross-section of the four altered zones around Kurokotype massive sulfide deposits, Japan (modified from Franklin et al., 1981).
179
of hydrothermal fluids with biogenic marine carbonates. The erratic distribution and the post-ore formation of carbonates, and indications of complex overprinting of different systems (VHMS and acid-sulfate) leaves some doubt about the genetic relationships between the massive sulfide deposits and carbonate assemblages.
FIGURE 7.17 | Idealised cross-section of a typical zoned footwall alteration pipe beneath Noranda-type massive sulfide deposits, Abitibi belt, Canada (modified from Lydon, 1984; Kerr and Gibson, 1993).
1 8 0 | CHAPTER 7
whereas small additions of K and possibly Si occur in the sericitic shell (Barrett and MacLean, 1994b). This generally results in significant net loss of mass, due to Si loss, from the overall alteration pipe (Barrett and MacLean, 1991). In a few unusual cases there may be net mass gains (e.g. Norbec deposit: Barrett and MacLean, 1999). Footwall alteration pipes of this type may represent zones of hydrothermal discharge that were focussed by synvolcanic faults. Their vertical extent suggests that the hydrothermal fluid sources were very deep. Overprinting relationships indicate that the footwall alteration pipes were initially zones of sericite quartz altered rock. As the hydrothermal system intensified, sericite was replaced by chlorite concurrent with metal zone refining in the sulfide lenses (Kerr and Gibson, 1993). Non pipe-like, broad altered footwall zones have more variable morphologies and mineral assemblages as exemplified by the differences in the Home and Mattabi deposits. The Home deposit has a poorly defined altered footwall zone of quartz + sericite chlorite that is many times wider than the massive sulfide bodies (MacLean and Hoy, 1991; Kerr and Gibson, 1993). Calculations by MacLean and Hoy (1991) indicate that the Home footwall alteration was accompanied by significant net mass gains; mainly gains of Si, Fe and K, slightly offset by losses of Na, Ca and Mg. Beneath the Mattabi deposit are siderite + chloritoid andalusite, kyanite and pyrophyllite zones, which narrow with depth and are transitional downward and laterally into an extensive semiconformable ankerite + chlorite + sericite + quartz zone (Franklin et al., 1975; Morton and Franklin, 1987). Gibson et al. (1999) suggested that the aluminous assemblages at Mattabi (and several other deposits that are notably Au rich) were analogous to the advanced argillic assemblages formed by low pH fluids in acid-sulfate epithermal systems. The Archaean massive sulfide deposits of the Panorama district in the Pilbara of Western Australia occur near the top of a 2 km thick basaltic to rhyolitic volcanic succession above a large synvolcanic granite pluton (Brauhart et al., 2001). Large, semi-conformable altered zones of feldspar-destructive sericite + quartz and chlorite + quartz alteration assemblages occupy the lower and middle parts of the volcanic succession and extend almost the entire exposed strike length (20 km). Locally transgressive chlorite + quartz altered zones, bounded by synvolcanic faults, extend upwards from the semiconformable altered zones to beneath the massive sulfide prospects. Mass changes in the feldspar-destructive altered zones were modest: small gains of Si and losses Ca, Na, Fe and K in the lower sericite + quartz zones, and small gains of Mg, Fe, Si and losses of K, Na, Ca in the transgressive chlorite + quartz zones. In the Golden Grove district of the Archaean Yilgarn craton, Western Australia, the volcanic succession that hosts the Scuddles and Gossan Hill massive sulfide deposits also exhibits the effects of regional-scale, intense feldspar-destructive alteration. The entire footwall succession of altered andesitic to rhyolitic volcaniclastic units, although preserving primary volcanic textures, is composed essentially of quartz + chlorite ( minor sericite). The alteration process, interpreted as a syn-depositional or early hydrothermal regional metasomatic event, virtually removed all Ca, Na and K from the rocks and added substantial Si, Fe and Mg (Sharpe and Gemmell, 2001). At Gossan Hill the regional quartz + chlorite alteration
facies is overprinted by two alteration facies related to sulfide mineralisation. A narrow stratabound chlorite ( siderite, ankerite talc and andalusite) zone envelops the lower Cu-rich massive magnetite + sulfide ore lens. An intense quartz zone underlies the upper Zn-rich massive sulfide lens and encloses a discordant zone of sulfide stringer veins that connects the upper and lower lenses (Sharpe and Gemmell, 2001). There is considerable diversity among alteration facies aroundArchaean massive sulfide deposits. Features that appear to be common to most Archaean districts are large semiconformable altered zones and localised discordant altered footwall zones. Brauhart et al. (2001) highlighted some of the differences in mineral assemblages and mass changes between Panorama and the Canadian semi-conformable altered zones. However, the well-defined discordant footwall alteration pipes are typically chlorite rich (if not metamorphosed to higher grades) and characterised by significant net mass loss, which is attributable to major Si loss and only partly offset by Mg and Fe gains.
Comparisons
Despite the many variations in mineral assemblage, morphology and extent of alteration facies associated with VHMS deposits, both within districts and across geologic time, there is one feature that is common to all: proximal altered footwall zones do not contain feldspar. Feldspar destruction is usually manifest in the presence of sericite, chlorite or smectite clays, or their higher grade metamorphic equivalents. One or more of these Al-bearing phyllosilicates is almost invariably present because, although VHMS-type hydrothermal fluids readily transport silica, alkalis and other cations, Al is generally immobile in these moderately acidic systems. One suspects that pyrite is an equally ubiquitous component of proximal altered footwall zones but it is frequently not mentioned in alteration mineral assemblages, due to the unnatural distinctions that many authors make between alteration and mineralisation. It is also becoming increasingly apparent that alumino-silicates such as kaolinite, pyrophyllite, andalusite and others exist locally in altered zones across the entire age spectrum of VHMS deposits, from Archaean to Cainozoic, and that there may always have been continua between moderate and low pH submarine hydrothermal systems. Because of the consistent feldspar destruction, alteration indices such as Al (Ishikawa et al., 1976), CCPI and S/Na2O (Large et al., 2001a) should be effective indicators of alteration intensity in all kinds of VHMS districts, at least at prospect scales. Footwall alteration facies of the Australian Palaeozoic and Japanese Cainozoic deposits are typically more sericitic than chloritic, and their proximal zones tend to be quartz rich. The limited mass change data available indicate they have typically undergone moderate to large net mass gains, which are dominantly attributable to gains in Si that significantly outweighed losses and gains in other components. This predominance of sericite is probably not due to low availability of Fe and Mg. Iron may be significantly added as pyrite and Mg commonly appears in carbonates or chlorite in upper or upper-peripheral altered footwall zones. In contrast, chlorite dominates the well-defined footwall alteration pipes that underlie many Canadian Archaean
deposits. These zones are characterised by significant net mass loss, in which the large loss of Si outweighed addition of Mg and Fe. Although there are some exceptions (e.g. Panorama), major Si and net mass losses are indicated wherever chlorite is dominant in an alteration mineral assemblage. This generalisation also applies to Australian Palaeozoic systems; for instance the small chlorite-rich zones in the Hellyer alteration pipe (Gemmell and Large, 1992) and Thalanga footwall (Herrmann and Hill, 2001). In terms of mass change, the major difference between Archaean deposits with chloride footwall alteration pipes, and Palaeozoic to Cainozoic deposits with quartz + sericitedominated altered footwall zones, is that the former lost mass and the latter gained mass. In addition, in all cases, the major contributor to net mass change was Si. This difference in the behaviour of Si is probably related to the evolution of the hydrothermal systems and particularly the compositions of hydrothermal fluids, which originated as seawater in both cases. Evidence of chlorite overprinting sericite quartz assemblages in the Canadian footwall alteration pipes suggests that fluid compositions changed as the hydrothermal system intensified. The initial fluid was probably over-saturated in Si and deposited quartz along the discharge zone to the seafloor as it cooled, whereas the later fluid, possibly of higher temperature and associated with Cu enrichment of the sulfide deposit, was undersaturated and leached Si from the core of the discharge zone. This change may be explained in terms of the regional deep semiconformable altered zones associated with Archaean deposits. The lower semi-conformable altered zone is typically a zone of silicification at temperatures greater than about 400C (Kennedy, 1950; MacGeehan, 1978; Fournier, 1985; Galley, 1993; Skirrow and Franklin, 1994), attributed to down-going modified seawater being heated up to the range of retrograde Si solubility at 400-600C (Fournier, 1985). If fluid deposited Si in the deep semi-conformable altered zone, it would then be undersaturated in Si as it ascended the discharge zone, even if it cooled as it ascended. The link between Archaean deposits and regional semiconformable altered zones, which are generally not recognised in the younger VHMS districts, suggests that Archaean crustal conditions (thin crust and large high-level plutonic intrusions) favoured large, intense and presumably long-lived systems. Palaeozoic and younger VHMS districts are not typically associated with large high-level plutons analogous to the Flavrian pluton of the Noranda district (Kerr and Gibson, 1993) or the Strelley granite at Panorama (Brauhart et al., 2001). Their absence may account for the less extensive, perhaps less evolved, altered footwall zones associated with Si and net mass gains that are most common beneath the Palaeozoic and younger massive sulfide deposits.
FIGURE 7.18 | Hellyer plan showing the altered zones immediately below the massive sulfide ore (approximately 400 RL). The black line is the outline of the base of the massive sulfide. Modified after Gemmell and Large (1992).
182
CHAPTER 7
Komyshan, 1989). The massive sulflde lens is bisected and offset by a major north-south trending fault, the Jack fault (Figs 7.18 and 7.19). Beneath the massive sulflde lens is an elongate, carrot-shaped, zoned, footwall alteration pipe (described in detail by Gemmell and Large, 1992). Above the deposit is a moderately well developed altered hanging wall zone (Gemmell and Fulton, 2001). The massive sulflde lens exhibits classical metal zoning, with minor Cu concentrated in a pyritic core, followed by low grade Zn + Pb, and then high grade Zn + Pb + Ag in the upper parts of the massive sulflde lens (McArthur and Dronseika, 1990; Large, 1992; McArthur, 1996). The centre of the massive sulflde deposit is capped by a quartz + pyrite zone, which is flanked by thin irregular lenses of barite that
are directly over the high-grade massive sulflde (Sharpe, 1991). Barite and massive sulfide clasts occur in volcaniclastic mass-flow units flanking the deposit.
Geological setting
The Hellyer ore body occurs above a footwall comprising feldspar-phyric andesitic and basaltic lavas and sills that consist of coherent and autoclastic facies, which are mainly hyaloclastite and peperite (Fig. 7.20: Waters and Wallace, 1992). Basalt (Hellyer basalt) and black mudstone (Que River Shale) dominate the hanging wall (Komyshan, 1986). The abundance of basalt-mudstone peperite indicates that most of the basalt units are sills that intruded the black mudstone (McPhie and Allen, 1992; Waters and Wallace, 1992). Very thick, graded quartz-bearing rhyolitic pumiceous and volcanic lithic breccias interbedded with turbidites and mudstones of the Southwell Subgroup occur in the upper parts of the hanging wall (Corbett, 1992; McPhie and Allen, 1992). The ore lens position is marked by a 040 m thick volcaniclastic unit, which mainly consists of coarse polymictic volcanic breccia, sandstone and laminated volcanic siltstone (Waters and Wallace, 1992). Trilobites in the Que River Shale, very thick sections of black mudstone and the abundance of graded mass-flow units collectively indicate that the Hellyer massive sulfide formed in a moderate to deep (>1000 m) submarine setting (Large et al., 2001a). The volcanic facies association indicates proximity to intrabasinal vents for effusive, basaltic and andesitic eruptions and synvolcanic intrusions.
Footwall alteration facies and zonation A zoned carrot-shaped footwall alteration pipe extends for at least 500 m beneath the Hellyer deposit (Figs 7.6C and 7.20). At the centre of the alteration pipe, immediately below the massive sulfide lens, is a siliceous core zone dominated by intense, pervasive quartz + sericite + pyrite alteration facies. This zone is progressively enclosed in chlorite, sericite and stringer envelope (or sericite + quartz) altered zones (Fig.
7.6C).
The moderate, selective sericite + quartz alteration facies (e.g. data sheet HE2 in the stringer envelope zone) is the 10-50 m wide outermost part of the alteration pipe and grades outward into weak, selective-pervasive albite + chlorite alteration facies (least-altered footwall, data sheet HE1). Primary volcanic textures are preserved (although modified), lithic fragments exhibit sericite-altered margins, and feldspar phenocrysts are partly altered to sericite. The AI shows an increase from background values of around 3055 to values of 60-70 (Fig. 2.8B).
FIGURE 7.19 | Cross-section of the Hellyer deposit showing the distribution of rock types, mineralised zones, and altered footwall and hanging wall zones. (A) The ore lens and altered zones are offset along the Jack fault (modified after Gemmell and Large, 1993). (B) Reconstructed 10740 N/10870 N cross-section showing the massive sulfide and footwall alteration pipe prior to folding and faulting (modified after Downs, 1993).
LOCAL HYDROTHERMAL ALTERATION RELATED TO VHMS DEPOSITS | 1 8 3 Southwell Subgroup: crystal-rich volcaniclastic shale, greywacke and minor felsic lava Que River Shale: black shale and minor sandstone Hellyer basalt: massive to pillowed basalt, pillow breccia, hyaloclastite and andesitic lava Mixed sequence: polymict volcanic breccia, massive and auto-brecciated dacite and massive sulfide ore
v
"
V V V / V n ,i I V
Lower andesites and basalts: andesitic, dacitic and basaltic lavas, hyaloclastites and minor volcani-clastic facies
FIGURE 7.20 | Schematic stratigraphic section through the Que-Hellyer Volcanics showing the Lower basalt: massive to pillowed basalts, e x t e n t of a | tered z o n e s at t h e He || yer hyaloclastites and pillow breccias , ~ n. , . . . ..,. . ' and Que River deposits. Modified after Waters and Wallace (1992).
Sericite chlorite dominates the strong, selectivepervasive alteration facies in a 1015 m wide zone marking the outer extent of an intense hydro thermal alteration system, recognised by obliteration of volcanic textures, presence of minor sulfides (mainly pyrite) and complete replacement of feldspar phenocrysts and feldspathic groundmass by sericite chlorite (e.g. data sheet HE3). The AI is typically between 70 and 85. On the Alteration box plot samples from this facies plot along a line from the least-altered footwall field toward the chlorite corner. In the intense, pervasive chlorite alteration facies, all primary minerals and glass in the footwall andesitic rocks are completely replaced by fine-grained chlorite with minor pyrite, sericite, quartz and carbonate (e.g. data sheet HE4). The AI is between 90 and 100 and the CCPI between 80 and 90. In the upper parts, immediately below the massive sulfide, this zone includes an intense, spheroidal chlorite + carbonate alteration facies (Fig. 7.6C), which has up to 50% dolomite in a fine-grained matrix of chlorite (e.g. data sheet HE5). This alteration facies has a lower AI (5080) than the intense chlorite alteration facies due to the elevated whole-rock CaO related to the dolomite component in the rock. In the siliceous core zone, all volcanic textures are completely destroyed and the rock is composed of a fine intergrowth of quartz + sericite + pyrite + chlorite (intense, pervasive quartz + sericite + pyrite alteration facies, data sheet HE6). This zone also contains a series of sub-vertical pyrite + quartz + sphalerite + galena chalcopyrite carbonate barite veins, interpreted as hydrothermal feeders below the ore body. Alteration indices in the siliceous core zone are extremely high with values of both AI and CCPI exceeding 90. Hanging wall alteration facies and zonation \
altered hanging wall zone extends through the hanging wall pillow basalts up to the contact with the overlying Que River Shale (Fig. 7.19). Data sheet HE7 is an example of the leastaltered hanging wall andesite. The distribution and intensity of alteration facies in the altered hanging wall zone is patchy, with pillow margins more intensely and pervasively altered (e.g. data sheet HE9) than the pillow interiors. The outer margin of the altered hanging wall zone is defined by weak sericite alteration facies grading inwards to a pink-white, strong, pervasive albite alteration facies (e.g. data sheet HE8), moderate, pervasive chlorite + carbonate alteration facies (e.g. data sheet HE9), and in the centre of the system, a distinctive green, strong, pervasive fuchsite alteration facies (e.g. data sheet HE 10). There is no systematic trend in the alteration indices in the altered hanging wall zones. AI and CCPI values are commonly low in the albite alteration facies due to high Na 2 O, and low MgO and FeO values (e.g. data sheet HE9).
