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Metasomatism of ferroan granites in the northern Aravalli orogen, NW India: Geochemical and isotopic constraints, and its metallogenic significance

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Authors

  • Parampreet Kaur
  • Naveen Chaudhri
  • Albrecht W. Hofmann
  • Ingrid Raczek
  • Jürgen Koepke

Research Organisations

External Research Organisations

  • Panjab University
  • Max Planck Institute for Chemistry (Otto Hahn Institute)
  • Julius Maximilian University of Würzburg
  • University of Lausanne (UNIL)
  • University of Bristol

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1083-1112
Number of pages30
JournalInternational Journal of Earth Sciences
Volume103
Issue number4
Early online date28 Mar 2014
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2014

Abstract

The late Palaeoproterozoic (1.72-1.70 Ga) ferroan granites of the Khetri complex, northern Aravalli orogen, NW India, were extensively metasomatised ~900 Ma after their emplacement, at around 850-830 Ma by low-temperature (ca. 400 °C) meteoric fluids that attained metamorphic character after exchanging oxygen with the surrounding metamorphic rocks. Albitisation is the dominant metasomatic process that was accompanied by Mg and Ca metasomatism. A two-stage metasomatic model is applicable to all the altered ferroan intrusives. The stage I is represented by a metasomatic reaction interface that developed as a result of transformation of the original microcline-oligoclase (An12-14) granite to microcline-albite (An1-3) granite, and this stage is rarely preserved. In contrast, the stage II metasomatic reaction front, where the microcline-bearing albite granite has been transformed to microcline-free albite granite, is readily recognisable in the field and present in most of the intrusives. Some of them lack an obvious reaction interface due to the presence of stage II albite granites only. When studied in isolation, these intrusives were incorrectly classified and their tectonic setting was misinterpreted. Furthermore, our results show that the mafic mineralogy of metasomatised granites has a significant impact on the characterisation of such rocks in the magmatic classification and discrimination diagrams. Nevertheless, the stage I metasomatised granites can be appropriately characterised in these diagrams, whereas the characterisation of the stage II granites will lead to erroneous interpretations. The close spatial association of these high heat producing ferroan granites with iron oxide-copper-gold (IOCG), U and REE mineralisation in the region indicates a genetic link between the metasomatism and the mineralisation. World-class IOCG, U and REE deposits are associated with metasomatised ferroan granites, suggesting that such a relationship may act as a critical first-order exploration target for undiscovered mineral deposits.

Keywords

    Albitisation, Aravalli orogen, Ferroan granites, IOCG metallogeny, Khetri complex, Metasomatism, NW India

ASJC Scopus subject areas

Cite this

Metasomatism of ferroan granites in the northern Aravalli orogen, NW India: Geochemical and isotopic constraints, and its metallogenic significance. / Kaur, Parampreet; Chaudhri, Naveen; Hofmann, Albrecht W. et al.
In: International Journal of Earth Sciences, Vol. 103, No. 4, 06.2014, p. 1083-1112.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Kaur P, Chaudhri N, Hofmann AW, Raczek I, Okrusch M, Skora S et al. Metasomatism of ferroan granites in the northern Aravalli orogen, NW India: Geochemical and isotopic constraints, and its metallogenic significance. International Journal of Earth Sciences. 2014 Jun;103(4):1083-1112. Epub 2014 Mar 28. doi: 10.1007/s00531-014-1005-x
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title = "Metasomatism of ferroan granites in the northern Aravalli orogen, NW India: Geochemical and isotopic constraints, and its metallogenic significance",
abstract = "The late Palaeoproterozoic (1.72-1.70 Ga) ferroan granites of the Khetri complex, northern Aravalli orogen, NW India, were extensively metasomatised ~900 Ma after their emplacement, at around 850-830 Ma by low-temperature (ca. 400 °C) meteoric fluids that attained metamorphic character after exchanging oxygen with the surrounding metamorphic rocks. Albitisation is the dominant metasomatic process that was accompanied by Mg and Ca metasomatism. A two-stage metasomatic model is applicable to all the altered ferroan intrusives. The stage I is represented by a metasomatic reaction interface that developed as a result of transformation of the original microcline-oligoclase (An12-14) granite to microcline-albite (An1-3) granite, and this stage is rarely preserved. In contrast, the stage II metasomatic reaction front, where the microcline-bearing albite granite has been transformed to microcline-free albite granite, is readily recognisable in the field and present in most of the intrusives. Some of them lack an obvious reaction interface due to the presence of stage II albite granites only. When studied in isolation, these intrusives were incorrectly classified and their tectonic setting was misinterpreted. Furthermore, our results show that the mafic mineralogy of metasomatised granites has a significant impact on the characterisation of such rocks in the magmatic classification and discrimination diagrams. Nevertheless, the stage I metasomatised granites can be appropriately characterised in these diagrams, whereas the characterisation of the stage II granites will lead to erroneous interpretations. The close spatial association of these high heat producing ferroan granites with iron oxide-copper-gold (IOCG), U and REE mineralisation in the region indicates a genetic link between the metasomatism and the mineralisation. World-class IOCG, U and REE deposits are associated with metasomatised ferroan granites, suggesting that such a relationship may act as a critical first-order exploration target for undiscovered mineral deposits.",
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note = "Funding Information: Acknowledgments We are grateful to Dmitry V. Kuzmin (Mainz), Uli Schuessler (W{\"u}rzburg), nora Groschopf (Mainz) and Doris neu-h{\"a}user (Mainz) for their assistance in microprobe work, XRF analyses and clean laboratory, and Rosemarie Baur (W{\"u}rzburg) for performing some of the XRF analyses. We thank two anonymous reviewers and the Editor Ingo Braun for their comments that led to improvement of the manuscript. Fruitful discussions with, and valuable suggestions by, Hartwig Frimmel (W{\"u}rzburg) are warmly acknowledged. This work was supported by grants from the Department of Science and Technology, new Delhi (DST, SR/S4/ES-388/2008), and the German academic Exchange Service, Bonn (DaaD, a/03/02882).",
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TY - JOUR

