Geology and Geochemistry of Cretaceous Submarine Exhalative Deposits at La Minta, SW Mexico

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 4
- File Size:
- 386 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1990
Abstract
A group of stratabound-stratiform Fe-Ba-Zn-Pb-Ag deposits within the La Minita mining district of Michoacan, southwest Mexico have been investigated. The results of the study show that these deposits were generated around submarine hot-springs issuing in a Cretaceous island-arc environment. The exhalative mineralization, which is both epigenetic and syngenetic in character, was developed above fault-systems which constituted the loci of both volcanism and subsequent hydrothermal systems.Fluid inclusion data suggest two hydrothermal events during ore mineralization, one at 240¦C and the other at 161 to 205¦C, with salinities between 2.1 and 12.8 wt.% NaCl equivalent. Stable isotope data support a marine origin for the ore-fluids, as well as, for carbon and sulfur. Strontium isotope data suggest that Sr in the barites was extracted from the volcanics and limestones by circulating seawater. The ore-depositional environment was one of shallow, sub-tropical marine character, where mineralization was in part geochemically controlled by carbonate reefal facies within the volcanic/pyroclastic suite.
Citation
APA:
(1990) Geology and Geochemistry of Cretaceous Submarine Exhalative Deposits at La Minta, SW MexicoMLA: Geology and Geochemistry of Cretaceous Submarine Exhalative Deposits at La Minta, SW Mexico. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1990.