Chemical and mineralogical heterogeneity in the basal zone of the Partridge River Intrusion: implications for the origin of Cu–Ni sulfide mineralization in the Duluth Complex,midcontinent rift system |
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Authors: | Edward M Ripley Nur Iskandar Taib Chusi Li Craig H Moore |
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Institution: | (1) Department of Geological Sciences, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405, USA;(2) Present address: University of Malaya, 50603 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia |
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Abstract: | Copper–nickel sulfide mineralization in the Partridge River Intrusion of the 1.1 Ga Duluth Complex is restricted primarily
to a 100 m thick zone near the base of the intrusion, which is heterogeneous at meter scales in terms of both sulfide contents
and rock types, which include dunite, melatroctolite, troctolite, leucotroctolite, gabbro, olivine gabbro, gabbronorite, and
rare norite. Olivine-rich troctolites and melatroctolites appear to have required mineral accumulation on a substrate, whereas
augite troctolite and gabbros are thought to have formed via in situ crystallization of magmas ranging in composition from
high-Al olivine tholeiite to high-Ti tholeiite. δ18O values of orthopyroxene-poor rocks in the Partridge River Intrusion range from 5.2 to 6.7‰. δ18O values of 6.7‰ are consistent with less than 20% contamination by high-18O metasedimentary country rock, either via devolatilization or local partial melting. Rocks with greater than ∼15% orthopyroxene,
gabbronorites, and norites, are characterized by δ18O values in excess of 6.9‰, and required the assimilation of larger amounts of siliceous country rocks. Sulfur isotopic values
in leucotroctolitic rocks that contain less than ∼400 ppm S and that overlie the basal zone range between −1.5 and 2‰, values
that are consistent with those of mantle-derived sulfur. In contrast, δ34S values in the basal zone range from −1.4 to 10.5‰, where the 34S-enriched samples require an input of sulfur from metasedimentary country rocks. δ34S values of the rocks in the basal zone correlate with variations in olivine Fo content but not with S abundance. The wide
range in δ34S values of rocks in the basal zone strongly suggests that magmas interacted with layers in the sedimentary country rocks
that were themselves characterized by variable sulfide contents and δ34S values. The S isotopic data suggest that the heterogeneity observed in the basal zone results from the emplacement of relatively
thin sheets of compositionally distinct magma. All rock types present in the basal zone can be produced as a result of variable
degrees of fractionation of a parental high-Al olivine tholeiite, followed by varying degrees of contamination of derivative
liquids by country rocks. The S-contamination process was essential for the development of Cu–Ni mineralization, and was restricted
to the earliest stages in the development of the Duluth Complex at a time when volatile species such as S and H2O, and low-T partial melts of country rocks, were available to magmas.
Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi: ) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. |
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