Ore genesis
Based on geological, textural, and metal zonation studies, McArthur (1989, 1996), Large (1992) and Gemmell and Large (1992) concluded that the Hellyer massive sulfide deposit grew as a mound in a seafloor depression. The metal zonation from Fe - Cu Pb-Zn > Ba was interpreted to be an expression of hydrothermal zone refining (Large, 1992), which developed similarly to that described by Eldridge et al. (1983) for the Kuroko deposits. Solomon and Khin Zaw (1999), however, presented fluid inclusion data (indicating high ore fluid salinities: averaging 11 wt%) to propose that sulfide deposition occurred in a seafloor depression brinepool, directly above the footwall alteration pipe. Solomon and Gaspar (2001) provide textural evidence in support of sulfide accumulation in a brine pool. Solomon and Groves (1994) and Solomon et al. (2004) suggest that the abnormally high salinity and other chemical characteristics of the Hellyer fluid inclusions, are strongly suggestive of involvement of magmatic fluids in the hydrothermal system.
Hanging wall alteration facies at Hellyer are less well developed than the footwall alteration facies; however, recent detailed studies by Gemmell and Fulton (2001) have recognised an upward flaring zoned alteration system that is centred above the thickest part of the massive sulfide lens. The
1 8 4 [ CHAPTER 7
HE1
feldspar phenocrysts, perlitic fractures and curvi-angular cm-scale clasts, areas of jigsaw-fit clasts Primary composition andesite Lithofacies Interpretation massive, matrix supported and poorly sorted andesitic hyaloclastite albite + chlorite + sericite + calcite selective-pervasive chlorite + calcite + sericite in matrix and chlorite + sericite in clasts, chlorite infill in perlitic fractures, sericite + calcite-altered plagioclase regional good weak syn volcanic? diagenetic
Geochemistry SiO2 54.69 TiO2 0.64 AI2O3 17.92 Fe2O3 7.65 MnO 0.09 MgO 3.79 CaO 3.14 Na2O 6.45
Rb Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb Tl
Photomicrograph (ppl)
HE 2
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 AI2O3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO Na2O 57.38 K2O 0.58 P2O5 15.33 S 7.76 CO2 0.10 Total 3.51 LOI 2.71 1.29 3.34 0.13 4.15 96.27 7.89 Rb Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb Tl 127 97 6700 300 2700 4500 Zr Nb Y Al CCPI Ti/Zr 123 7.0 26 63 69 28.3
Photomicrograph (xn)
1 8 6 | CHAPTER 7
HE 3
Primary composition dacite-basalt Lithofacies Interpretation Alteration minerals Alteration textures Distribution Preservation Alteration intensity Timing Alteration style
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 AI2O3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO 54.50 0.52 14.51 10.93 0.21 5.16 1.47
3 58
Cu Pb Zn 97.92 Sb 8.11 Tl Zr Nb
0.10 6.02
Al CCPI Ti/Zr
79 77 33.4
94 6.0
Na2O K ?
0.90 ' Ba
]]' Y 4100
18
Photomicrograph (xn)
HE 4
Primary composition andesite Lithofacies Interpretation Alteration minerals Alteration textures Distribution Preservation Alteration intensity Timing Alteration style
massive
indeterminate chlorite + pyrite + (quartz + sericite + calcite + galena) pervasive, chlorite infill in perlitic fractures, chlorite + quartz-altered feldspars pipe moderate intense synmineralisation hydrothermal
Geochemistry SiO2 37.69 TiO2 0.59 AI2O3 16.08 Fe2O3 18.86 MnO 0.41 MgO 11.38 CaO 0.64 Na2O 0.12
Rb Sr Ba Cu 96.35 Pb 12.29 Zn Sb Tl
Zr Nb Y Al CCPI Ti/Zr
Photomicrograph (xn)
CHAPTER 7
HE 5
135756
intense, spheroidal chlorite +carbonate footwall Que-Hellyer Volcanics Mount Read Volcanics coherent, feldspar-phyric andesite nil porphyritic andesite massive indeterminate chlorite + dolomite + (quartz + sericite) nodules-spheroids local poor
intense
synmineralisation hydrothermal
Geochemistry SiO2 34.88 P2O5 TiO2 0.60 S AI2O3 15.63 CO2 Fe2O3 12.89 Total MnO 0.80 LOI MgO 13.07 CaO 4.86 Rb Na2O 0.01 Sr K2O 1.73 B a Cu Pb Zn 88.72 Sb 15.40 Tl Zr 66 N b 58 1 1200 0.13 4.13 300 7200 11500 Al CCPI Ti/Zr 75 93 29.0
124
90
28
Photomicrograph (xn)
HE 6
Primary composition andesite Lithofacies Interpretation Alteration minerals Alteration textures massive in situ hyaloclastite quartz + sericite + pyrite + (chlorite) pervasive, pseudomorphs of feldspar pyroxene?, quartz and sericite veins disseminated pyrite, feldspar overgrowths on phenocrysts core of pipe moderate intense synmineralisation hydrothermal
Geochemistry SiO2 67.42 TiO2 0.30 AI2O3 8.13 Fe2O3 12.34 MnO 0.07 MgO 1.42 CaO 0.32 Na2O 0.03
4.0 28 91 85 24.7
Photomicrograph (xn)
1 9 0 | CHAPTER 7
HE 7
Sample no. Alteration facies Location Formation Succession Volcanic facies Relict minerals Relict textures Lithofacies Interpretation Alteration minerals Alteration textures Distribution Preservation Alteration intensity Timing Alteration style
142562 subtle, pervasive aibite + chlorite + calcite hanging wall Que-HellyerVolcanics Mount Read Volcanics massive, feldspar-phyric amygdaloidal andesite plagioclase massive, porphyritic, weakly amygdaloidal massive lava chlorite + aibite + calcite + quartz + (chalcopyrite) selective-pervasive, chlorite or quartz infill in amygdales, quartz + calcite veins regional good weak synmineralisation diagenetic to metamorphic
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 AI2O3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO Na,0 51.14 0.55 14.77 8.82 0.21 5.56 5.44 4.19 K2O P2O5 S CO2 Total LOI 0.42 0.60 0.06 4.76 99.91 8.17 Rb Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb TI 21 Zr 125 Nb 226 Y 745 6 Al 147 CCPI 1.1 Ti/Zr <0.5 151 7.1 21 38 75 21.8
Photomicrograph (xn)
HE 8
Primary composition basalt Lithofacies Interpretation Alteration minerals Alteration textures massive and jigsaw-fit breccia lava or sill albite + chlorite + calcite + (pyrite) pervasive, albite + chlorite, massive chlorite + pyrite veins, patchy calcite domains possibly irregular pseudomorphs local, plume? poor strong post mineralisation diagenetic-hydrothermal?
Photomicrograph (xn)
1 9 2 I CHAPTER 7
HE 9
Geochemistry SiO2 42.34 TiO2 0.61 AI2O3 11.78 Fe2O3 5.41 MnO 0.12 MgO 4.34 CaO 15.44 Na2O 1.06
Rb Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb Tl
Photomicrograph (xn)
HE 10
142643
strong, pervasive fuchsite hanging wall Que-Hellyer Volcanics Mount Read Volcanics massive feldspar-phyric basalt feldspar porphyritic, minor amygdales
Primary composition basaltic andesite Lithofacies Interpretation Alteration minerals Alteration textures massive lava or sill sericite (fuchsite) + calcite + ankerite + chlorite + pyrite pervasive, disseminated pyrite, sericite cleavage, calcite sericite pseudomorphs after feldspar plume poor strong post mineralisation hydrothermal
Geochemistry
SiO 2 TiO2
K2O
S CO2 Total LOI
Rb Sr Ba
74 4.9 18
AIA
Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO Na2O
23 50 43.9
Photomicrograph (ppl)
1 9 4 | CHAPTER 7
Geological setting
The Rosebery, Hercules and South Hercules polymetallic ore bodies are hosted by the same stratigraphic sequence in the upper part of the Central Volcanic Complex, west of the Henty fault (Solomon, 1964; Green et al., 1981). The footwall comprises a thick (up to 500 m), poorly stratified rhyolitic-dacitic succession of weakly graded, feldspar-phyric pumice breccia, which is interpreted to be the product of large volume submarine caldera-forming eruptions, and
rhyolitic and dacitic sills (Hercules Pumice Formation: Lees, 1987; Allen, 1994b; Large et al., 2001b). The ore lenses occur in the 5 to 10 m thick, finely stratified pumiceous siltstone, sandstone, crystal-rich sandstone and claystone top (host rocks) of the footwall pumice breccias (Lees, 1987; Corbett and Solomon, 1989; Allen, 1994b; Large et al., 2001b). The host rocks are overlain by black mudstone, which represents a hiatus in volcanism marked by non-volcanic sedimentation. The hanging wall comprises a 5 to 400 m thick succession of massive to stratified, feldspar + quartz-phyric rhyodacitic volcaniclastic units of the White Spur Formation, interbedded with black mudstone (Lees, 1987; Allen, 1994b). The footwall rhyolitic pumice breccias haveTi/Zr of 7-9 (Fig. 4.5), whereas the host interval porphyry sill has Ti/Zr of 12-14, and the volcaniclastic facies 10-30 (Large et al., 2001b). Bedforms and textures within the footwall pumice breccias and host rocks are consistent with deposition from volcaniclastic turbidity currents, debris flows and suspension in a below-wave-base environment (McPhie and Allen, 1992). The footwall pumice breccias are interpreted to represent the submarine deposits from a large, felsic explosive eruption (Allen, 1994a). The host rocks may have been derived from water-settled suspension sedimentation or the influx of volcaniclastic turbidites from distal rhyolitic volcanic centres (Large et al., 2001b). The hanging wall volcaniclastic units probably comprise the medial to distal facies from an extrabasinal felsic volcanic centre (Allen, 1994a). A below-wave-base submarine setting for the RoseberyHercules succession is indicated by the presence of sedimentary structures in the footwall pumice breccias consistent with deposition from cold water-supported gravity flows and water-settled fall, rare intercalated black pyritic mudstone and the associated VHMS deposits (Gifkins and Allen, 2002).
FIGURE 7.21 | Long-section of the Rosebery mine, western Tasmania, showing the drives and main ore lenses, labelled alphabetically (provided by Zinifex Rosebery mine, 2004). K lens is at depth at the north end of the mine.
1 9 6 | CHAPTER 7
RB1
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 AI2O3 Fe2O3 73.26 0.32 14.13 2.11 0.03 0.97 0.99 3.87
K2O
P2O5
S
CO2
Total
Rb Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb Tl
257
14.2
33 41 31
7.5
LOI
1 3 Al 26 CCPI
0.0 Ti/Zr 0.0
Photomicrograph (ppl)
RB2
139586
subtle, selective albite + quartz + sericite hanging wall White Spur Formation Mount Read Volcamics feldspar > quartz crystal-rich pumiceous sandstone plagioclase and quartz clastic (feldspar and quartz crystals, and pumice shards)
Primary composition rhyolite-dacite Lithofacies Interpretation Alteration minerals Alteration textures Distribution Preservation Alteration intensity Timing Alteration style massive subaqueous mass-flow deposit albite + sericite + quartz + chlorite selective clast alteration, disseminated sericite, albite + sericite-altered plagioclase regional good subtle synvolcanic diagenetic
Geochemistry SiO2 74.40 TiO2 0.35 AI2O3 14.34 Fe2O3 2.06 MnO 0.04 MgO 0.57 CaO 0.58 Na2O 4.41
75
Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb Tl Zr
Nb Y
:
10.8 33 34 27 10.6
Al CCPI Ti/Zr
Photomicrograph (xn)
1 9 8 I CHAPTER 7
KB 3
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 AI2O3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO Na2O 71.46 K2O 0.32 P2O5 12.93 S 2.44 CO2 0.11 Total 1.65 LOI 1.49 1.36 4.16 Rb 0.06 Sr 0.06 Ba 1.87 Cu 98.02 Pb 3.89 Zn Sb Tl 182 Zr 56 Nb 1042.5 Y 3 5 Al 29 CCPI 2.7 Ti/Zr 0.9 229.9 12.6 32 67 41 8.3
Photomicrograph (xn)
RB4
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 Al2O3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO Na2O 72.95 K2O 0.27 P 2 O 5 12.86 S 2.58 co 2 0.17 Total 1.14 LOI 0.27 0.01 4.24 Rb 0.04 Sr 1.94 Ba 0.40 98.19 3.57 Cu Pb Zn Sb Tl 202 Zr 18 Nb 1767 Y 239 4300 Al 6900 CCPI 7.5 Ti/Zr 4.5 224 13.2 35 95 45 7.2
Photomicrograph (xn)
2 0 0 I CHAPTER 7
RB5
nil
porphyritic? rhyolite massive indeterminate chlorite + pyrite + sphalerite + quartz + sericite foliated, schistose local poor intense synmineralisation hydrothermal and metamorphic
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 44.22 0.33 14.48 16.58 1.49 2.22 0.10 0.05
K2O
P2O5 S
MA
Fe2O3
Rb Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb Tl
174 Zr 14 Nb 948 Y
1678
247
12.0
35 97 83
8.0
co2 Total
LOI
604 Al
68200 CCPI
Photomicrograph (ppl)
RB6
nil
rare feldspar crystals
Primary composition dacite Lithofacies Interpretation Alteration minerals Alteration textures massive indeterminate rhodochrosite + sericite + pyrite nodular-spheroidal rhodochrosite, disseminated pyrite, sericite-altered feldspar local, immediate hanging wall ofsulfide lens poor intense synmineralisation hydrothermal
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 AI2O3 Fe2O3 16.79 0.39 10.73 7.50 29.36 1.97 2.04 0.05
K2O
P2O5
S
Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb TI Zr
27
4297
Nb Y Al
CCPI Ti/Zr
7.2 20
co2
Total
LOI
73 70
16.5
Rb
183
142
Photomicrograph (ppl)
I CHAPTER 7
deposition for the host succession. The occurrence of exhalative massive sulfide bodies, limestone with shallow marine fauna, and welded ignimbrite in the Tyndall Group at Comstock suggest a shallow marine setting for mineralisation (Jago et al., 1972; Corbett et al., 1974; White and McPhie, 1997; Corbett, 2001).
