Conference Proceedings
PACRIM 2015
Conference Proceedings
PACRIM 2015
Geology, Mineralisation and Alteration of the Tuwu-Yandong Porphyry Cu Deposit, North-west China
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The Tuwu-Yandong Cu deposit, located in the East Tianshan mountains in the eastern section of the Central Asian Orogenic Belt, is the largest and economically most important porphyry Cu deposit in Xinjiang, China. It contains ~3 Mt of copper at an average grade of 0.46 per cent Cu and 0.2 g/t Au, with significant amounts of Mo and Ag. The deposit is mainly hosted in the Carboniferous Qi'eshan Group and plagiogranite porphyry, and is controlled by faults that are east-west-, north-west- and north-east-trending. Ore minerals in the Tuwu-Yandong deposit are dominated by pyrite, chalcopyrite and molybdenite, with minor bornite, chalcocite, magnetite, sphalerite and galena. Gangue minerals are mainly composed of quartz, sericite, chlorite, epidote, anhydrite, gypsum, muscovite, biotite, phosphorite, sphene, dolomite, actinolite, barite, albite and calcite. Based on the megascopic and microscopic textural relationships and mineral assemblages, five stages of hydrothermal alteration and hypogene mineralisation are recognized in the Tuwu-Yandong Cu deposit: the potassic stage, propylitic stage, phyllic stage, late veins stage and supergene stage. Most of the copper was deposited during the phyllic stage, along with less molybdenite.CITATION:Xiao, B, Chen, H, Wang, Y and Yang, J, 2015. Geology, mineralisation and alteration of the Tuwu-Yandong porphyry Cu deposit, north-west China, in Proceedings PACRIM 2015 Congress, pp 641-644 (The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy: Melbourne).
A full-length paper was notprepared for this presentation._x000D_
The Tuwu-Yandong Cu deposit, located in the East Tianshan mountains in the eastern section of the Central Asian Orogenic Belt, is the largest and economically most important porphyry Cu deposit in Xinjiang, China. It contains ~3 Mt of copper at an average grade of 0.46 per cent Cu and 0.2 g/t Au, with significant amounts of Mo and Ag. The deposit is mainly hosted in the Carboniferous Qi'eshan Group and plagiogranite porphyry, and is controlled by faults that are east-west-, north-west- and north-east-trending. Ore minerals in the Tuwu-Yandong deposit are dominated by pyrite, chalcopyrite and molybdenite, with minor bornite, chalcocite, magnetite, sphalerite and galena. Gangue minerals are mainly composed of quartz, sericite, chlorite, epidote, anhydrite, gypsum, muscovite, biotite, phosphorite, sphene, dolomite, actinolite, barite, albite and calcite. Based on the megascopic and microscopic textural relationships and mineral assemblages, five stages of hydrothermal alteration and hypogene mineralisation are recognized in the Tuwu-Yandong Cu deposit: the potassic stage, propylitic stage, phyllic stage, late veins stage and supergene stage. Most of the copper was deposited during the phyllic stage, along with less molybdenite.CITATION:Xiao, B, Chen, H, Wang, Y and Yang, J, 2015. Geology, mineralisation and alteration of the Tuwu-Yandong porphyry Cu deposit, north-west China, in Proceedings PACRIM 2015 Congress, pp 641-644 (The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy: Melbourne).
Contributor(s):
B Xiao, H Chen, Y Wang, J Yang
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- Published: 2015
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