Tao Wang’s research while affiliated with China University of Geosciences (Beijing) and other places

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Publications (1)


Stable Isotopic Geochemical and Geochronological Constraints on the Formation of the Shihu Gold Deposit: The Intracontinental Metallogeny of the Taihang Tectonic Belt, Eastern China
  • Article

July 2015

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112 Reads

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14 Citations

Resource Geology

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Jianzhong Hu

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Tao Wang

The Early Cretaceous Shihu gold deposit is located in the northern segment of the Taihang Tectonic belt, which extends across the central part of the North China Craton. The deposit is hosted predominantly by the Archean metamorphic crystalline units, and is spatially and temporally related to quartz diorite porphyry present extensively throughout the gold deposit. We studied the geology, geochronology and stable isotopic geochemistry. Zircon U–Pb LA–ICP–MS ages of the quartz diorite porphyry at deposit range from 134 ± 1 to 131 ± 2 Ma, which are coeval and probably genetically related to the mineralization. The majority of the sulfides of the gold deposit have δ34S values ranging from −1 to 2‰, which suggest an homogeneous magmatic source. In addition, the isotopic compositions of δ18Ofluid and δ18Dfluid vary from 2.1 to 7.0‰ and −93 to −65‰, respectively, suggesting that the magmatic fluids mingled with meteoric water. The Pb isotopic analyses reveal that both the ore-forming materials and the quartz diorite porphyry originated from the lower crust and may have been mixed with mantle material. The 87Sr/86Sri and 143Nd/144Nd (143Nd/144Nd)i ratios for the quartz diorite porphyry demonstrate that there was mixing of two end-member (crust and the mantle) isotopic compositions. These results suggest that the ore-forming fluids and materials were derived from lower-crustal melting induced by mantle processes. Processes associated with the formation of the Shihu gold deposit differ significantly from those that characterize orogenic gold deposits, and instead are representative of formation in an intracontinental tectonic environment.

Citations (1)


... The largest Au deposit (Yixingzhai; ~ 94 t Au; ~ 140 Ma) is temporally bracketed by pre-ore and post-ore diorite dikes of similar isotopic ages. Auriferous quartz veins of the second largest Au deposit (Shihu; ~ 30 t Au; ~ 130 Ma) are spatially associated with numerous coeval quartz-diorite dikes, both being controlled by NNEto NNW-trending faults (Wang et al. 2015). The auriferous quartz veins in the Xiaolinggen Au deposit and many pre-ore or syn-ore lamprophyre and diorite dikes consistently strike NW to NNW (Ding et al. 1992). ...

Reference:

Tectono-magmatic controls on decratonic gold deposits
Stable Isotopic Geochemical and Geochronological Constraints on the Formation of the Shihu Gold Deposit: The Intracontinental Metallogeny of the Taihang Tectonic Belt, Eastern China
  • Citing Article
  • July 2015

Resource Geology