Geological setting
The Lyell ore bodies and their altered halos are focussed along the Great Lyell fault and occur at a variety of stratigraphic intervals in the Central Volcanic Complex and in the overlying Mount Julia Member of the Comstock Formation, Tyndall Group (Corbett, 2001). Western Tharsis is situated in a steeply west-dipping, overturned, east-facing succession of altered intermediate to felsic volcanic rocks assigned to the Central Volcanic Complex of the Middle Cambrian Mount Read Volcanics. In the Mount Lyell area, these volcanic rocks are reverse-faulted to the east against the late Cambrian to Early Ordovician siliciclastic conglomerate and sandstone of the Owen Group. All the Mount Lyell field deposits lie within a 6 x 1 km pyritic altered zone adjacent to the complex fault contact (Corbett, 2001). Two units of rhyolitic volcaniclastic rocks with subordinate interbedded volcanogenic sandstone and siltstone comprise the immediate stratigraphic footwall and host rocks at Western Tharsis (Huston and Kamprad, 2001). These units, each several hundred metres thick, contain some ash- to lapilli-sized clasts but primary volcanic textures are typically obscured by alteration and their volcaniclastic origin is largely interpretative. They are separated by a 10-50 m thick group of andesitic volcaniclastic rocks and locally amygdaloidal coherent lavas or sills. The stratigraphic hanging wall consists of a 200300 m thick complex of intercalated felsic and intermediate volcaniclastic rocks. A thin unit of felsic quartz porphyry, possibly a correlate of the lower Tyndall Group, occurs between the altered Central Volcanic Complex and the faulted contact with the Owen Group. In this part of the field, the (North Lyell) fault contact dips at 70 to the southwest. Deep drilling indicates that the Western Tharsis mineralised zone may intersect the fault at around 1500 m below surface (Corbett, 2001). The presence of thick, graded beds in the Central Volcanic Complex at Lyell indicates a subaqueous environment of
is similarly effective in delineating pyrophyllite, topaz and zunyite-bearing zones (see Section 8.2 for more detail). Chlorite compositions are moderately Fe-rich (molecular Mg/Mg + Fe ratios = 27-48) with a subtle trend to Fe enrichment towards the mineralised zone. Carbonates in the distal to medial alteration facies are ankeritic to sideritic in composition. They show a distinct trend of Fe enrichment from the footwall towards the mineralised zone (Huston and Kamprad, 2001). Carbonates in the hanging wall are moderately manganiferous (up to 0.2 Mn atoms per formula unit).
Ore genesis
Metallogenic interpretations of the Mount Lyell deposits have fuelled geological debate for over a century and remain controversial today (Corbett, 2001; Huston and Kamprad, 2001). Early models that related mineralisation to Devonian or Cambrian intrusions were succeeded, during the 1960s, by acceptance of Cambrian synvolcanic origins. In the 1980s and early 1990s, the North Lyell type bornite ores were popularly attributed to re-mobilisation during Devonian deformation. Large et al. (1996) revived the magmatic connection, interpreting Cambrian granites to be the source of hydrothermal fluids and metals. In recent years, a magmatic connection has been further supported by wider recognition of advanced argillic type assemblages, which are consistent with the involvement of magmatic volatiles and acidic fluids. Nevertheless, there is still disagreement over the timing of mineralisation. Huston and Kamprad (2001) pointed to an apparent (Pb-isotopic) 40 Ma age difference between stratiform synvolcanic Pb + Zn + Cu sulfide lenses at Lyell Comstock and the disseminated Cu + Au deposit at Prince Lyell. They suggested a two event history: Middle Cambrian
syngenetic stratiform Pb + Zn + Cu mineralisation followed by a 40 Ma period of tectonism that culminated in highsulfidation type Cu + Au mineralised zones derived from deep Ordovician granites. However, the more extensive field evidence gathered by Corbett (2001) indicates that all the alteration and mineralisation was restricted to Middle Cambrian, and ceased during deposition of the lower part of the Tyndall Group. Rather than a temporal overprinting of different styles, Corbett (2001) envisaged a single, vertically extensive, submarine volcanic, hybrid magmatic-seawater hydrothermal system. It produced disseminated chalcopyrite + pyrite (and locally magnetite + apatite) mineralised zones in the deeper parts, high-sulfidation type bornite mineralised zones and intense siliceous altered zones in the upper subseafloor zones, and deposited exhalative Pb + Zn + Cu massive sulfide lenses at the seafloor. The Western Tharsis zone encompasses the transition between deep chalcopyrite + pyrite and upper highsulfidation types of mineralisation (Fig. 7.22). Corbett's diagrammatic representation shows the system as sub-vertical, cutting through sub-horizontal volcanic strata and focussed along or adjacent to the Great Lyell fault. However, the Western Tharsis deposit appears to be subvertical and stratabound. This is possibly a misinterpretation; primary volcanic textures and facies associations are largely obscured in the intensely altered zones. Furthermore, Corbett's (2001) model suggests diapir-like upward movement of the phyllosilicate-rich altered volcanic rocks on the hanging wall side of the fault zone, which may have disrupted the volcanic sequence. The arguments about Mount Lyell are not yet settled. Nevertheless, the emerging recognition of high-sulfidation ore deposits may renew interest in exploration in western Tasmania.
FIGURE 7.22 | Cross-section model of the Mount Lyell, vertically extensive, submarine, hybrid magmatic-seawater hydrothermal, alteration and mineralisation system, western Tasmania (modified after Corbett, 2001).
2 0 4 | CHAPTER 7
WT 1
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 AI2O3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO Na2O 75.69 0.26 13.00 2.45 0.04 0.78 1.04 1.15 K20 P2O5 S CO2 Total LOI Rb 3.33 0.04 0.37 1.17 99.32 3.12 112 Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb Tl Zr 37 243 3 14 28 0.7 0.9 291 Nb Y Al CCPI Ti/Zr 13 40 65 40 5.4
Photomicrograph (xn)
y\/T 2
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 AI2O3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO Na2O 47.78 0.51 14.56 12.59 0.19 4.63 5.53 2.07 K20 P2O5 S CO2 Total LOI 1.47 0.09 0.04 7.84 97.30 10.71 Rb Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb Tl 46 83 367 10 6 199 0.8 0.5 Zr Nb Y Al CCPI Ti/Zr 72 3 17 45 82 42.5
Photomicrograph (xn)
2 0 6 | CHAPTER 7
WT 3
Distribution Preservation Alteration intensity Timing Alteration style poor strong synmineralisation hydrothermal
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 AI2O3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO Na,0 70.58 0.23 12.12 8.03 0.11 0.68 0.16 0.21 K2O P2O5 S CO2 Total LOI 3.63 0.04 0.02 3.11 98.92 4.44 Rb Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb TI
126 19 758 18 5 63 0.9 Al CCPI 92 67 Zr Nb Y 246 13 42
2.5 Ti/Zr
5.6
Photomicrograph (xn)
yyi 4
Distribution Preservation Alteration intensity Timing Alteration style hydrothermal poor intense
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 AI2O3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO Na2O K2O 80.78 0.24 12.25 2.21 0.01 0.12 0.03 0.36 1.43 P2O5 S CO2 Total LOI Rb Sr Ba 0.05 Cu 1.61 Pb 0.40 Zn 99.49 Sb 3.08 Tl Zr 31 Nb 117 Y 1170 72 7 6 0.6 <0.5 249 13 5 Al CCPI Ti/Zr 80 54 5.8
Photomicrograph (xn)
2 0 8 | CHAPTER 7
WT 5
113105
intense, proximal quartz + pyrophyllite + pyrite -200 m straigraphicaily above mineralised zone Central Volcanic Complex Mount Read Volcanics altered rhyolite
Distribution Preservation Alteration intensity Timing Alteration style hydrothermal poor intense
Geochemistry SiO2 68.25 P2O5 TiO2 0.28 S AI2O3 18.13 CO2 Fe2O3 1.35 Total MnO 0.30 LOl MgO 1.12 CaO 2.05 Rb Na2O 0.05 Sr K2O 0.06 Ba
Cu Pb Zn Sb Tl Zr 1 Nb 33 Y 171
Al CCPI Ti/Zr
36 96 4.6
Photomicrograph (xn)
yyy g
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 AI,0 '2^3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO Na2O 60.29 0.35 12.84 10.77 0.52 1.08 1.26 0.13 K2O S 3.97 0.08 6.28 2.64 100.21 8.09 Rb Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb 120 25 1737 88 214 138 1.0 Tl Zr Nb Y Al CCPI Ti/Zr 1.0 182 9 23 78 72 11.5
co 2
Total LOI
Photomicrograph (xn)
2 1 0 I CHAPTER 7
WT 7
Primary composition rhyolite Lithofacies Interpretation Alteration minerals Alteration textures indeterminate quartz + sericite + pyrite + chalcopyrite pervasive: 50-100 pm microcrystalline quartz, interstitial shreds and seams of sericite, disseminated euhedral pyrite, > chalcopyrite
Distribution Preservation Alteration intensity Timing Alteration style hydrothermal poor strong
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 AI2O3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO Na2O 72.75 0.22 10.11 6.11 0.01 0.36 0.33 0.05 K2O 2.80 Rb 0.35 Sr 4.17 Ba 0.02 Cu 97.28 Pb 4.22 Zn Sb Tl 64 111 1330 13800 21 32 99.2 <0.5 Zr Nb Y Al CCPI Ti/Zr 200 11 12
S
CO2 Total LOI
67 6.6
Photomicrograph (xn)
WT 8
Geochemistry
58.74 0.49 AI2O3 13.65 Fe2O3 12.66 MnO 0.23 MgO 1.75 CaO 0.26 Na2O 0.03
SiO 2 TiO 2
3.45 P2O5 0.27 5.38 S co 2 0.17 Total 97.08 LOI 6.73 K2O
Rb Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb Tl
Zr Nb Y
167 13 25
Photomicrograph (xn)
212 | CHAPTER 7
Geological setting
The ore lenses lie in a laterally extensive but narrow stratabound altered zone (A-zone of Callaghan, 2001) at the stratigraphic boundary between the Central Volcanic Complex and the base of the Tyndall Group. In the Henty area these units trend NNW to NNE and face east, with steep easterly to slightly overturned steep westerly dips. The Henty fault zone, trending about 015 and dipping at 70 to the west, obliquely truncates the volcanic succession. The stratabound altered and mineralised zones occur in the immediate footwall of the fault zone, extending about 200 m down-dip from the fault (Halley and Roberts, 1997; Callaghan, 2001). The intersection of the fault and the favourable stratigraphic horizon plunges at a low angle to the south. This is a consequence of the gradual change in trend and slight overturning of the host sequence, from NNW with steep easterly dip in the south, to NNE and steep westerly dip in the northern part of the mine area (Halley and Roberts, 1997). As in many Au deposits, grade cut-offs rather than lithological differences define the ore zones (Callaghan, 1998). Most of the high-grade ore exists in thin lenses or sheet-like bodies up to 7 m thick in the intense, massive quartz (MQ) alteration facies (Halley and Roberts, 1997) but this facies is not uniformly auriferous (Callaghan, 2001). The stratigraphic upper part of the mineralised A-zone typically has a high disseminated base-metal-sulfide content or is spatially associated with lenses of massive pyrite or massive to banded sphalerite + galena (Penney, 1998). Discontinuous massive pyrite lenses up to 2 m thick exist at this stratigraphic level for 600 m of strike but extend less than 150 m down-dip from the Henty fault. Feldspar-phyric to aphyric dacitic lavas and rare basaltic lavas intercalated with dacitic to basaltic hyaloclastite and polymictic volcanic breccias of the Central Volcanic Complex dominate the stratigraphic footwall between the Henty fault and A-zone (e.g. data sheet HN1: Callaghan, 1998). The footwall succession includes discontinuous calcareous volcaniclastic units and hematitic fossiliferous limestone. Immobile element ratios indicate that the protoliths of the altered and mineralised zone were compositionally uniform dacitic volcanic units. The stratigraphic hanging wall, immediately east of the A-zone, comprises massive, andesitic, feldspar crystal-rich volcanic sandstone (e.g. data sheet HN2), dacitic volcanic breccia, lavas and polymictic volcano-sedimentary breccia,
intercalated with calcareous volcanic sandstone, hematitic fossiliferous limestone and minor mudstone. This lithologically diverse part of the hanging wall succession, up to 200 m thick, is recognised as the Lynchford Member: the lowermost unit of the Tyndall Group (Callaghan, 2001). It is succeeded eastwards by the Mount Julia Member consisting of graded rhyolitic breccia, quartz + feldspar-rich volcanic sandstone and minor siltstone intruded by southward thickening quartz + feldspar porphyritic rhyolite sills, cryptodomes and associated hyaloclastites. Overlying this is a thick succession of quartzrich epiclastic sandstone and volcanolithic conglomerate (Zig Zag Hill Formation), which passes conformably eastwards into siliciclastic and micaceous sandstone and conglomerate. White and McPhie (1996) interpreted the massive crystal-rich volcanic sandstone of the Lynchford and Mount Julia Members as originating from large subaerial or shallow marine explosive eruptions that produced pyroclastic flows, which transgressed into a shallow marine environment. The fossil assemblage in the limestone units (Jago et al., 1972) and local welded ignimbrite units in the Mount Julia Member (White and McPhie, 1996) also indicate that the Henty host rocks, or at least those immediately overlying the mineralised zone, were deposited in a near-shore, shallow-marine setting.
above (Callaghan, 2001) or 20-40 m stratigraphically above the mineralised zone (Halley and Roberts, 1997). In proximal areas, the hanging wall albite + quartz alteration fades is up to 100 m thick, possibly extending up to the base of the Zig Zag Hill Formation (Callaghan, 1998). It is considered to be of hydrothermal origin, distinct from regional-scale diagenetic albite alteration facies.
Ore genesis
Halley and Roberts (1997) interpreted Henty as a Au-rich volcanogenic massive sulfide deposit because of its association with conformable pyrite and carbonate lenses, colloform textures in pyrite, the presence of red jasper clasts that resemble siliceous exhalites, and C-, O- and Pb-isotopic data that indicate a Cambrian synvolcanic origin for the stratabound alteration system. They suggested that its unusual high Au/Ag ratios, extent of footwall silicification and high proportion of
base-metal sulfides disseminated in the upper altered footwall zone were due to the shallow-marine, near-shore setting where input of meteoric water produced low-salinity hydrothermal fluids, which boiled and cooled at some depth below the seafloor. Although the Au in the intense, massive quartz alteration facies exists largely in late-stage veinlets related to Devonian brittle deformation and remobilisation, there is no evidence for addition of metals during this event. Callaghan (2001) proposed synvolcanic inputs of magmatic volatiles, fluids and metals to account for the Au + Cu + Bi + Ag + Te metal association and Al mobility in the intense, massive quartz alteration facies, which are atypical of seawater dominated VHMS systems. He envisaged a low pH, high salinity, submarine, subseafloor type of pulsed magmatic plus seawater, high-sulfidation epithermal system. This model invokes the proto-Henty fault as a magmatic volatile and fluid conduit that reactivated during Devonian deformation to dislocate the eastern and western halves of the hydrothermal system.
Table 7.2 | The Henty-Mount Julia alteration facies and their defining characteristics (Callaghan, 1998).
Alteration facies Intense, massive quartz Intense, proximal quartz + sericite Code Mineral assemblage Quartz (carbonate, sericite, pyrite, chalcopyrite, galena, gold) Quartz + sericite (carbonate, pyrite, chalcopyrite, galena, sphalerite) Sericite + quartz + pyrite + chlorite (carbonate, chalcopyrite, galena) Calcite chlorite Sulfides Gold (g/t) Variable; average 36 0.1 to 1 Thin lenses in core of A-zone. Distribution
(%) MQ ~2
MV
0.1 to 5
MZ
2-10
0.5 to 2
Peripheral, enveloping the intense proximal quartz + sericite alteration facies. Discontinuous stratiform lenses at stratigraphic top of A-zone in peripheral parts of the system; laterally equivalent to massive pyrite lenses. Stratigraphic footwall, in felsic volcanic rocks between Henty fault and A-zone. Directly adjacent to A-zone and extending up to 100 m into hanging wall succession.
