TITEL
The Genetic Relationship between Rhyolitic Volcanism and Zn-Cu-Au deposits in the Maurliden Volcanic Centre, Skellefte district, Sweden: Volcanic facies, Lithogeochemistry and Geochronology
FöRFATTARE
Montelius, Cecilia
INSTITUTION
Tillämpad kemi och geovetenskap / Malmgeologi
SAMMANFATTNING
The Skellefte district is one of three major ore provinces in Sweden and
contains more than 80 Zn-Cu-Au-Ag massive sulphide deposits. The Maurliden
area in the central part of the district represents a subaqueous,
constructional and relatively topographic high silicic volcanic centre. It
hosts four sulphide deposits and was active during around 1885 Ma.
The tholeiitic to transitional Maurliden volcanic centre developed in an
extensional arc region in the Skellefte district that probably developed on
an immature (relatively thin) continental arc crust. The four Maurliden Zn-
Cu-Au massive to stringer sulphide deposits are hosted within the same
quartz-feldspar porphyritic pumice breccia-sandstone unit (QFP pumice unit)
and were formed by replacement and infilling of this unit together with
seafloor precipitation/exhalation. The QFP pumice unit was generated by
explosive subaqueous eruptions and was sedimented on the seafloor as a
succession of subaqueous mass-flow pulses.
Field relationships and geochemistry indicate a close relationship between
massive sulphide deposition and host rock in composition, intensity of
volcanism and sedimentation during the evolution of the Maurliden volcanic
centre. The volcanic activity before ore deposition was dominated by felsic
extrusive volcanism associated with both terrestrial to shallow marine
breccia-conglomerates and siltstone-sandstone turbidites deposited below
wave base. At the same time or slightly after this stage, there was a stage
of quartz-feldspar porphyritic rhyolitic extrusive and explosive volcanism.
At this stage the ore-host, the QFP pumice unit, was subaqeously erupted
and emplaced. The waning stage of the felsic volcanic activity was
accompanied by deposition of massive sulphide and siltstone-sandstone. Most
mafic rocks are post-ore dykes.
The similar geochemical composition of the felsic rocks suggests that they
were derived from a common magma source. Trace element and rare earth
element characteristics suggest that these magmas were relatively
primitive. The coeval felsic volcanic activity and the strong facies
control on massive sulphide deposition, suggest that massive sulphide
deposition was intimately linked to the magmatic evolution of the Maurliden
volcanic centre. The QFP pumice unit has a strong control on the location
of sulfide mineralization in the Maurliden area, and represents a new VMS
horizon in the central Skellefte district and it is possible that this
horizon occurs in other unexplored parts of the Maurliden domain.
ISSN 1402-1544 / ISRN LTU-DT--05/17--SE / NR 2005:17
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