Source of gold in Neoarchean orogenic-type deposits in the North Atlantic Craton, Greenland: Insights for a proto-source of gold in sub-seafloor hydrothermal arsenopyrite in the Mesoarchean ...
Given that gold (Au) mostly remained in the incipient Earth mantle until ca. 3.9–3.8 Ga, a “proto-source” of gold may have been present in the dominantly mafic crust precursor born through first-stage melting of the early Earth mantle. In south-westernmost Greenland, a fragment of the North Atlantic...
Main Authors: | , , , , , |
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Format: | Article in Journal/Newspaper |
Language: | English |
Published: |
ETH Zurich
2020
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://dx.doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000423875 http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11850/423875 |
Summary: | Given that gold (Au) mostly remained in the incipient Earth mantle until ca. 3.9–3.8 Ga, a “proto-source” of gold may have been present in the dominantly mafic crust precursor born through first-stage melting of the early Earth mantle. In south-westernmost Greenland, a fragment of the North Atlantic Craton is characterised by greenstone belts comprising mafic volcanic and magmatic rocks, and harzburgite cumulates that were emplaced at ca. <3.19–3.01 Ga (e.g., Tartoq greenstone belt). Here, combining detailed sulphide petrography with rhenium-osmium-sulphur (Re-Os-S) isotope geochemistry of individual mineral separates of arsenopyrite from gold-sulphide mineralised shear zones, we pinpoint the precipitation of ca. 3.18–3.13 Ga (Re-Os model ages) hydrothermal arsenopyrite associated and coeval with arc-related magmatism of the Tartoq Group. We consider sub-seafloor hydrothermal alteration of the oceanic crust and magmatic activity to have supplied arsenic (As), Re, and Au, to result in the precipitation of ... : Precambrian Research, 343 ... |
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