Earth Science Frontiers ›› 2025, Vol. 32 ›› Issue (6): 224-244.DOI: 10.13745/j.esf.sf.2025.7.12

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Types, genesis, and implications of phlogopite in the Jinchuan Cu-Ni (Pt) sulfide deposit, Gansu Province, China

YU Xianghui1(), LIU Cui1,*(), SU Shangguo1, LIU Jixu1, WANG Miao1, GUO Xu2, ZHOU Chenghao3, GAO Yalin4,5   

  1. 1. School of Earth Sciences and Resources, China University of Geosciences (Beijing), Beijing 100083, China
    2. No.217 Geological Team Co., Ltd., Shanxi Geological Exploration Bureau, Datong 037008, China
    3. No.216 Nuclear Industry Brigade, Ürümqi 830011, China
    4. State Key Laboratory of Ni&Co Associated Minerals Resources Development and Comprehensive Utilization,Jinchang 737100, China
    5. Jinchuan Group Corporation, Ltd., Jinchang 737102, China
  • Received:2025-06-14 Revised:2025-07-03 Online:2025-11-25 Published:2025-11-12
  • Contact: LIU Cui

Abstract:

The Jinchuan Cu-Ni-(PGE) sulfide deposit in China ranks as the world’s third largest and Asia’s largest deposit of its type, constituting a vital strategic resource reservoir. Significant debate persists regarding the genesis and metallogenic mechanisms of this deposit. Phlogopite is a common hydrous mineral within the rocks and ores of Jinchuan, and its relationships with rock-forming and metallic minerals can elucidate the interconnections between magmatism, mineralization, and fluid activity. Based on systematic microscopic observations of phlogopite coupled with elemental geochemical characteristics, this study identifies two distinct types within the Jinchuan deposit: Type A and Type B phlogopite. Type A phlogopite typically exhibits subhedral to euhedral habits with prominent deep yellowish-brown to colorless pleochroism. It predominantly occurs in barren to low-grade rocks, displaying symplectite/symplectic intergrowth with grains of olivine and pyroxene, indicating crystallization contemporaneously with these minerals from the mantle-derived ultramafic magma. Elemental analysis reveals its similarity to phlogopite found in kimberlites and lamprophyres from regions like the USA and South Africa. It was classified as ‘re-equilibrated’ phlogopite rather than primary magmatic phlogopite, signifying slight modification by mantle-derived melt-fluid flux. Type B phlogopite also commonly exhibits subhedral to euhedral habits but lacks pleochroism. It occurs in relatively higher-grade ores and more intensely altered rocks, developing between rock-forming minerals, sometimes in symplectite/symplectic intergrowth, and is often associated with metallic minerals or crosscut/replaced by them. It similarly displays symplectite/symplectic intergrowth with surrounding olivine and pyroxene grains, which are typically serpentinized or chloritized. Type B phlogopite was presumably also generated from magmatic crystallization. Elemental analysis indicates its resemblance to phlogopite in certain South African peridotites, classifying it as ‘neocrystallized’ phlogopite, which experienced stronger modification by mantle-derived melt-fluid flux and is associated with the main mineralization stage. Type A phlogopite formed under relatively high-temperature, high-Ti, and high-oxygen fugacity conditions characterized by low Si, Mg, and Na, but enrichment in Fe and Al, favoring the enrichment of metallic elements like Fe. Type B phlogopite formed through the modification of Type A phlogopite. Consistent with this, its elemental signature suggested that the modifying agent was a mantle-derived, Mg-, Si-, and Na-enriched, but Ti-, Fe-, and Al-depleted melt-fluid flux rich in volatile components such as Cl. During this process, rock-forming minerals absorbed Mg while releasing Fe, contributing to ore formation. The crystallization temperatures of phlogopite were calculated using Ti geothermometry. The continuous vertical variation in these crystallization temperatures likely represents prolonged, sustained melt-fluid flux, indicating that the Jinchuan ultramafic intrusion functioned primarily as a long-term conduit for melt-fluid flux. This persistent flux may be the key factor enabling the progressive enrichment of metallic elements and the formation of the deposit.

Key words: Jinchuan Cu-Ni(Pt) sulfide deposit, phlogopite, elemental geochemistry, melt-fluid flow

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