CB
<10
Moderate, footwall sericite + quartz carbonate Strong, hanging wall albite + quartz
MA
<2
AS
2 1 4 | CHAPTER 7
HN1
Primary composition dacite Lithofacies Interpretation Alteration minerals Alteration textures massive to brecciated dacite lava albite + chlorite + calcite + quartz selective-pervasive in irregular chlorite and calcite veinlets and blebs, albite sericitealtered plagioclase Distribution Preservation Alteration intensity Timing Alteration style regional moderate moderate synvoicanic plus subsequent fault-related deformation diagenetic and tectonic deformation
Geochemistry
SiO 2 TiO 2 AI2O3 Fe 2 O 3 MnO MgO CaO Na2O 58.40 0.46 12.50 4.42 0.13 1.51 8.71 5.05 S
K2O
co 2
Total LOI
Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb Tl
114 327
Nb
40.9
Y Al
CCPI Ti/Zr
28 15 48
14.7
7 8
139 1.2 0.5 188
Au
Zr
Photomicrograph (xn)
HN2
Geochemistry SiO2 54.90 TiO2 0.64 AI2O3 14.40 Fe2O3 3.73 MnO 0.19 MgO 1.81 CaO 9.05 Na2O 6.74
Photomicrograph (xn)
2 1 6 | CHAPTER 7
HN3
Geochemistry
SiO 2 TiO 2 AI 2 O 3 Fe 2 O 3 MnO MgO CaO Na2O
Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb Tl Zr
Nb Y Al CCPI Ti/Zr
14.6 26
co 2
Total LOI
17 5.3
Photomicrograph (xn)
HN4
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 AI2O3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO Na2O 22.80 0.18 4.16 2.33 0.26 0.85 36.40 1.38 K2O P2O5 S CO2 Total LOI Au 0.58 Sr 0.08 Ba 0.72 Cu 24.70 Pb 94.44 Zn 29.11 Sb Tl 0.017 Zr 263 476 21 76 100 10.0 0.5 49 Nb Y A! CCPI Ti/Zr 1.0 16 4 60 22.0
Photomicrograph (xn)
2 1 8 | CHAPTER 7
HNS
Primary composition dacite Lithofacies Interpretation Alteration minerals Alteration textures indeterminate indeterminate sericite + quartz + pyrite + chlorite foliated, semi-mylonitic, disseminated pyrite, non-foliated domains of quartz + calcite > sericite local, enclosing mineralised lens poor intense synmineralisation hydrothermal and tectonic-metamorphic
Geochemistry SiO2 65.30 TiO2 0.53 AI2O3 15.00 Fe2O3 6.18 MnO 0.03 MgO 1.28 CaO 0.97 Na2O 0.37
Nb Y Al CCPI Ti/Zr
29.4 25 83 54 18.5
Photomicrograph (xn)
Hi 6
Sr Ba
12.2 14 85 41 14.8
Cu
Pb Zn Sb Tl Zr
Photomicrograph (xn)
2 2 0 | CHAPTER 7
Geochemistry
SiO 2 TiO 2 AI2O3 Fe 2 O 3 MnO MgO CaO Na2O
K2O P2O5 S
co 2
Total LOI
Au Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb Tl
Zr Nb Y Al CCPI Ti/Zr
Photomicrograph (xn)
Geological setting
The Thalanga deposit consisted of several semi-connected, thin, stratabound and stratiform massive sulfide lenses hosted in a distinctive quartz crystal-rich volcanic unit, which is sandwiched between the underlying rhyolitic Mount Windsor Formation and the overlying mixed andesitic-dacitic Trooper Creek Formation (Fig. 7.23). The host unit (known as the Thalanga horizon or favourable unit) is composed of quartz + feldspar crystal-rich volcanic breccia, sandstone and siltstone, and co-magmatic, peperitic quartz + feldspar intrusions (Paulick and McPhie, 1999).
The ores are massive to semi-massive lenses dominated by pyrite and sphalerite with variable proportions of galena, chalcopyrite, pyrrhotite, magnetite and barite (Gregory et al., 1990). Barite-rich zones exist in the up-dip and western peripheries of the West and East Thalanga lenses. Chlorite + tremolite + carbonate rocks, interpreted as metamorphosed chlorite + carbonate alteration assemblages (Herrmann and Hill, 2001), are closely associated with the West Thalanga ore lenses. Magnetite-bearing quartzite bodies in the peripheral or upper parts of some of the sulfide lenses, and also intercalated with volcanic siltstone of the host unit to the west, are interpreted to be metamorphosed exhalative siliceous ironstones (Duhig et al., 1992). The stratigraphic footwall is a laterally extensive, 1200 m thick, submarine rhyolitic succession. It is dominated by sparsely quartz + feldspar-phyric coherent rhyolitic lavas (e.g. data sheet TH1) and domes that may have formed a low volcanic rise in the Thalanga area (Paulick and McPhie, 1999). Rhyolitic hyaloclastite breccias and volcanic sandstones are locally significant, particularly in the upper part of the footwall beneath the western sulfide lenses. The hanging wall succession is composed mainly of unaltered to weakly altered coherent lavas and sills of feldspar-phyric to aphyric dacite (e.g. data sheet TH2), and minor basalticandesite. At Thalanga, it includes minor volcaniclastic rocks
FIGURE 7.23 | Schematic facies architecture of the submarine volcanic succession, from the Mount Windsor Volcanics, through the Trooper Creek Formation, to the Rollston Range Formation, northwest of the Thalanga mine, Queensland. Modified after Hill (1996).
2 2 2 | CHAPTER 7
of mixed dacitic-rhyolitic derivation, including lithic massflow breccia, sandstone and massive to laminated cherty siltstone, which increase in proportion westward. Paulick and McPhie (1999) interpreted the volcanic facies assemblage to indicate that the deposit formed in a below-storm-wavebase environment on an elevated, lava-dominated, rhyolitic centre. The compositions of the footwall and hanging wall successions, respectively, indicate that they were rhyolitic magmas derived from crustal melting, and mixed-mafic-felsic magmas from subduction-modified mantle, in an extensional back-arc-basin setting (Stolz, 1995). Regional deformation and metamorphism, related to Mid-Late Ordovician granitoid intrusions produced upper greenschist facies metamorphic mineral assemblages and a near-vertical foliation, particularly in phyllosilicate-rich hydrothermally altered volcanic rocks.
Ore genesis
There is consensus amongst researchers that Thalanga is a sheet-like, synvolcanic, deformed and metamorphosed VHMS deposit formed in a deep-marine back-arc rift. Isotopic data suggests that the hydrothermal fluid and sulfur were dominantly of seawater origin (Hill, 1996; Herrmann and Hill, 2001). The hydrothermal system pervasively altered a very broad zone in the mainly coherent rhyolitic footwall succession to quartz + sericite + pyrite + chlorite assemblages. The ore-forming fluids were focussed in low-angle quartz + pyrite stringer zones. These pyritic stringer zones have a semistratiform distribution, which suggests control by volcanic facies related permeability contrasts. However, some appear to cut through coherent rhyolite units and thus may represent deformed synvolcanic fault zones (Paulick and McPhie, 1999). A major proportion of the massive sulfide ore was deposited in thin, extensive, stratiform and stratabound lenses, either directly on the palaeo-seafloor or a few metres below it. The distribution of massive pyrite and Cu-rich zones suggests that the down-dip eastern parts of West and Central Thalanga ore bodies, and central part of East Thalanga, were sites of high-temperature hydrothermal discharge (Hill, 1996; Paulick et al., 2001). Subordinate stratabound semi-massive ore lenses were formed by subsurface replacement and/or infilling of coarse volcaniclastic units of the host unit, which were deposited by syneruptive, synhydrothermal mass flows on top of the accumulating seafloor massive sulfide lenses. Chlorite + carbonate (pre-metamorphic) alteration mineral assemblages intimately associated with the West Thalanga sulfide lenses, probably formed by mixing of hydrothermal fluid and cold seawater in permeable volcaniclastic units immediately below the palaeo-seafloor, in proximal to medial parts of the hydrothermal discharge system. Apart from disseminated and vein-type pyrite in the altered footwall zones, all the sulfides were deposited at the top of the rhyolitic Mount Windsor Formation, or in the quartz crystal-rich unit that immediately overlies it. The massive, coherent dacite lavas and sills of the hanging wall succession are essentially unaltered and unmineralised; their emplacement appears to have ended local hydrothermal circulation.
TH1
140802
weak, patchy quartz + sericite Thalanga footwall Mount Windsor Formation Mount Windsor Subprovince massive quartz + plagioclase-phyric rhyolite quartz and albitised plagioclase phenocrysts porphyritic rhyolite massive rhyolite lava quartz + sericite + biotite + chlorite selective-pervasive (patchy) microcrystalline quartz matrix, weakly aligned sericite biotite in cleavage regional, broadly stratabound, footwall succession moderate weak synvolcanic diagenetic
Geochemistry SiO2 TiO2 AI2O3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO Na,0 76.40 0.11 11.90 1.64 0.04 0.67 1.42 2.27 K2O P2O5 S CO2 Total LOI 4.04 0.02 0.01 <0.1 98.52 0.60 Rb Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb 110 Tl 82 Zr 1056 Nb 5 Y 20 48 Al 0.2 CCPI Ti/Zr 0.5 146 13 40 56 25 4.5
Photomicrograph (xn)
2 2 4 | CHAPTER 7
TH2
140799
subtle, selective-pervasive quartz + albite Thalanga hanging wall Trooper Creek Formation Mount Windsor Subprovince massive sparsely plagioclase-phyric
dacite
plagioclase phenocrysts weakly porphyritic, faintly flow banded dacite massive to flow banded dacite lava or sill quartz + albite (chlorite + actinolite epidote) selective-pervasive; mosaic of 20 pm quartz + albite, dissemiated chlorite and acicular prisms actinolite defining weak relict flow banding, quartz calcite veins regional, broadly stratabound, hanging wall succession good subtle synvolcanic diagenetic
Geochemistry SiO2 74.00 TiO2 0.33 AI2O3 12.70 Fe2O3 1.47 MnO 0.03 MgO 0.52 CaO 1.47 Na2O 4.10
Rb Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb
64 76 1285 3 11 29 0.2
Tl Zr Nb Y Al CCPI Ti/Zr
Photomicrograph (xn)
TO 3
140808
strong, pervasive quartz + sericite + pyrite chlorite Thalanga footwall Mount Windsor Formation Mount Windsor Subprovince massive quartz + plagioclase-phyric rhyolite quartz porphyritic rhyolite massive rhyolite lava quartz + sericite + chlorite + pyrite pervasive, microcrystalline quartz matrix with strongly aligned sericite (cleavage), scattered 1-2 cm elliptical chlorite-rich domains local, broadly stratabound in footwall beneath entire Thalanga system, >200 m thick, thinning laterally poor strong synmineralisation footwall hydrothermal
Distribution
Geochemistry SiO2 75.70 K2O TiO2 0.07 P2O5 AI2O3 11.40 S Fe2O3 5.14 CO2 MnO 0.08 Total MgO 2.38 LOI CaO <0.01 Na2O 0.21
Rb Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb Tl
Zr Nb Y Al CCPI Ti/Zr
128 14 36 96 73 3.3
Photomicrograph (xn)
2 2 6 I CHAPTER 7
TH4
Alteration textures
Distribution
Geochemistry SiO2 67.00 TiO2 0.05 AI2O3 6.60 Fe2O3 14.34 MnO 0.02 MgO 1.67 CaO 0.05 Na2O 0.06
Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb Tl Zr
Nb Y Al CCPI Ti/Zr
7 44 97 88 3.8
Photomicrograph (xn)
TH5
Geochemistry SiO2 84.20 K2O TiO2 0.06 P2O5 AI2O3 7.40 S Fe2O3 0.60 CO2 MnO <0.01 Total MgO 0.08 LOI CaO 0.11 Na2O 0.34 Rb
Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb Tl Zr
Nb Y Al CCPI Ti/Zr
9 20 93 9 4.5
Photomicrograph (xn)
2 2 8 | CHAPTER 7
TH8
145401
intense, pervasive, stratabound chlorite + tremolite Thalanga footwall Mount Windsor Formation Mount Windsor Subprovince quartz + plagioclase-phyric rhyolitic volcaniclastic breccia? nil nil rhyolite indeterminate
Geochemistry SiO2 44.57 TiO2 0.135 AI2O3 13.06 Fe2O3 3.88 MnO 0.15 MgO 17.67 CaO 6.76 Na2O 0.18
Rb Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb Tl
Zr Nb Y Al CCPI Ti/Zr
171 10 32 75 85 4.7
Photomicrograph (xn)
TH7
Distribution
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 AI2O3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO Na2O 33.10 0.060 6.48 4.82 0.57 19.00 15.60 0.13 K2O P2O5 S CO2 Total LOI 0.58 0.15 4.82 7.10 92.41 5.86 Rb Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb Tl 8700 7500 4200 23800 Al CCPI Ti/Zr 55 97 4.0 Zr Nb Y 89 6 13
Photomicrograph (xn)
2 3 0 I CHAPTER 7
TH8
nil nil
rhyolite indeterminate
?
dolomite + calcite > minor tremolite + chlorite + pyrite + chalcopyrite + sphalerite + galena pervasive; mosaic of 1 mm sutured spheroidal dolomite and interstitial calcite disseminated sulfides and sparse ragged tremolite prisms local, stratabound, proximal to medial, closely associated with or lateral to West Thalanga sulfide lenses
Alteration textures
Distribution
nil
intense synmineralisation footwall hydrothermal, seawater mixing?
Photomicrograph (xn)
TH9
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 AI2O3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO 70.90 0.10 14.50 1.69 0.04 3.94 0.12 Na2O K2O P2O5 S CO2 Total LOI 1.05 3.92 0.01 <0.01 0.10 96.37 2.67 Rb Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb Tl 145 40 952 3 5 231 0.2 2.6 Zr Nb Y Al CCPI Ti/Zr 162 19 54 87 52 3.7
Distribution
Photomicrograph (xn)
2 3 2 | CHAPTER 7
Geological setting
The lithofacies association at Highway-Reward represents a deep marine intrusion-dominated felsic volcanic centre. Doyle and McPhie (2000) recognised at least 13 coherent feldspar- and quartz + feldspar-phyric dacitic to rhyolitic synvolcanic sills, small cryptodomes (e.g. data sheets HR1 and 4) and lavas in the immediate area. The abundance and complex overlapping relationships of coherent intrusive units indicate a proximal volcanic setting. Thin volcanic sandstone and siltstone units and thicker units of crystal- and pumicerich sandstone and breccia separate the intrusions. The crystaland pumice-rich facies were mainly derived from explosive eruptions and deposited in the submarine basin from watersupported gravity flows. The succession is upright and dips at 20-30 to the southeast. Massive pyrite chalcopyrite exists in two vertical pipelike bodies about 150 m apart. Both are discordant to bedding, parallel to a locally developed northeast trending sub-vertical cleavage (S4) and have irregular-amoeboid outlines with plan dimensions of about 200 x 75-150 m. The western pipe (Highway) has a vertical extent of 250 m and the eastern pipe (Reward) of at least 350 m (Doyle and Huston, 1999). They are dominantly composed of fine-grained (<0.5 mm) pyrite with interstitial chalcopyrite, minor tennantite, sphalerite, quartz and sericite, and traces of chlorite, galena, barite, hematite and aikinite (PbCuBiS3). The massive sulfide pipes are intersected by chalcopyrite, barite, quartz + carbonate and anhydrite veins, and contain inclusions of quartz + sericite + pyrite altered volcanic rocks in their margins. The Highway and Reward massive sulfide pipes contain approximately 2 Mt and 5 Mt of pyrite, respectively. They include hypogene sulfide resources estimated at 1.2 Mt @ 5.5% Cu, 1.2 g/t Au and 6.5 g/t Ag in the Highway pipe and 0.2 Mt @ 3.5% Cu, 1 g/t Au and 13 g/t Ag in the Reward pipe. The pipes are enveloped by a broad 200 x 500 m halo of vein and disseminated low-grade Zn + Pb + Ba sulfides. Within that are several small zones of massive to laminated sphalerite + pyrite + galena + chalcopyrite + barite. A 20-30 m thick stratabound lens of sphalerite-rich massive sulfide exists in volcaniclastic rocks 50 m above and south of the Reward pipe. It has a pyrite-rich base that thickens northwards into a discordant lens of massive pyrite lying above the southern edge of the Reward pipe. Sphalerite-rich sulfides also exist locally in narrow discordant zones at the margins of the main Highway and Reward massive sulfide pipes.
