학술논문

Metallogenic fingerprint of a metasomatized lithospheric mantle feeding gold endowment in the western Mediterranean Basin
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Geological Society of America Bulletin. 134(5-6):1468-1484
Subject
27A|Economic geology - metal ores
02C|Geochemistry - rock, sediment, soil
basalts
Betic Cordillera
Cenozoic
chain silicates
chemical composition
EDS spectra
Europe
gold ores
Iberian Peninsula
ICP mass spectra
igneous rocks
inclusions
lithosphere
mantle
mass spectra
metal ores
metallogeny
metals
metasomatism
mineral deposits, genesis
Miocene
Murcia Spain
Neogene
petrography
platinum group
Pliocene
pyroxene group
silicates
Southern Europe
Spain
spectra
Tallante Spain
Tertiary
theoretical models
volcanic rocks
X-ray spectra
xenoliths
Language
English
ISSN
0016-7606
Abstract
Spinel peridotite xenoliths (one plagioclase-bearing) hosted in alkaline basalts from Tallante (southeast Spain) record the mineralogical and geochemical fingerprint of the subcontinental lithospheric mantle (SCLM) evolution beneath the southern Iberian margin. Mantle metasomatism in fertile lherzolites caused the crystallization of clinopyroxene + orthopyroxene + spinel clusters through the percolation of Miocene subalkaline melts during the westward migration of the subduction front in the western Mediterranean. In the Pliocene, heat and volatiles provided by alkaline host-magmas triggered very low melting degrees of metasomatic pyroxene-spinel assemblages, producing melt quenched to silicate glass and reactive spongy coronae around clinopyroxene and spinel. Refertilization of the Tallante peridotites induced the precipitation of base-metal sulfides (BMS) included in metasomatic clino- and orthopyroxene. These sulfides consist of pentlandite ± chalcopyrite ± bornite aggregates with homogeneous composition in terms of major elements (Ni, Fe, Cu) and semi-metals (Se, As, Te, Sb, Bi), but with wide variability of platinum-group elements (PGE) fractionation (0.14 < PdN/IrN < 30.74). Heterogeneous PGE signatures, as well as the presence of euhedral Pt-Pd-Sn-rich platinum-group minerals (PGM) and/or Au-particles within BMS, cannot be explained by conventional models of chalcophile partitioning from sulfide melt. Alternatively, we suggest that they reflect the incorporation of distinct populations of BMS, PGM, and metal nanoparticles (especially of Pt, Pd, and Au) during mantle melting and/or melt percolation. Therefore, we conclude that Miocene subalkaline melts released by asthenosphere upwelling upon slab tearing of the Iberian continental margin effectively stored metals in metasomatized domains of this sector of the SCLM. Remarkably high Au concentrations in Tallante BMS (median 1.78 ppm) support that these metasomatized domains provided a fertile source of metals, especially gold, for the ore-productive Miocene magmatism of the westernmost Mediterranean.