Earth Science Frontiers ›› 2025, Vol. 32 ›› Issue (5): 308-325.DOI: 10.13745/j.esf.sf.2024.12.128

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Types, characteristics of apatite and its metallogenic indications in the Oubulage porphyry copper-gold deposit, Inner Mongolia

ZHONG Jingyu(), ZHANG Yanan*(), SU Shangguo, CHEN Xuegen   

  1. School of Earth Sciences and Resources, China University of Geosciences (Beijing), Beijing 100083, China
  • Received:2024-09-06 Revised:2024-12-28 Online:2025-09-25 Published:2025-10-14
  • Contact: ZHANG Yanan

Abstract:

The Oubulage porphyry Cu-Au deposit, situated in the Langshan metallogenic belt within the Central Asia-Mongolia metallogenic province, represents a typical magmatic-hydrothermal system. Petrographic analysis, cathodoluminescence (CL) imaging, and major-trace element geochemistry reveal two distinct generations of apatite. The first type (Ap-I) occurs as inclusions within hornblende and biotite, showing coarse grain sizes (100-200 μm), euhedral morphologies, and dark green to brown CL emissions—features indicative of direct crystallization from a silicate melt. In contrast, the second type (Ap-II) is mainly distributed along mineral fractures related to fluid activity and is paragenetic with sulfides, calcite, phengite, K-feldspar, albite, and rutile, forming a fluid-dominated mineral assemblage. Ap-II is finer-grained (30-50 μm), exhibits euhedral to subhedral forms, and emits green to yellowish-green CL, reflecting crystallization from volatile-rich hydrothermal fluids. Compared with Ap-I, Ap-II shows higher concentrations of F, SiO2, Al2O3, MnO, and SO3, along with elevated δEu values, and lower Ga contents and Th/U ratios—implying involvement of oxidized, F-, Si-, Al-, and Mn-rich fluids. Additionally, Ap-II is enriched in W, Bi, and Sn, displays higher Nb/Ta ratios than mantle values, and corresponds to a formation temperature of 784.7 ℃ (based on the Zr-in-rutile thermometer), suggesting the ore-forming fluids were high-temperature, supercritical in nature. The presence of radial fractures in early-formed Ap-I, garnet, and other minerals further indicates the influence of fluid overpressure. Collectively, these features point to deep-sourced, oxidized, high-temperature supercritical fluids enriched in F, Si, Al, and Mn that played a key role in metal transport and mineralization.

Key words: Apatite, F- and Si-rich supercritical fluid, fluid overpressure, Oubulage porphyry copper-gold deposit, Inner Mongolia

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