Ore genesis
The deposits were initially thought to have had a two-stage origin (Beams et al., 1998). The stratiform Zn-rich zone was interpreted as a syngenetic Cambro-Ordovician sulfide lens and the pyrite + chalcopyrite pipes as Siluro-Devonian syndeformational deposits, because of their discordance to host volcanic rocks, parallelism to the youngest cleavage (S4) and the observation that anhydrite overprinted the dominant S3 cleavage. However, Doyle and Huston (1999) refuted this microtextural relationship and argued for a syngenetic volcanic-associated, subseafloor replacement origin for the massive sulfide pipes. Lead isotopic ratios, the gradation from stratiform Zn-rich sulfides into discordant Cu-rich massive pyrite, relict framboidal sulfide textures, hydrothermal alteration facies and their relationships to primary volcanic facies, and the S3 tectonic overprint are all consistent with Early Ordovician synvolcanic formation of all the sulfide zones. The Highway-Reward massive sulfide pipes have some similarities with disseminated to massive Cu-Au deposits in the Mount Lyell field (Large et al., 2001c). The similarities include metal ratios, dominance of pyritic subseafloor replacement style mineralisation and low 534S values; mostly in the range 5 to 7.5%o at Highway-Reward and 5 to 10%o at Mount Lyell (Solomon etal., 1969; Doyle and Huston, 1999). Given the emerging evidence for involvement of magmatic fluids at Mount Lyell (Corbett, 2001; Huston and Kamprad, 2001) it is reasonable to similarly classify Highway-Reward as a hybrid seawater-magmatic hydrothermal system.
HR1
137068
weak, selective-pervasive quartz + sericite + albite upper medial, 50 m east of Highway pipe (10075N) Trooper Creek Formation Mount Windsor Subprovince massive quartz + plagioclase-phyric rhyolite quartz, plagioclase porphyritic rhyolite massive partly extrusive cryptodome quartz + sericite + albite? > (calcite, pyrite) selective-pervasive, microcrystalline groundmass, albite + sericite or calcitealtered plagioclase
Geochemistry
SiO 2 TiO 2 AI 2 O 3 Fe 2 O 3 75.08 0.30 12.75 1.57 0.08 2.02 0.61 2.16 S
K2O
Rb Sr Ba Cu
Zr Nb Y
158 9 22
co 2
Total LOI 97.37 2.88
diagenetic
Pb Zn Sb Tl
Al CCPI Ti/Zr
60 44 11.4
Photomicrograph (xn)
2 3 4 | CHAPTER 7
HR2
Rb Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb Tl
Zr Nb Y Al CCPI Ti/Zr
161 9 21 24 39 12.3
Fe 2 O 3
MnO MgO CaO Na2O
Photomicrograph (xn)
HR3
137079
moderate, pervasive chlorite upper proximal zone, between Highway and Reward sulfide pipes Trooper Creek Formation Mount Windsor Subprovince massive quartz + plagioclase-phyric rhyolite quartz, mafic phenocrysts? porphyritic, amygdaloidal? rhyolite massive partly extrusive cryptodome quartz + sericite + chlorite pervasive, microcrystalline mosaic of quartz + chlorite + sericite, sericite pseudomorphs after plagioclase phenocrysts, anastomosing wispy sericite foliation, recrystallised overgrowths on quartz local; medial to proximal zones laterally equivalent to upper parts of sulfide pipes moderate to poor moderate synmineralisation hydrothermal
Geochemistry
SiO 2 TiO 2 AI 2 O 3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO Na2O
71.21 0.30
K2O S
CO2 Total LOI
Rb Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb
Tl Zr Nb Y Al CCPI Ti/Zr
1.5
165 9 23
93 66
10.9
Photomicrograph (xn)
2 3 6 I CHAPTER 7
HR4
Primary composition dacite Lithofacies Interpretation Alteration minerals Alteration textures massive to weakly flow banded cryptodome albite + chlorite + sericite > (zeolite?, quartz) pervasive groundmass, microcrystalline partly preserving micropoikilitic texture, albite sericite-altered plagioclase, chlorite veinlets regional good weak synvolcanic diagenetic
Geochemistry
SiO 2 TiO2
AI2O3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO Na2O 66.74 0.55 16.63 4.30 0.18 2.48 0.19 4.40 K2O
P2O5
Rb Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb Tl
Zr Nb Y Al CCPI Ti/Zr
161
9 25
48 51 20.5
co 2 Total
LOI
97.38 2.42
Photomicrograph (xn)
HR 5
137127
strong, pervasive chlorite + sericite + quartz + pyrite Highway footwall, 100 m east of stringer zone Trooper Creek Formation Mount Windsor Subprovince massive quartz + plagioclase-phyric rhyodacite quartz + altered plagioclase porphyritic
Primary composition rhyodacite Lithofacies Interpretation Alteration minerals Alteration textures massive cryptodome quartz + sericite + pyrite + chlorite rutile pervasive in groundmass, millimetre patches of microcrystalline quartz and wispy domains of aligned sericite, some broken quartz phenocrysts local; medial to proximal zones laterally equivalent to upper parts of sulfide pipes poor strong synmineralisation hydrothermal
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 AI2O3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO Na2O 64.55 0.44 17.02 5.54 0.04 1.87 0.20 0.18 S
K2O
Rb Sr Ba Cu
149 8 25
co 2
Total LOI
97.43 Pb 4.93 Zn
Sb Tl
94
59
17.8
Photomicrograph (xn)
2 3 8 | CHAPTER 7
HR
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 AI2O3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO Na2O 73.82 0.41 12.23 4.55 0.02 0.76 0.09 0.08 K2O P2O5 S CO2 Total LOI Rb Sr Ba Cu 98.56 Pb 4.09 Zn Sb Tl 3.65 0.06 2.89 78 14 2222 1385 10 90 1.3 5.3 Zr Nb Y Al CCPI Ti/Zr 107 6 13 96 57 23.0
Photomicrograph (xn)
HR7
Primary composition dacite Lithofacies Interpretation Alteration minerals Alteration textures indeterminate indeterminate chlorite + pyrite > quartz pervasive cryptocrystalline groundmass or matrix of chlorite, cleavage, 5% disseminated euhedral pyrite with quartz pressure shadows local; narrow zones enveloping footwall quartz + pyrite stringer zone nil intense synmineralisation hydrothermal
Geochemistry SiO2 24.90 TiO2 0.61 AI2O3 18.79 Fe2O3 16.73 MnO 0.35 MgO 22.70 CaO 0.21 Na2O 0.04
Zr Nb Y Al CCPI Ti/Zr
Photomicrograph (xn)
2 4 0 | CHAPTER 7
HR8
Geochemistry
SiO2 TiO2 AI2O3 Fe2O3 MnO MgO CaO Na2O 75.78 0.18 5.87 9.89 0.02 0.26 0.20 0.03 K2O P2O5 S CO2 Total LOI 101.21 5.81 1.80 0.02 7.16 Rb Sr Ba Cu Pb Zn Sb Tl 30 13 1404 11 3 12 1.2 1.2 Al CCPI Ti/Zr 90 83 20.8 Zr Nb Y 52 3 8
Photomicrograph (xn)
I 241
Recognising alteration facies that may be genetically related to ore deposits is an important step in mineral exploration. Even more helpful is the ability to identify alteration facies that are likely to be associated with particular ore deposit types and thus prioritise exploration targets. The characteristics of alteration facies have the potential to be used as exploration vectors, guiding explorers to the most prospective altered zones in a system, and thereby enabling efficient and early testing of the best targets, avoiding expensive, protracted exploration programs, and improving the chance of success. The processes that alter volcanic facies and the range of textures and mineral assemblages they produce are complex and challenging. As described in previous chapters, there are a variety of alteration processes, which can produce a broad range of alteration mineral assemblages and textures. Ancient volcanic rocks commonly contain a complex assemblage of overprinting alteration minerals and textures, which reflect multiple episodes of alteration by a variety of processes: diagenesis, hydrothermal alteration, deformation, metamorphism or weathering. In early Palaeozoic volcanic regions, like the Mount Read Volcanics, western Tasmania and the Mount Windsor Subprovince, north Queensland, patience and experience are required to unravel the complexities of altered rocks and recognise those altered zones that are 'red-herrings' to mineral explorers. In fact, numerous geologists have initially doubted that the foliated, weathered and mosscovered rocks encountered in western Tasmania really were of volcanic origin. Several intensive, protracted and ultimately unsuccessful exploration programs have been conducted in the Mount Read Volcanics on unfavourable altered zones. On the other hand, there may be altered zones that remain under-explored because favourable alteration facies were not recognised. Recognising the occurrence of altered rocks and identifying favourable or prospective alteration facies and zones are important steps toward minimising risk and expenditure during exploration in these environments. This chapter draws together the descriptive and geochemical techniques described in Chapters 2, 3 and 4, and an understanding of the different alteration processes that modify submarine volcanic successions. It proposes methods for discriminating alteration facies associated with particular processes, identifying favourable altered zones for mineral
exploration, and guiding exploration within those zones toward potentially mineralised areas.
8.1 | PRINCIPLES OF DISCRIMINATING BETWEEN DIAGENETIC, HYDROTHERMAL AND METAMORPHIC ALTERATION FACIES
Diagenetic facies
As discussed in Chapter 5, the characteristics of diagenetic facies are: They are typically widespread with district or regional-scale distribution. At local scales, they display variable alteration intensity and patchy distribution. This is mainly controlled by distribution of coherent versus clastic volcanic facies, and variations in the primary composition, permeability, porosity and the proportion of glassy to crystalline facies. They occur in vertically-stacked, extensive, sub-horizontal altered zones, which have mineral assemblages that reflect increasing temperature with depth. They have undergone relatively minor (< 10 wt%) chemical changes that are predominantly in response to hydration or alkali-exchange reactions between the volcanic facies and modified seawater. Mass transfers are generally small, an order of magnitude less than those in intense hydrothermal alteration facies. The scale of migration of elements is also small (millimetres to tens of centimetres) and thus on a larger scale (i.e. basin scale) the changes are essentially isochemical. Their mineralogical and textural changes vary from subtle to strong. Quartz phenocrysts, for example, are relatively stable and commonly well preserved, whereas mafic phenocrysts and volcanic glass are relatively unstable and typically completely altered. These changes are commonly overprinted or obscured
2 4 2 I CHAPTER!
Metamorphic facies
Metamorphic facies share some characteristics with diagenetic facies, but also differ significantly in these ways: Distribution varies in scale: contact metamorphic facies associated with intrusions may be as narrow as a few centimetres and up to several kilometres wide. Regional metamorphic facies (either burial metamorphism or metamorphism associated with deformation) can be tens or hundreds of kilometres wide and several kilometres thick. Metamorphic facies are uniform and pervasive: they are not typically patchy at a scale of metres to tens of metres. Primary volcanic textures have virtually no influence on high-grade metamorphic facies, which are principally determined by whole-rock compositions and metamorphic conditions. Chemical changes are minor; metamorphism is generally a process of phase-change in response to changing temperature and pressure at low water-rock ratios, which limits the redistribution of chemical components in and out of the system. The most common metamorphic reactions are dehydration and decarbonation reactions. The composition and mineralogy of metamorphic facies are generally strongly influenced by the primary composition of volcanic facies. Mineralogical and textural changes vary from subtle to intense depending on the degree of metamorphism. Typically, primary volcanic quartz phenocrysts are well preserved up to about amphibolite grade, but fine-grained or glassy facies and some mafic phenocrysts are unlikely to survive even low grades of zeolite and greenschist facies or contact metamorphism. Metamorphic re-crystallisation produces a wide variety of distinctive textures, such as granoblastic, porphyroblastic, decussate, schistose, and gneissic, which are not easily confused with primary volcanic or diagenetic textures.
the distribution is mainly dependent on permeability and porosity; therefore hydrothermal alteration facies may be restricted to fractures and vein selvedges in coherent or otherwise impermeable rocks. The degrees of mineralogical and textural preservation, and chemical changes are extremely dependent on alteration intensity and pre-hydrothermal alteration composition and texture of the facies. Pre-existing textures and minerals are less likely to be preserved in proximal zones of hydrothermal systems, through which hot reactive fluids are flushed, than in peripheral zones with lower temperature, partly neutralised fluids and lower fluid-rock ratios. As in the other types of alteration, quartz crystals in felsic volcanic facies tend to survive intense alteration, except where major loss of silica is involved (e.g. in chlorite zones). Other primary crystal phases are commonly progressively replaced (e.g. feldspars altered to sericite) and may be useful as indicators of alteration intensity. Hydrothermal alteration facies rarely preserve primary textures in originally glassy facies. Hydrothermal mineral assemblages are largely controlled by fluid composition and physicochemical conditions, and are not noticeably influenced by primary compositions; at least in the intensely altered zones, which had high fluidrock ratios. Thus, an intensely hydrothermally altered zone may cut across volcanic lithofacies of different primary compositions and textures (e.g. coherent andesite and rhyolitic breccia) and comprise only one alteration facies in which the protoliths are mineralogically and texturally indistinguishable. Hydrothermal alteration commonly involves significant mass transfer of chemically mobile elements. Elements may be gained through precipitation or lost through dissolution. These mass transfers may produce large positive or negative net mass changes within particular alteration facies (generally with implications for volume change) or balance each other out to produce negligible net change. Significant mass changes are commonly evident in composition data and derivative alteration indices. For example, Na depletion typically accompanies hydrolysis and sericitisation of plagioclase. However, substantial mass changes in some major elements are commonly obscured by the constant sum effect; this applies especially to Si. Major chemical modifications are frequently reflected in exotic mineral assemblages. For example, VHMS-related alteration facies commonly contain disseminated pyrite or base-metal sulfides, and several types of Zn deposits are associated with Mn-rich mineral assemblages. It is important for economic geologists to recognise hydrothermal alteration facies, which may indicate the largescale transport and deposition of economically valuable elements, and to discriminate these from alteration facies that result from other alteration processes that are unrelated to ore deposition. In some cases, examination of an individual altered sample can reveal important facts that help to identify the alteration process. For example, a rock with gneissic fabric is metamorphic; a rock composed essentially of quartz and pyrite is probably of hydrothermal origin. However, alteration textures and mineral assemblages may not easily distinguish some weak hydrothermal alteration facies, perhaps in peripheral zones, from diagenetic or metamorphic facies. One of the main criteria distinguishing hydrothermal
from other alteration facies is the distribution or extent of the altered zone. This cannot be determined by observation of an individual specimen or outcrop. It requires systematic prospect-scale mapping and knowledge of the district-scale geological context. Unfortunately, in the last decade of the 20 th century there has been a significant decline in in-field and on-ground geological data collection, particularly in the mineral exploration and mining industries. There is a trend towards using high technology remote sensing to rapidly explore large areas at continuously improving resolutions. However, to ensure meaningful interpretation of these data, it is imperative that this virtual geology is not disconnected from real rocks. The combination of a variety of criteria, and high-quality mapping, will lead to the best interpretation of alteration facies.
vector could be misleading and potentially guide exploration away from some Cu-Au deposits in the Mount Lyell field. Mapping of mineral zonation is effective where large systematic datasets are available (i.e. where there are plenty of outcrops or drill cores) and mineral assemblages are visually distinctive or can be determined by simple field tests (e.g. effervescence in acid for carbonate or sodium-cobaltinitrite staining for K-feldspar). However some mineral assemblages that are not readily identified visually, are discretely zoned and may be diagnostic of a deposit style. New field-based mineralogical tools, such as portable SWTR spectrometers (Section 2.4), will facilitate major improvements, which will not only aid exploration, but also contribute to understanding these deposit systems (Thompson et al., 1999). SWIR spectral studies have recently shown some spectacular examples of mineral zonation, particularly in acid-sulfate type systems (e.g. case studies in Thompson et al., 1999, and Huston and Kamprad, 2001).
