4.2 Article Proceedings Paper

Fluid immiscibility and gold deposition in the Birimian quartz veins of the Angovia deposit (Yaoure, Ivory Coast)

Journal

JOURNAL OF AFRICAN EARTH SCIENCES
Volume 50, Issue 2-4, Pages 234-254

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jafrearsci.2007.09.014

Keywords

gold; fluid inclusions; CO2; fluid immiscibility; P-T conditions; Birimian; Angovia (Ivory Coast)

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The Paleoproterozoic terranes (Birimian) of West Africa are well known to host numerous economic gold mineralizations. The Angovia gold mineralization is located in a brecciated and mylonitic zone within the Birimian greenstones. The sulfide-gold mineralization is mainly represented by gold associated with pyrite and chalcopyrite. A fluid inclusion study undertaken on mineralized quartz veins revealed the presence of aqueous-carbonic (CO2-H2O) fluids, the association of carbonic (CO2) and early aqueous fluids, followed by later aqueous (H2O-salt) and finally nitrogen-rich fluids. Entrapment of the initial homogeneous aqueous-carbonic fluids prior to fluid immiscibility depicts the evolution of the P-T conditions during the exhumation of the terranes after the peak of green-schist metamorphism. The CO2 rich-fluid occurs especially in gold-bearing quartz, and are considered as the main evidence of the ore-forming process in the gold-bearing quartz veins. It is considered as a product of immiscibility of the CO2-H2O parent. The volatile fraction of carbonic and aqueous-carbonic fluid inclusions is dominated by CO2, containing minor amounts of N-2, even smaller amounts of CH4 and sporadically, H2S. The aqueous- carbonic fluids have moderate salinity (3-10 wt.% eq. NaCl). Late aqueous and N-2-(CH4-CO2) fluids are considered as later, unrelated to the main ore stage, and were trapped during the cooling of the hydrothermal system from 300 to 200 degrees C. The immiscibility has been favored by a strong pressure drop, the main trapping P-T conditions being 320-370 degrees C and 105-135 MPa. The mineralizing process is likely related to the immiscibility event, which was probably favored by the release of the fluid pressure after fracturing along the main shear zones. The ore process is likely to have occurred along the main shear zones or related secondary structures affected by cycling of the fluid pressure and quartz sealing-fracturing processes. The superimposed process can also explain the relative complexity of the quartz textures and fluid inclusion microfractures, and the rather wide range in the density of both parent fluid and CO2-dominated fluid. (c) 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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