Mexican Ag-Au and Ag-Pb-Zn Epithermal Deposits: Hydrothermal Products of a Magmatic (?) Heritage

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
T Albinson
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
6
File Size:
944 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1995

Abstract

Mexican epithermal deposits can be broadly grouped into two types based on their contained metals, distribution, associated igneous rocks and fluid inclusion compositions. Silver-gold deposits (eg Tayoltita) mostly occur in the western part of northernMexico where host rocks consist of Eocene, intermediate composition volcanic and intrusive rocks; fluid inclusion studies indicate that mineralising fluids were <300¦C and dilute (=3 eq. wt. % NaCl). In contrast, silver-lead-zinc deposits (eg Fresnillo) mostly occur in the central part of northern Mexico where they are temporally associated with Oligocene-Miocene volcanic rocks and intrusions of felsic composition, but commonly hosted within underlying Paleozoic-Mesozoic sedimentary rocks; fluid inclusion studies indicate that mineralizing fluids ranged from 200 to 400 ¦C and were saline (=10 eq. wt. % NaCl). The distribution of these two deposit types, crosscutting major crustal sutures, and the close spatial-temporal relationships between mineralisation and magmatism, together suggest that magmatic processes were more important in the formation of mineralising solutions, as a source of both ligands and metals, than the segments of crust hosting deposits.
Citation

APA: T Albinson  (1995)  Mexican Ag-Au and Ag-Pb-Zn Epithermal Deposits: Hydrothermal Products of a Magmatic (?) Heritage

MLA: T Albinson Mexican Ag-Au and Ag-Pb-Zn Epithermal Deposits: Hydrothermal Products of a Magmatic (?) Heritage. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1995.

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