2 4 4 | CHAPTER!
hydrothermally altered rocks with large net mass gains. Although additions of exotic hydrothermal components such as sulfur and CO 2 , and depletions of Na 2 O, are relatively immune to the effects of closure, it seriously compromises the use of some other major components as exploration vectors. For example, SiO2 may not provide effective vectors in hydrothermal systems where mineralisation was associated with silicification. If closure in major element data is likely to obscure the effects of alteration on the compositional data and exploration vectors, then it is preferable to estimate the individual component mass changes (by immobile element techniques, Section 4.1) and use those as exploration vectors. The alternative approach is to convert quantitative major element lithogeochemical data to modal mineral proportions using a method such as MINSQ (Herrmann and Berry, 2002) or GENMIX (Le Maitre, 1981). This does not remove the effects of closure, but is a way of quantifying mineral proportions, which can then be used as vectors in mineral exploration. This approach was used by Large et al. (2001b, Fig. 6) to demonstrate systematic variations in proportions of alteration minerals around the Rosebery K-lens sulfide deposit (Fig. 2.14).
Alteration indices
Alteration indices formulated from two or more components of major element analyses (Section 2.4) enhance the compositional contrast between variably altered samples and thus are frequently more effective as exploration vectors than single component lithogeochemical data. For example, sulfur and Na 2 O proportions in the footwall of the Rosebery K-lens deposit range from 0.01% (limit of detection) up to about 7.2% and 5.6%, respectively (Large and Allen, 1997). However, the ratio S/Na2O ranges from 0.002 to 194, because those components increase and decrease respectively in response to increasing alteration intensity (Large et al., 2001b). Both components vary over two to three
orders of magnitude, whereas S/Na2O varies across about five orders of magnitude. Carefully formulated indices can in this way amplify compositional changes and reflect variations in more than one mineral composition or abundance. Where systematic lithogeochemical data are available, plotting and contouring of alteration indices on plans and crosssections provides numerical indications of alteration intensity (e.g. Fig. 2.7). Datasets of alteration indices are of assistance in guiding exploration towards potentially mineralised altered zones, especially when used in combination with alteration facies or mineral zonation maps. Mineral explorers have increasingly applied these techniques to VHMS exploration over the last two decades; however, few results or case studies have been published. Exploration data are commonly limited to a few samples or drill holes and are not suitable for contouring. Nevertheless, useful vectors can be inferred from sparse but strategically or fortuitously located data. This is exemplified in lithogeochemical data from a few drill holes near the northern end of the Rosebery deposit (65R, 109R, 113R and 128R; Table 8.1). If, in a VHMS exploration scenario, the first two holes were drilled in sequence (65R followed by 109R), then the lithogeochemical vectors would suggest that exploration was heading away from the most favourable zone. The intermediate third hole, 113R, would then be superfluous, merely reinforcing interpretation of vectors in the first two holes. The anomalous values in the near-miss hole (65R) would encourage further persistence. If, on the other hand, the first hole in a greenfields exploration program was 109R, the major element or alteration indices data would not justify continuing exploration in that vicinity, even if the favourable stratigraphic setting was recognised. In this case, success would depend on the explorer recognising other vectors or indicators of proximity, such as the distal trace element Tl and Sb halos identified by Large et al., (2001b). In favourable geologic settings, limited lithogeochemical data, even from a single drill hole, may yield useful vectors. For example, samples from a single hole, such as HL6 or
TABLE 8.1 | Selected major element data and alteration indices for samples of pumice breccia from the footwall to the Rosebery K-lens massive sulfide deposit, western Tasmania. The values tabulated are (A) averages of three samples from the top 30 m of the footwall unit and (B) the uppermost sample of the footwall intersected in eachdriii hole. The alteration indices, S/Na2O and Al, generally show greater increases with proximity to ore than the changes in Na2O, S and Zn. Averaging the uppermost three samples smoothes the gradients towards ore, but diminishes the anomalies in the medial intersection, 113R. Data from Large and Allen (1997). Locations of the drill holes are shown in Figure 2.7 of this volume and Figure 2 of Large et al. (2001b).
(A) Averages of three samples from the top 30 m of the footwall unit 109R 113R 65R 128R 450 250 75 0 2.99 1.66 0.28 0.01 0.18 0.37 0.79 0.49 0.00 0.13 0.18 0.49 0 2 44 49 44 61 89 89
(B) Uppermost sample of footwall unit 109R 113R 65R 128R 450 250 75 0 1.53 0.21 0.08 0.01 0.29 1.09 1.02 0.37 0.01 0.38 0.02 0.19 0 5 13 37 51 89 95 89
HL14 drilled through the footwall zones beneath the Hellyer massive sulfide deposit, generally exhibit gradually increasing alteration indices (Figs 9 and 20 of Gemmell and Large, 1992). Recognition of these variations, in combination with the visible alteration facies, confirms that an altered zone exists and indicates the direction of increasing alteration intensity, guiding further exploration. Drill hole NC4, which intersected the Tyndall GroupCentral Volcanic Complex contact south of Henty is another interesting example. In this hole, an abrupt down-hole increase in the alteration indices is associated with a change of lithotype (Fig. 4.4). The lithogeochemical data support the recognition of an extensive stratabound altered zone of which the upper boundary is most favourable for VHMS exploration. Bivariate (x-y) plots of two alteration indices, such as the AI-CCPI Alteration box plot (Large et al., 2001a), are useful in identifying compositional trends and different alteration facies. This graphic approach simplifies the recognition of rock compositions that lie outside the normal range of primary volcanic compositions (i.e. those that have been modified by chemical or depositional processes; Fig. 2.9). It also assists classification of different alteration facies and identifying the zones of greatest prospectivity (Fig. 2.11). In recent CODES research projects, box plots of customdesigned alteration indices have been effective in several other types of hydrothermal systems, including low- and high-sulfidation epithermal Au-Ag deposits (Williams, 2000) and Broken Hill type Pb-Zn-Ag deposits (Large, 2004). The Ishikawa et al. (1976) alteration index (AI) has been successfully applied to many plagioclase-destructive and/ or K-feldspar-bearing alteration styles, but there is scope for more experimentation with new indices. As outlined in Section 4.1, the formulae for alteration indices typically have chemical components that were increased by alteration in their numerators, and components that were decreased in the denominators. The gained or lost components can often be inferred from the differences in alteration mineral assemblages. However, immobile-element-based mass change calculations provide a more rigorous method of selecting components for formulating alteration indices. Section 4.1 summarises several techniques of estimating mass changes by comparing compositions of alteration facies to their leastaltered precursor compositions and their potential application to exploration vectors is discussed below.
The solution to the closure problem is to estimate the mass changes of all mobile major-element components, using an immobile-element-based method of the type described in Section 4.1. Spatially located mass change data can then be used as direct indicators of alteration intensity or as multiple component alteration indices, in the same way as major element lithogeochemical data. This approach has the potential to target favourable areas during exploration. It provides closure-free quantification of compositional changes, which help delineate hydrothermal fluid pathways, zones of greatest alteration intensity and prospective areas. Furthermore, the quantification of absolute mass changes is a means of estimating the 'quality' of an altered zone. For example, let us consider a hypothetical program of lithogeochemical sampling over two altered zones of similar dimensions in a VHMS district. Mass change estimates might show that the first altered zone involved negligible mass transfers and the second had significant mass gains, of the order of 2030 g/lOOg and equating to tens of millions of tonnes of altered rock (cf. Thalanga footwall zone, Herrmann and Hill, 2001). In this case, we would conclude that the second altered zone has greater mineral potential. Substantial mass changes demonstrate that a hydrothermal system had the intensity, and perhaps duration, to move large amounts of SiO2, CO 2 , S and other components into the alteration facies. Therefore, it probably also had the capacity, if fluid compositions were suitable, to move large amounts of base and precious metals and potentially, if a favourable site and process for deposition is available, form an ore deposit. The first altered zone in our hypothetical example was produced by near-isochemical alteration and resulted in negligible changes to the whole-rock composition, suggesting that alteration involved less reactive or smaller volumes of fluid, perhaps over a short duration. The differences may be semi-evident in alteration mineral assemblages and intensities, and possibly in the composition data despite distortion by closure, but the only way to quantify the difference for objective exploration decisions is by mass transfer techniques. The major difficulty in this method is in determining precursor compositions to compare with the altered compositions. Poor exposures, limited lithogeochemical data, lateral variation in the primary composition of volcanic facies or structural complexity make the pairing of alteration facies and unaltered (or least-altered) precursors problematic, and frequently impossible, in practical application. There are no published examples where mass change calculations have led to a mineral discovery, probably because of the leastaltered precursor problem and the only recent development of easy mass change calculation techniques. Nevertheless, the mass change approach will contribute to a higher level of lithogeochemical interpretation and exploration targeting where host volcanic successions are compositionally uniform and sufficiently understood to enable its confident application.
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tools electron microprobe and X-ray diffraction are complex laboratory-based instruments requiring considerable expertise in operation and data interpretation. That has made mineral analysis slow and expensive relative to geochemical analyses of rocks, soils and sediments, and consequently explorers have largely ignored the mineral chemistry vector possibilities. Researchers at CODES are currently developing laser ablation ICP-MS techniques for micro-analysis of trace elements in sulfides. These are likely to provide exploration vectors but, for similar reasons, they may not ultimately be widely applied by mineral explorers. However, the advent during the last decade of portable short wavelength infrared (SWIR) spectrometers, which can indirectly measure compositional variations in micas, clays and carbonates, could establish mineral composition mapping as a viable exploration technique (Sections 3.1 and 4.2, and references therein). SWIR spectrometers such as PIMA are relatively inexpensive at about US$21,000 to purchase or US$70 per day for hire. They can analyse up to a few hundred samples per day of all types of geological materials, which require no preparation apart from drying. SWIR spectrometers are simple to operate and the PC-based spectral recognition software now available has simplified spectral interpretation and data manipulation, so that an operator can quickly become an expert interpreter. White micas, chlorites and clays in altered zones around mineral deposits frequently show spatial compositional variations that could be exploration vectors (Section 4.2). The ease of SWIR spectral analysis now enables explorers to rapidly test for the existence of mineral composition vectors in a large enough set of orientation samples. If the results are promising, the technique can be inexpensively applied on a routine basis to assist exploration targeting. If, on the other hand, SWIR spectral features are invariant or spatially erratic, then little time and money will have been expended. There are not yet many published mineral exploration case studies involving portable SWIR spectral analysis because it is a relatively new technique (e.g. Denniss et al., 1999; Huston et al., 1999; Merry and Pontual, 1999; Herrmann et al., 2001; Jones et al., in prep.). Nevertheless, recent and current research at CODES shows great potential for SWIRdetermined white mica composition vectors, on scales of tens to hundreds of metres, in a variety of volcanic-hosted gold and base-metal deposits. Further work is required on spatial SWIR spectral variations in chlorites and clay minerals. It is likely that mineral explorers will rapidly adopt this technique over the next few years. Part of the stimulus comes from very recent developments in airborne high-resolution visible-to-SWIR spectral scanning systems, such as HyMap", which offer great promise for districtscale mineral mapping in exploration of well-exposed bedrock areas (Taranik, 2001). For example, mineral maps from a trial HyMap* airborne spectral survey of the Panorama VHMS district, Western Australia, apparently 'show the complete hydro thermal convective system' (Cudahy et al., 2000). At Panorama, these authors consider that spectrally interpreted distributions of white mica, pyrophyllite and topaz define altered zones that formed at the boundary between magmatic fluid and seawater convection, in addition to seawater recharge zones, and hydrothermal discharge zones. The discharge zones are prospective for massive sulfides. A similar HyMap* survey
of the Mount Lyell area in western Tasmania has produced mineral distribution and pyrophyllite abundance maps (e.g. Fig. 8.1). These illustrate the high spatial resolution now available from airborne spectral surveys, and their enormous potential for alteration mapping and using vectors during exploration in well-exposed, thinly vegetated areas. Remote sensing spectral systems are also finding applications in regolith mapping (Craig, 2001) and exploration of partly covered areas. Bierwirth et al. (2002) used HyMap data to map distributions of a range of minerals including pyrophyllite, white mica, Mg- and Fe-chlorite, calcite, dolomite, kaolinite, tourmaline, hematite and goethite in altered zones associated with epithermal and lode Au deposits in the poorly exposed, largely alluvium- and calcrete-covered Indee District of the Central Pilbara. These demonstrations of district-scale mineral and mineral compositional mapping by remote sensing tools should certainly encourage explorers to use spectral data in prospect-scale investigations. In addition, high-output, multipurpose visible-SWIR and thermal infrared spectral, and laser instruments such as CSIRO's HyLogging and HyChips systems (Syddell, 2004) and the OARS prototype (CSIRO, 2002), are being developed for routine logging of drill core, cuttings, soil and other geological sample materials.
Isotopic vectors
Section 4.3 introduces the potential for isotope geochemistry to yield interpretations of hydrothermal fluid sources, temperatures, water-rock ratios, and broad halos for exploration targeting. Oxygen isotopes are particularly useful in exploration because oxygen is a major component of hydrothermal fluids, and it readily exchanges isotopes with silicate minerals at fractionation factors that are mineral specific and temperature dependent. Furthermore, the 518O-depletion halos observed around several deposit types typically extend further from ore than most other geochemical anomalies and may provide direct vectors to ore zones. For example, the 518O-depletion zone around the Fukuzawa deposits in the Hokuroku district, Japan, extends up to 1 km beyond the Na2O-depletion anomaly (Green et al., 1983). Waring et al. (1998) found 618O-depletion anomalies in dolomitic shale at Mount Isa (Queensland), which extend up to 2 km beyond Cu ore zones, with low and uniform isotopic gradients (<2%o per 100 m) that allow estimates of the distance to ore. Most importantly, the O-isotopic anomalies produced in hydrothermally altered zones appear to survive subsequent deformation and metamorphism. For instance, Cartwright (1999) argued convincingly that a hydrothermally related regionalscale 618O depletion zone in Proterozoic metapelites in the Broken Hill district, NSW, had survived high-grade regional metamorphism up to granulite facies. The final section of this chapter summarises several VHMS-related alteration studies and exploration programs, which have applied whole-rock Oisotope geochemistry. Sulfur-isotope geochemistry has been widely applied to interpretations of sulfur (and hence fluid) sources, and hydrothermal temperatures, which have been used in the development of VHMS genetic models. For example,
FIGURE 8.1 | Mineral maps of the Mount Lyell mine area, western Tasmania, interpreted from HyMap airborne hyperspectrai data. Map A shows the zonal distributions of eight important alteration minerals. Map B shows relative abundance of pyrophyllite (warm colours = high abundance), and discriminates the pyrophyllite-rich facies at North Lyell, Western Tharsis and Glen Lyell from weaker responses in the Owen Group exposed on Mount Lyell. The spatial resolution (pixel size) is about 5 m. Mineral spectral responses are partly restricted by vegetated areas, which appear as dark grey tones on the HyMap band (greyscale) background airphoto images. These maps were created by K. Yang, M.A. Quigley and J.F. Huntington as part of the 2003 HyMap mineral mapping project for Copper Mines of Tasmania and Mineral Resources Tasmania, carried out through the C-Vista strategic alliance between CSIRO and HyVista Corporation.
