Mineral chemistry of magnetite from magnetite-apatite mineralization and their host rocks: Examples from Kiruna, Sweden and El Laco, Chile

Magnetite-apatite deposits, sometimes referred to as Kiruna-type deposits, are major producers of iron ore that dominantly consist of the mineral magnetite (nominally [Fe²⁺Fe³⁺₂]O₄). It remains unclear whether magnetite-apatite deposits are of hydrothermal or magmatic origin, or a combination of tho...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Broughm, Shannon G.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Memorial University of Newfoundland 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.library.mun.ca/12543/
https://research.library.mun.ca/12543/1/thesis.pdf
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Summary:Magnetite-apatite deposits, sometimes referred to as Kiruna-type deposits, are major producers of iron ore that dominantly consist of the mineral magnetite (nominally [Fe²⁺Fe³⁺₂]O₄). It remains unclear whether magnetite-apatite deposits are of hydrothermal or magmatic origin, or a combination of those two processes, and this has been a subject of debate for over a century. Magnetite is sensitive to the physicochemical conditions in which it crystallizes (such as element availability, temperature, pH, fO₂, and fS₂) and may contain distinct trace element concentrations depending on the growing environment. These properties make magnetite potentially a useful geochemical indicator for understanding the genesis of magnetite-apatite mineralization. The samples used in this study are from precisely known geographic locations and geologic environments in the world class districts of Kiruna and the Atacama Desert and their associated, sometimes hydrothermally altered, host rocks. Trace element analyses results of magnetite from the Kiruna area in the Norrbotten region of northern Sweden, and the El Laco and Láscar volcanoes in the Atacama Desert of northeastern Chile, were evaluated using mineral deposit-type and magmatic vs. hydrothermally derived magnetite discrimination diagrams. The objectives of this study are to critically evaluate the practical use and limitations of these discrimination diagrams with the goal of determining if the trace element chemistry of magnetite can be used to resolve if magnetite-apatite deposits form in a hydrothermal or magmatic environment, or a combination of those two processes. The results of this study reveal that the magnetite from Kiruna have relatively low trace element concentrations and are homogeneous. There is little chemical variation between the ore, the hydrothermally altered host rocks, and related igneous intrusives from Kiruna, which may be a result of pervasive post-formation alteration due to extensive metasomatism and later greenschist facies metamorphism that has ...