Economic Geology
Maryam Emami Jafari; Saeed Alirezaei; Iraj Rasa; Jochen Kolb
Abstract
The Hired gold deposit in the Lut block, East Iran, is closely associated with an intermediate-mafic intrusive complex consisting of granodiorite to diorite, hornblende quartz-monzonite, and gabbro-diorite intruded into Eocene volcanic rocks. The intrusions are distinguished by high contents of CaO, ...
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The Hired gold deposit in the Lut block, East Iran, is closely associated with an intermediate-mafic intrusive complex consisting of granodiorite to diorite, hornblende quartz-monzonite, and gabbro-diorite intruded into Eocene volcanic rocks. The intrusions are distinguished by high contents of CaO, FeOt, and MgO, and rather low K2O+Na2O implying they crystallized from weakly differentiated magmas. This subject, and the relatively high Mg# (36.36 to 52.32) imply the involvement of a mantle source in the production of the parent magma. The intrusions are metaluminous, calc-alkaline to high-K calc-alkaline, and distinguished by the occurrence of ilmenite as an accessory mineral. Mineralization occurs in veins and veinlets disseminations in the granodiorite intrusion and the volcanic rocks, closely associated with tourmaline, silicic, and carbonate alterations, and is distinguished by abundant pyrrhotite, arsenopyrite, pyrite, and minor chalcopyrite, galena and sphalerite. Gold occurs mostly as submicroscopic grains in the pyrite and arsenopyrite. The mineralogical and geochemical attributes of the intrusive complex, and the ore mineralogy, allow the Hired to be classified as a gold deposit related to reduced I-type granitoids. The reducing nature of the parent magma can be explained by introduction of reduced crustal materials into the source area, and/or assimilation of carbonaceous metasedimentary rocks.
Petrology
Seyed Mohsen Kashfi; Saeed Alirezaei; Mohammad Reza Hosseini; Iraj Rasa
Abstract
The Zaghdareh area in the Esfandagheh-Faryab ophiolitic complex, southern Sanandaj-Sirjan belt, embraces extensive outcrops of mafic-intermediate lava flows and a felsic intrusive body. The volcanic rocks are calc-alkaline to tholeiitic, metaluminous, and distinguished by depletions in light rare earth ...
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The Zaghdareh area in the Esfandagheh-Faryab ophiolitic complex, southern Sanandaj-Sirjan belt, embraces extensive outcrops of mafic-intermediate lava flows and a felsic intrusive body. The volcanic rocks are calc-alkaline to tholeiitic, metaluminous, and distinguished by depletions in light rare earth elements and relatively flat patterns for heavy rare earth elements in chondrite-normalized diagram; the (La/Yb)N ratio is lower than unity for most samples. The chemical attributes for the Zaghdareh volcanic rocks are comparable to those developed in suprasubduction zones. The Zaghdareh intrusive body is distinguished by abundant plagioclase and quartz, and subordinate hornblende, phenocrysts in quartz-feldspar rich matrix. Representative samples from the intrusion plot in the trondhjemite-tonalite fields in the normative An-Ab-Or diagram. The intrusion is calc-alkaline to tholeiitic, peraluminous, and marked by enrichments in Na2O and CaO and depletions in K2O, Rb, and most other LILEs, as well as low K2O/ Na2O ratios, very low Rb/Sr ratio, and distinct depletions in light rare earth elements, which are typical of the oceanic plagiogranites. Results from this study and a comparison with other ophiolitic suites in Iran suggest that the occurrence of plagiogranites is a recurring feature associated with the development and evolution of ophiolitic suites in suprasubduction zones.