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S-isotope compositions constrained some of the genetic interpretations for formation of the Hellyer deposit (e.g. Gemmell and Large, 1992; Solomon and Khin Zaw, 1997). It also has exploration potential for discriminating different types of deposits and hydrothermally altered zones, which may have different economic potential. The regional study of sulfide deposits in the Mount Read province by Solomon et al. (1988) found considerable variation in S-isotope compositions consistent with different geologic settings and metal associations, and which contributed to interpretations of hydro thermal geochemistry. Green and Taheri (1992) took both a genetic and discriminatory approach to the interpretation of low 634S values of pyrite (-1.2 to +4.7%o) at the Boco prospect, western Tasmania. They suggested that altered zones at Boco formed in a seawater-hydrothermal system, which leached sulfur from volcanic host rocks at temperatures that were too low to inorganically reduce seawater sulfate, and transported base metals to form an ore deposit. Subsequent recognition of advanced argillic alteration mineral assemblages at Boco and several other Tasmanian and Victorian prospects indicate possible involvement of magmatic fluids, and hence a magmatic source of sulfur (Herrmann et al., 2004). Regardless of the genetic uncertainties, sulfide 634S values of less than 5%o could distinguish barren pyritic altered zones from more prospective base and precious metalrich VHMS systems in the Mount Read province. There are few published accounts of S-isotope compositions as direct vectors in mineral exploration. However, existing data for Rosebery (Davidson et al., 2000) and Hellyer (Gemmell and Large, 1992) suggest broad halos of 634S enrichment in disseminated pyrite in footwall zones lateral to the main upflow zones, which could be used to increase exploration target sizes and zero-in on Zn-rich VHMS deposits, particularly in permeable volcaniclastic successions (Large et al., 2001c). At regional scales, two recent studies of deeply covered areas have promoted S-isotope compositions of sulfates in groundwater as potential indicators of buried oxidising PbZn-Ag sulfide deposits, in the Broken Hill region of New South Wales (Waring et al., 1998) and Gawler Craton in South Australia (Kirste et al., 2003). In the latter case, sulfates from oxidising sulfide deposits with low 534S signatures (-2.5 to +5.6%o) appear to have contributed to anomalous low 534S values in groundwater sulfates, detectable several hundred metres downstream from the Menninnie Dam prospect. Background 634S values of sulfates in ground waters are 16 to 18%o in the Gawler region and -13.5%o in the Broken Hill region. The concept is probably less applicable to exploration for sulfide deposits with higher 634S signatures (e.g. Tasmanian VHMS deposits, 8 to 17%o, Solomon et al., 1988), which would provide less contrast against background groundwater compositions. Furthermore there are many, typically difficult to determine, hydrological and geochemical factors that complicate interpretations of local groundwater isotopic anomalies. This new application of S-isotope geochemistry is one that will probably appeal only to the most persistent of under-cover mineral explorers. Carbon isotopes, like sulfur, are used for interpreting fluid sources and hydrothermal conditions but have not been widely applied as exploration vectors. Huston's (1999) review of stable isotopes in VHMS systems found carbonate 613C values in most deposits occupy a narrow range of-5 to
0%o, consistent with seawater dissolved bicarbonate sources. Low fractionation factors, and the limited occurrences of carbonates in massive sulfide deposits (Ohmoto and Goldhaber, 1997) restrict the applications of C isotopes, except in conjunction with O isotopes. For example, Khin Zaw and Large (1992) interpreted a coupled positive trend of 613C and 618O data in Mn-rich carbonates at South Hercules, Tasmania, as temperature-related, and then, with additional fluid inclusion temperature data, estimated the isotopic compositions of the hydrothermal fluid. Although their paper did not describe spatial zonation of isotopic data, the genetic discussion speculated that mineralised and altered facies were zoned according to variations in temperature and hydrothermal fluid-seawater mixing ratios, controlled by permeabilities in the volcaniclastic succession. In these types of deposits associated with lateral carbonate facies, isotopic data could provide prospect-scale exploration vectors if the hydrothermal temperature gradients were consistent. Callaghan's (2001) study of the Henty-Mount Julia gold deposit, Tasmania, used carbonate 613C and 618O data in a boomerang shaped trend for intensive modelling of fluid compositions and genetic concepts. The data, crudely divided into proximal and distal carbonates, lie on two trends joined at an abrupt inflection. Both of the fluid mixing or fluidlimestone interaction models proposed by Callaghan (2001) to account for the trends offer potential for prospect to districtscale isotopic vectors, or at least methods of discriminating hydrothermal and sedimentary carbonates.
Whole-rock O-isotope vectors in VHMS exploration In most cases, the proximal altered zones of VHMS systems show significant 618O depletion, partly attributable to highfluid temperatures and low-fractionation factors of some minerals (e.g. chlorite) in seafloor hydrothermal discharge zones, and partly due to the contrast with 618O enrichment caused by low-temperature seawater-rock reactions in normal submarine volcanic successions. A classic semi-regional study by Cathles (1993) in the Noranda district, Canada, discovered a low 618O anomaly (<6%o) in volcanic rocks around the Flavrian felsic pluton. The pluton is surrounded by a discontinuous halo of high wholerock 618O anomalies (>9%o) 10-15 km from the intrusion. Several narrow finger-like zones of low 618O values extend radially from the inner 18O-depleted zone through the high 618O halo, in the directions of most of the known VHMS deposits in the district (Fig. 8.2). These low 518O zones record areas of high hydrothermal-fluid flow and concentrated discharge, which are favourable for mineral deposits. The concentric zones of 18O depletion and enrichment around the pluton closely match the isotopic zonation patterns of Cathles' (1983) numerical model. He concluded that wholerock 818O sampling, at 0.5 km intervals along traverses adjacent to the margins of plutons, could identify plutons with sufficient energy to drive long-lived hydrothermal systems, and favourable settings for detailed massive sulfide exploration. Another district-scale study, in the Panorama area of Western Australia, showed a similar pattern of low whole-rock 618O around the perimeter of a large subvolcanic intrusion
FIGURE 8.2 | Map showing spatial relationships between felsic plutons, whole-rock 618O anomalies, and massive sulfide deposits in the Noranda area, Abitibi belt, Canada (modified after Cathles, 1993).
(Brauhart et al., 2000). The granitoid pluton underlies a 1.5 km thick mixed mafic to felsic volcanic succession that hosts several small polymetallic massive sulfide deposits and prospects along a single favourable horizon at the stratigraphic top of the sequence (Fig. 6.6). Narrow radial zones of low 618O point to most of the known deposits and prospects (Fig. 8.3). These low 618O zones coincide with intense feldspar-destructive sericite + quartz and chlorite + quartz zones. Brauhart et al. (2000) calculated hydrothermal temperatures from the 618O data. They used fractionation factors calculated to suit the specific modal mineralogy of each sample, an initial fluid 618O value of+2%o and assumed high water-rock ratios. The resulting calculated temperature distribution closely matched the O-isotopic pattern, the low 618O zones coinciding with temperatures greater than about 300C (Fig. 8.3). This indicates that temperature was the main control on low whole-rock 818O. It is consistent with increased temperature with depth in the volcanic succession, and in the transgressive discharge or feeder zones beneath the sulfide deposits. The authors concluded that whole-rock O-isotope mapping could be used as a regional exploration vector, and pointed to additional favourable targets in the Panorama district. Green and Taheri (1992) followed up the Hokuroku work of Green et al. (1983) with several empirical isotopic studies of alteration systems in the Mount Read province. The altered footwall zones beneath the Hellyer deposit exhibit a subtle whole-rock 618O anomaly with values ranging from 8.3 1.3%o in the central stringer zone, through 9.8 1.7%o in the enclosing sericitic zone, to background values around 11.30.9%o in adjacent least-altered footwall andesites. There is also a subtle depletion anomaly of 10.6 1.2%o in the basalts immediately above the deposit, compared to background values of 11.82.2%o. However, the 518Odepletion zone is narrow, reflecting the strong fault or fracture control on hydrothermal-fluid flow. This limits its utility in exploration. The Hercules alteration system also shows a range of whole-rock 6 !8 O values from 6.8%o in footwall zones to background values of 14.0 to 15.5%o. There are some unexpectedly high values (around 15%o) in relatively proximal parts of the footwall and lowvalues (down to 6.8%o)
FIGURE 8.3 | Distribution of whole-rock 618O values and estimated hydrothermal temperatures in the Panorama district of the Pilbra region, Western Australia (modified after Brauhart et al., 2000).
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in the apparent hanging wall rocks to the east. These may be partly due to fault displacements that dismembered the alteration system. They highlight the difficulty of applying broad-scale geochemical exploration techniques in deformed and structurally complex terrains. In contrast to Hellyer and Hercules, the apparently barren Boco altered zone has whole-rock 618O values that are not significantly different to background values (9.9 1.0 and 10.5 l.l%o, respectively). This is consistent with Green and Taheri's (1992) interpretation that the Boco alteration facies formed in a low-temperature (<200cC) seawater hydrothermal system, incapable of transporting base metals and reducing seawater sulfate. Alternatively, the 618O values could indicate a higher temperature, isotopically heavier fluid (>280C, --5%o), representing either evolved seawater or mixed seawater and magmatic water. The presence of advanced argillic assemblages in parts of the Boco system implies highly acidic fluid conditions, which supports a magmatic fluid input (Herrmann et al., 2004). The least-altered volcanic rocks in VHMS-hosting successions typically have anomalously high background whole-rock 618O values (>9 or 10%o), which are attributable to low-temperature diagenetic alteration. The curves in Figure 4.17 indicate that re-equilibration with quite small proportions of cold seawater can produce large positive shifts in volcanic rock 618O values. On the other hand, zones of low 618O reflect high-temperature hydrothermal alteration at high water-rock ratios. The empirical data from Noranda and Panorama show that low 818O zones may be regionally
extensive at depths of greater than 1 km below favourable horizons, and in narrow finger-like zones that point toward favourable sites for hydrothermal discharge. They may form relatively broad halos around massive sulfide deposits. Despite these promising research results, VHMS explorers have been less than enthusiastic about O-isotope vectors and there are few examples of successful application in Australia. This may be largely attributable to the expense of isotopic analysis (currently around US$150 per sample) and the recognition that interpretation of isotopic data is not straightforward. A notable exception is the case of the Thalanga West 45 deposit, documented by Miller et al. (2001). These authors took a similar approach to Brauhart et al. (2000), using estimates of modal mineralogy to determine tailor-made fractionation factors for each sample, to calculate isotopic equilibration temperatures from whole-rock 618O data, at assumed high water-rock ratios and fluid isotopic composition. They found that zones of apparent high temperatures (>230C) coincided with the known Central, East and Orient massive sulfide lenses. The existence of an additional isotopic-temperature anomaly, about 1 km west of the known resources, stimulated further exploration that turned up a favourable REE geochemical anomaly in the same sector. Subsequent exploratory drilling discovered a 0.23 Mt polymetallic massive sulfide lens. It remains sub-economic, but may represent the first successful VHMS exploration application of O-isotope geochemistry in Australia.
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Use of O, C, and S stable isotope in regional mineral exploration: AGSO Journal of Australian Geology and Geophysics, v. 17, p. 301-13. Waters, J. C, and Wallace, D. B., 1992. Volcanology and sedimentology of the host succession to the Hellyer and Que River volcanic-hosted massive sulfide deposits, northwestern Tasmania: Economic Geology, v. 87, p. 650-66. Weaver, S. D., Gibson, I. L, Houghton, B. E, and Wilson, C. J. N., 1990. Mobility of rare earth and other elements during crystallization of peralkaline silicic lavas: Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, v. 43, p. 57-70. Webster, S. S., and Skey, E. H., 1979. Geophysical and geochemical case history of the Que River deposit, Tasmania, Australia: Ottawa Geological Survey of Canada Economic Geology Report, no. 31, p. 697-720. Weihed, P., Allen, R. L., and Svenson, S. A., 2000. Metallogeny and tectonic evolution of the c. 1.9 Ga Skellefte marine, volcanic arc, northern Sweden [abs.], in Gemmell, J. B., and Pongratz, J., eds., Volcanic environments and massive sulfide deposits, Hobart, Australia, November 16-19, 2000, CODES Special Publication, v. 3, p. 225-226. Whalen, J. B., McNicoll, V. J., Galley, A. G., and Longstaffe, F. J., 2004. Tectonic and metallogenic importance of an Archaean composite high- and low-Al tonalite suite, Western Superior Province, Canada: Precambrian Research, v. 132, p. 275 301. Whetten, J. T, and Hawkins, J. W, 1970. Diagenetic origin of greywacke matrix minerals: Sedimentology, v. 15, p. 34761. White, D. E., 1970. Geochemistry applied to the discovery, evaluation and exploitation of geothermal energy resources: Geothermatics Special issue 2, v. 1, p. 58-80. White, M. J., 1996. Stratigraphy, volcanology and sedimentology of the Cambrian Tyndall Group, Mount Read Volcanics, western Tasmania: Unpublished PhD thesis, University of Tasmania, 196 p. White, J. D. L., 2000. 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P., and Collins, P. L. E, 1989. Mid-Palaeozoic deformation, granitoids and ore deposit, in Burrett, C. F., and Martin, E. L., eds., Geology and mineral resources of Tasmania: Geological Society of Australia Special Publication, v. 15, p. 238-92. Wilshire, H. G., 1959. Deuteric alteration of volcanic rocks: Journal and Proceedings, Royal Society of New South Wales, v. 93, p. 105-20. Wilshire, H. G., and Hobbs, B. E., 1962. Structure, sedimentary inclusions, and hydrothermal alteration of a latite intrusion: Journal of Geology, v. 70, p. 32841. Wilson, A. J., Cooke, D. R., and Harper, B. L., 2003. The Ridgeway gold-copper deposit - a high-grade alkalic porphyry deposit in the Lachlan Fold Belt, New South Wales, Australia: Economic Geology, v. 98, p. 163766. Winkler, H. G. E, 1979. Petrogenesis of metamorphic rocks, 5th ed.: New York, USA, Springer-Verlag, 348 p. WoldeGabriel, G., Keating, G. N., and Valentine, G. A., 1999. 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I 271
INDEX
A page number in bold indicates that the reference is to a figure. A bold t indicates that the reference is to a table.
