Origin of reef-style PGE mineralization in the Paleoproterozoic Monchegorsk Complex, Kola Region, Russia

The Paleoproterozoic Monchegorsk Complex in northwest Russia represents one of the largest layered intrusions in Europe and hosts several examples of broadly stratiform platinum group element (PGE) mineralization at different stratigraphic levels of the intrusion that have been suggested to represen...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Economic Geology
Main Authors: Karykowski, Bartosz T., Maier, Wolfgang D., Groshev, Nikolay Y., Barnes, Sarah-Jane, Pripachkin, Pavel V., McDonald, Iain
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: 2018
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Online Access:https://constellation.uqac.ca/id/eprint/4913/1/1333-1358.pdf
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Summary:The Paleoproterozoic Monchegorsk Complex in northwest Russia represents one of the largest layered intrusions in Europe and hosts several examples of broadly stratiform platinum group element (PGE) mineralization at different stratigraphic levels of the intrusion that have been suggested to represent reef-style mineralization. The Sopcha reef occurs in the ultramafic lower portion of the complex and constitutes an up to 6-m-thick succession of layered, mineralized dunite, harzburgite, and olivine-orthopyroxenite, with peak grades of 3.4 ppm Pt + Pd and 1.1 wt % Ni. Another PGE occurrence is hosted by the leucogabbronoritic to anorthositic Vuruchuaivench intrusion, which represents part of the mafic upper portion of the Monchegorsk Complex. The disseminated sulfide mineralization reaches up to 7.3 ppm Pt + Pd and is concentrated in several lenticular bodies over a strike length of ~5 km, rather than in a laterally continuous reef as previously suggested. Moreover, our work identified a previously unreported minor enrichment in precious metals of up to 0.2 ppm Pt + Pd in leucogabbroic rocks of the Monchetundra intrusion, which represents the uppermost portion of the Monchegorsk Complex and belongs to the more than 60-km-long mafic Main Ridge. Detailed lithophile and chalcophile element data, coupled with mineral chemistry, indicate that the PGE mineralization at Sopcha and Vuruchuaivench does not represent classic reef-style mineralization, which is commonly narrow and marked by a sharp increase in Cu/Pd ratios, reflecting the in situ sulfide saturation within a large magma chamber. Instead, it is more likely that the Sopcha reef was emplaced as a crustally contaminated and sulfide-saturated, olivine-rich crystal mush that was sourced from a deeper chamber. The Sopcha mineralization is characterized by Pd/Pt > 5 and Pd/Ir > 55, similar to contact-style mineralization elsewhere in the complex, possibly suggesting a common origin of the sulfides. The mineralized Vuruchuaivench rocks have similar Pd/Pt but much ...