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Magmatic immiscibility and the origin of magnetite-(apatite) iron deposits.

Dorota K PietruszkaJohn M HancharFernando TornosRichard WirthNathan A GrahamKenneth P SeverinFrancisco VelascoMatthew Steele-MacInnisWyatt M Bain
Published in: Nature communications (2023)
The origin of magnetite-(apatite) iron deposits (MtAp) is one of the most contentious issues in ore geology with competing models that range from hydrothermal to magmatic processes. Here we report melt inclusions trapped in plagioclase phenocrysts in andesite hosting the MtAp mineralization at El Laco, Chile. The results of our study reveal that individual melt inclusions preserve evidence of complex processes involved in melt immiscibility, including separation of Si- and Fe-rich melts, the latter hosting Cu sulfide-rich, phosphate-rich, and residual C-O-HFSE-rich melts, with their melting temperature at 1145 °C. This association is consistent with the assemblages observed in the ore, and provides a link between silicate and Fe-P-rich melts that subsequently produced the magnetite-rich magmas that extruded on the flanks of the volcano. These results strongly suggest that the El Laco mineralization was derived from crystallization of Fe-P-rich melts, thus providing insight into the formation of similar deposits elsewhere.
Keyphrases
  • metal organic framework
  • mass spectrometry
  • heavy metals
  • liquid chromatography