AI-CCPI Alteration box plot see Alteration box plot albite alteration 39, 42-44, 61, 65, 69, 133-5, 165-7, 191, 214,216 Alteration box plot 31-4, 36, 169-70, 245 alteration distribution 22, 63-4 alteration facies describing and defining 1536 diagenetic 2412 distribution 63-4 hydrothermal 242-3 metamorphic 242 variables 22 alteration fluids 93, 170-3 Alteration Index (AI) 30-2, 34, 169, 245 alteration indices 26-30, 34, 73, 169-70, 244^5 alteration intensity describing 27t estimation, integrated approach 336 explained 2536 illustrated 28-29, 36 lithogeochemical indications of 243-4 alteration mineral assemblages see mineral assemblages alteration nomenclature 16, 19-22, 2It, 22t, 23t alteration pipes 63, 164-74, 176, 182-3 alteration plumes 63, 167, 168, 191-3 alteration processes 46 alteration rates 6 alteration textures deformation textures 52, 54-6, 55-7 described 37-63, 37t, 38t, 62t dissolution textures 41, 50-1, 52 dynamic recrystallisation textures 52 illustrated 39-40, 62, 103-4, 110, 111-13 infill textures 41,48-9 overprinting and false/pseudo textures 37, 54-63, 58-61, 62t recrystallisation textures 52, 53 replacement textures 37-8, 41, 42-7 static recrystallisation textures 52, 53
alteration timing 69-71, 7It, 172 alteration zonation boundaries 64 contact altered zones 5, 64, 66-7, 67, 139, 149-56, 242 diagenetic 64, 105-8 facies model 3 greenschist facies zones 115, 116, H6t, 131, 142, 144-5, 152 halos 66-9 Hellyer deposit 178,182-3,184-93 Henty deposit 178, 212-3, 214-20 Highway Reward deposit 14, 167, 178, 232, 233-40 Hokuroku Basin 119-27 hydrothermal 5-6, 66-8, 164-9, 243 mapping 243 metamorphic 645, 667 Mount Read Volcanics 128-38 patterns 64-9,98, 165-8 regional deep semi-conformable 66, 142-8 regional metamorphic 115-17,140 Rosebery deposit 178,195,196-201 scales described 64t Thalanga deposit 14, 178, 222, 223-31 veins and fractures 67, 69 Western Tharsis deposit 202-3,204-11 amphibolite facies 115-17,140 Amulet deposit see Noranda district analytical techniques electron microprobe 19,25,88 field observations 18 ICP-AES (inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry) 76-7 ICP-MS (inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry 767 isotope geochemistry 925 HyMap 246, 247 lithogeochemical sampling 73-87 mineral chemistry analysis 87-91 NAA (neutron activated analysis) 76 petrography 24-5, 33-4 PIMA 25, 33, 245
2 7 2 | INDEX
SWIR spectroscopy 19, 24, 25, 33, 88, 90, 202-3, 243, 245 X-ray diffraction (XRD) 19, 24, 25, 33, 88 X-ray fluorescence spectrometry (XRF) 76-7 anhydrous minerals 97
B
Bathurst mining camp 164-5,170 Boco prospect 248, 250 burial-related alteration 97-138 see also diagenesis and submarine environments
c
carbonates diagenetic 105 in exploration 90-1, 243-4 hydrothermal 47, 91, 166, 178, 188, 201, 217, 229-30 cataclastic texture 52 CCPI (chlorite-carbonate-pyrite index) see also Alteration box plot explained 31, 34 exploration, uses for 169,245 cementation 97, 102, 105, 108-10, 132 Central Volcanic Complex see Mount Read Volcanics chlorite 19-22, 89, 138, 156, 165-8, 187, 239 closure and alteration indices 26 constant sum effect 2434 explained 78-9,243-5 mass change anomalies 81 compaction 97, 109-10, 132 compositional nomenclature 20 contact alteration 5, 149-62 corrosion vugs 41, 501, 52 crystallisation primary 4 textures 52 of zeolite assemblages 105, 110, 114, 121
diagenesis explained 5 Hokuroku Basin 118-27 isotope geochemistry analysis 93-4 and metamorphism 16, 98, 102, 114, 115 Mount Read Volcanics 128-38 in submarine volcanic successions 97, 10214 diagenetic minerals carbonates 105 genesis of 108-14 layered silicates 102,105 other diagenetic minerals 105 zeolites 105, 110, 118, 120-7 diagenetic zones Hokuroku Basin 11827 Mount Read Volcanics 128-38 zonation 64-5, 105-8 discharge zone 1412 dissolution 41, 50-1, 52, 97, 102, 108-10, 114, 132 dynamic recrystallisation textures 52
electron microprobe see analytical techniques element concentrations 32-3 eutaxitic texture 54, 57 exploration Alteration box plot 31-4,169-70 alteration identification as tool in 24150 Alteration Index (AI) 30-2 isotope geochemistry in 92-5, 246-50 lithogeochemistry in 73-87 mineral chemistry in 87-91 sulfide mapping 243 use of chlorite in 89 use of white mica in 901 vectors and proximity indicators 32-3, 94-5, 243-50
D
Darwin Granite see Mount Read Volcanics data sheets contents of 36 Darwin Granite 157-62 Hellyer deposit 184-93 Henty deposit 21420 Highway-Reward deposit 233-40 Hokuroku Basin 122-7 Mount Read Volcanics 133-8 Rosebery deposit 196-201 Thalanga deposit 223-31 Western Tharsis deposit 20411 deep, semi-conformable altered zones 1426 deformation textures 52, 54-6, 55-7 detection limit explained 75 deuteric alteration 148 devitrification explained 4 texture 37, 39, 62 zones 151
false textures see pseudotextures fiamme 54, 57 fluid-rock interaction 169, 170-2, 171, 173 foliation 52, 54, 70, 711 footwall alteration 163-74, 179, 182-9 fused zones 151
geochemistry see isotope geochemistry, lithogeochemistry geothermal gradient 98 geothermometers 92-3 glass alteration in submarine volcanic successions 15, 97-8 common alteration minerals 19t crystallisation 4 diagenesis 10214 disequilibrium assemblages 24 hydration 4-5, 98-102 reactive quality, 6 Green Tuff Belt see Hokuroku district
INDEX | 2 7 3
H
halos 5-6, 38, 41, 66-9, 149-56, 157-62, 163-74, 17881 hanging wall alteration 163, 164, 167-8, 190-3 Hellyer deposit see also Mount Read province alteration fades and zonation 178, 182-3, 18493 Alteration Index (AI) 31, 183 explained 11, 181-93 exploration 245 geological setting 1812 ore genesis 170, 183 white mica 90 Henty deposit see also Mount Read province alteration facies and zonation 178, 212-13, 214-20 explained 12 geological setting 212 hanging wall alteration 167 isotopic data 248 ore genesis 213 Hercules deposit see also Mount Read province alteration halo 178 explained 12, 128 geological setting 194 Highway-Reward deposit see also Mount Windsor Subprovince alteration facies and zonation 14, 167, 178, 232,
233-40
explained 14 geological setting 12-14, 232 hanging wall alteration 167,178 ore genesis 232 submarine facies associations 13 Hokoroku Basin see Hokuroku district Hokuroku district alteration 64-5, 67, 118-27, 122-7 geological setting 11820 Green Tuff Belt 52, 64, 107, 118, 150, 151 Kuroko deposits see Kuroko deposits oxygen isotopes 94-5, 246 size of VHMS deposits 164 hydration of volcanic glass 4-5, 98-102 hydrothermal alteration boundaries between zones 64 chemical reactions 168 and diagenetic alteration 128 discharge zone 141-2,156 discriminating 1619 explained 4 halos 66-7, 164-74 intensity measures 32-3 intrusion-related 140-61 see also intrusions metamorphic assemblages 174, 175t plagioclase destruction 31, 167 recharge zone 141 subseafloor systems 1401 syntectonic 6 tectonic deformation 6 VHMS deposits 5-6, 163-240 zones 5-6, 66-8, 164-78, 243 hydrothermal convection 1, 94, 140-1, 140
Iberian pyrite belt 90, 91, 142, 164, 165, 166, 166, 174 ICP-AES (inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry) 767 ICP-MS (inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry 76-7 indices alteration 26-30, 34, 73, 244-5 Alteration box plot see Alteration box plot Alteration Index (AI) 30-2, 34, 169, 245 CCPI (chlorite-carbonate-pyrite index) 31, 34, 169, 245 molar proportion alteration 30 multi-component and normalised 26, 30 simple ratio 26 induration 150, 151 infill textures 41,48-9 intrusions halos 667 cryptodomes 2, 6, 66, 128, 139, 143, 153, 212, 232 dykes 2, 6, 66, 141, 139, 149, 152, 153 plutons 139, 143, 153 sills 66, 70, 100, 128, 148-9, 152-3, 150, 152, 174, 182, 194,202,212,221,232 in submarine volcanic successions 2 , 3 , 139 synvolcanic 13962 isotope geochemistry applications 92-5 carbon 76, 77, 248 exploration 94-5, 246-50 hydrogen 76, 77, 93 oxygen 94-5, 246,248-50 stable isotopes 92-5 sulfur 76, 77-8, 92, 141, 180, 246, 248 water-rock ratios 93
K
kaolinite in VHMS altered zones 88, 150, 174-75, 178-80 keratophyre 98 K-lens see Rosebery deposit Kuroko deposits see also Hokuroku district alteration 164, 179 Alteration Index (AI) 31 alteration model 166, 1789
least altered see also alteration intensity explained 26 alteration indices 32 lithification 97, 108-10 lithogeochemistry analytical methods 73-8 carbonates 76-7 chemostratigraphy 79-81 C-H-N elemental analyser 76 closure 78-9, 81 compatible elements 7980
2 7 4 I INDEX
europium 87 explained 73-8, 74t and exploration 243-5 hydrous minerals 76-7 ICP-AES (inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry) 76-7 ICP-MS (inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry 76-7 immobile elements 79-81, 85, 87 inaccuracies in 77 incompatible elements 79 limit of detection 75 LOI (loss on ignition) 76 mass change 73, 81-7, 85-6, 87, 97, 165, 180-1, 245-6 NAA (neutron activated analysis) 76 precision and accuracy required 75 recalculating to volatile free 77-8 REE (rare earth elements) 73, 79, 81, 87 reporting data 77 sampling methods 738 summing elements 77 use of reference materials 75 XRF (X-ray fluorescence spectrometry) 76-7
Mount Read province alteration 7-12, 163-164 Chester deposit 90 history 9, 11-12 Hellyer deposit see Hellyer deposit Henty deposit see Henty deposit Hercules deposit see Hercules deposit Mount Lyell field see Mount Lyell field Mount Read Volcanics see Mount Read Volcanics oxygen isotopic exploration 24950 Que River deposit see Que River deposit Rosebery deposit see Rosebery deposit size of VHMS deposits 164 Western Tharsis deposit see Western Tharsis deposit Mount Read Volcanics see also Mount Read province AI and CCPI ranges 32,34 alteration 128-32, 133-8 Central Volcanic Complex 9-10, 69, 128, 130-32,
157-62
chemostratigraphic discrimination and correlation 80 compaction effects at 110 Darwin Granite 154-6, 157-62 geology of 7-12, 128, 129 Kershaw Pumice Formation 128,1346 Mount Black Formation 128, 133, 137-8 pyritic alteration systems 89 metamorphic assemblages 11 Sterling Valley Volcanics 128 Mount Windsor Subprovince alteration 14, 164, 222, 232 geology 12-14, 221-40 Highway-Reward deposit see Highway-Reward deposit Thalanga deposit see Thalanga deposit
M
mass change see lithogeochemistry massive sulfide 1635, 167 Mattabi deposit 91, 180 metamorphism burial metamorphism and diagenesis 16, 97, 98, 102, 114, 115-17 contact metamorphism 5, 11, 12, 64, 66-7, 149-54, 242 explained 4, 5, 20, 24 regional metamorphism 5, 64-6, 115, 139, 140-8 of VHMS-related altered zones 174-5 metasomatic alteration 4, 5, 144-6 microanalysis 24 microprobe see analytical techniques mineral assemblages alteration assemblages 235, 34, 165 burial effects on 97, 109 common assemblages 21t, 22t, 109, 165 disequilibrium 23-4, 63 equilibrium 23-4 in exploration 243 igneous 16, 19 isotopic studies of 925 nomenclature 19-20 mineral chemistry 87-91, 245-6 minerals defined 87-8 Mount Lyell field see also Mount Read province deposits 12,202,243 geological setting 202 halos 202 hanging wall alteration 167 HyMap system 246, 247 mineral zonation 243, 247 ore genesis 203 Western Tharsis deposit see Western Tharsis deposit
N
NAA (neutron activated analysis) 76 see also analytical techniques naming altered rock see alteration nomenclature Noranda district 66, 142-7, 167, 179-81 numerical fluid-flow modelling 172
o
overprinting textures 37, 70-1, 70t, 711 and false/pseudo textures 37, 54-63, 58-61, 62t relationships 69-71, 7It
palagonite 99, 99-100 Panorama district 180, 246, 248-50 paragenetic sequence 69 perlite 37,40,54, 100-1, 101 PIMA (portable infrared mineral analyser) 25, 33, 245 see also analytical techniques plagioclase destruction 31,167-9 pseudotextures 16, 37, 54-63, 58-61, 62t, 63 pyrophyllite in VHMS systems 174, 202, 207-8
Que River deposit 11-12, 70, 90, 167 see also Mount Read province
INDEX I 2 7 5
R
regional metamorphism see metamorphism relict textures 14, 16, 19, 24, 25, 37-38, 141 replacement textures 37-38, 41, 42-7 Rio Tinto deposit see Iberian pyrite belt Rosebery deposit see also Mount Read province alteration 70, 128, 131t, 168, 173, 178, 195, 196201 Chlorite-carbonate-pyrite index (CCPI) 195 geochemical alteration parameters 168 geological setting 194 explained 11-12, 194-201 hydrothermal carbonates 91 hydrothermal fluid flow 174 K-lens 30, 34, 68, 91, 174, 244 lithogeochemical data in exploration 82, 244 sericite 70-1
Scuddles deposit 180 sericite alteration 20-2, 70-1, 165-78, 185-6, 198-9, 20611, 218,225, 231, 238 see also white mica Short-wavelength infrared spectroscopy (SWIR) see analytical techniques siliceous alteration 165-9, 182, 189, 199, 219-20 smectites 102, 109, 117 Snow Lake District 142-6 sodium content in volcanic rocks 346, 2434 solution seams 51, 52 spilite 98 stable isotopes see isotope geochemistry stockwork see stringer zones stringer zones 163, 165, 172-3, 179 stylolites 51, 52 submarine environments 2, 97138 submarine facies associations Mount Read Volcanics 10-11, 214-20 Seventy Mile Range Group 12-13 submarine volcanic successions 1-14, 3, 97-138, 241-9 SWIR spectroscopy see analytical techniques synvolcanic intrusions see intrusions
vein-halo alteration 38,41,43,69 VHMS deposits alteration patterns 16478 classification 1636 common features 1634 comparisons 178-81 exploration 241-50 footwall alteration 163-74 halos 5-6, 67-9, 68, 163-8, 175, 178-81 hanging wall alteration 1634, 1678 Hellyer deposit see Hellyer deposit Henty deposit see Henty deposit Highway-Reward deposit see Highway-Reward deposit kaolinite, presence of 174 major VHMS provinces 164 Mount Lyell see Mount Lyell field pyrite in 243 pyrophyllite, presence of 174 regional alteration zones 5-6, 139-62 Rosebery deposit see Rosebery deposit Thalanga deposit see Thalanga deposit Western Tharsis deposit see Western Tharsis deposit VMS deposits see VHMS deposits volcanic facies alteration processes 26 alteration in submarine environments 97138 associations 2 changes in 108 clastic facies 1,19 coherent facies 1, 6, 16, 19 common clay minerals in 102 crystalline facies 6 volcaniclastic facies 1, 6, 12, 1619 volcanic-hosted massive sulphide deposits see VHMS deposits vugs 41,50-1,52
W
water-rock ratios 934 Western Tharsis deposit see also Mount Read province see also Mt Lyell field alteration facies and zonation 2023, 20411 case study 202-11 geological setting 202 ore genesis 203 white mica 91 white mica 20, 89-91, 165, 246 Woodlawn deposit 178
Thalanga deposit see also Mount Windsor Subprovince alteration facies and zonation 14, 178, 222, 223-31 explained 14 geological setting 1214, 2212 mass change estimations 856 ore genesis 222 oxygen isotopic exploration 250 thermodynamic alteration model 170-2
X
X-ray diffraction 19, 24, 25, 33, 88 X-ray fluorescence spectrometry (XRF) 767
vectors exploration 24350 isotopic 24650 lithogeochemical 243-4 mass change 245 mineral chemistry 79, 89-91, 245-6 sulfide 243-4
zeolites 105-6, 106t, 110, 114-16, 118, 120-1 zones see alteration zonation
Dr Cathryn Gifkins is a Research Fellow at the Centre for Ore Deposit Research at the University of Tasmania. Cathryn brings to the publication a strong background in mapping, describing and interpreting altered and deformed volcanic rocks in submarine successions. Her current research focusses on the textural, mineralogical and compositional effects of alteration in glassy volcanic rocks, the link between volcanic centres and mineralising hydrothermal systems, and the facies architecture and stratigraphy of the Mount Read Volcanics. ' Walter Herrmann is a Research Fellow in economic geology at the Centre for Ore Deposit Research. Wally's background in mineral exploration in Australian volcanic successions, principally the Mount Read Volcanics and the Mount Windsor Subprovince is a valuable asset to the book. He has a special interest in understanding hydrothermal alteration as a method for discriminating and discovering VHMS and porphyry deposits. Professor Ross Large is Director of the Centre for Ore Deposit Research and has a long and celebrated academic and exploration career. Ross has a comprehensive knowledge of VHMS deposits, and has actively promoted and developed the application of geochemical techniques to mineral exploration. This innovative approach has recently produced the Alteration box plot, an alternative way to relate alteration intensity, mineralogy and geochemistry.