T1 - Metasomatism of ferroan granites in the northern Aravalli orogen, NW India

T2 - Geochemical and isotopic constraints, and its metallogenic significance

AU - Kaur, Parampreet

AU - Chaudhri, Naveen

AU - Hofmann, Albrecht W.

AU - Raczek, Ingrid

AU - Okrusch, Martin

AU - Skora, Susanne

AU - Koepke, Jürgen

N1 - Funding Information: Acknowledgments We are grateful to Dmitry V. Kuzmin (Mainz), Uli Schuessler (Würzburg), nora Groschopf (Mainz) and Doris neu-häuser (Mainz) for their assistance in microprobe work, XRF analyses and clean laboratory, and Rosemarie Baur (Würzburg) for performing some of the XRF analyses. We thank two anonymous reviewers and the Editor Ingo Braun for their comments that led to improvement of the manuscript. Fruitful discussions with, and valuable suggestions by, Hartwig Frimmel (Würzburg) are warmly acknowledged. This work was supported by grants from the Department of Science and Technology, new Delhi (DST, SR/S4/ES-388/2008), and the German academic Exchange Service, Bonn (DaaD, a/03/02882).

PY - 2014/6

Y1 - 2014/6

N2 - The late Palaeoproterozoic (1.72-1.70 Ga) ferroan granites of the Khetri complex, northern Aravalli orogen, NW India, were extensively metasomatised ~900 Ma after their emplacement, at around 850-830 Ma by low-temperature (ca. 400 °C) meteoric fluids that attained metamorphic character after exchanging oxygen with the surrounding metamorphic rocks. Albitisation is the dominant metasomatic process that was accompanied by Mg and Ca metasomatism. A two-stage metasomatic model is applicable to all the altered ferroan intrusives. The stage I is represented by a metasomatic reaction interface that developed as a result of transformation of the original microcline-oligoclase (An12-14) granite to microcline-albite (An1-3) granite, and this stage is rarely preserved. In contrast, the stage II metasomatic reaction front, where the microcline-bearing albite granite has been transformed to microcline-free albite granite, is readily recognisable in the field and present in most of the intrusives. Some of them lack an obvious reaction interface due to the presence of stage II albite granites only. When studied in isolation, these intrusives were incorrectly classified and their tectonic setting was misinterpreted. Furthermore, our results show that the mafic mineralogy of metasomatised granites has a significant impact on the characterisation of such rocks in the magmatic classification and discrimination diagrams. Nevertheless, the stage I metasomatised granites can be appropriately characterised in these diagrams, whereas the characterisation of the stage II granites will lead to erroneous interpretations. The close spatial association of these high heat producing ferroan granites with iron oxide-copper-gold (IOCG), U and REE mineralisation in the region indicates a genetic link between the metasomatism and the mineralisation. World-class IOCG, U and REE deposits are associated with metasomatised ferroan granites, suggesting that such a relationship may act as a critical first-order exploration target for undiscovered mineral deposits.

AB - The late Palaeoproterozoic (1.72-1.70 Ga) ferroan granites of the Khetri complex, northern Aravalli orogen, NW India, were extensively metasomatised ~900 Ma after their emplacement, at around 850-830 Ma by low-temperature (ca. 400 °C) meteoric fluids that attained metamorphic character after exchanging oxygen with the surrounding metamorphic rocks. Albitisation is the dominant metasomatic process that was accompanied by Mg and Ca metasomatism. A two-stage metasomatic model is applicable to all the altered ferroan intrusives. The stage I is represented by a metasomatic reaction interface that developed as a result of transformation of the original microcline-oligoclase (An12-14) granite to microcline-albite (An1-3) granite, and this stage is rarely preserved. In contrast, the stage II metasomatic reaction front, where the microcline-bearing albite granite has been transformed to microcline-free albite granite, is readily recognisable in the field and present in most of the intrusives. Some of them lack an obvious reaction interface due to the presence of stage II albite granites only. When studied in isolation, these intrusives were incorrectly classified and their tectonic setting was misinterpreted. Furthermore, our results show that the mafic mineralogy of metasomatised granites has a significant impact on the characterisation of such rocks in the magmatic classification and discrimination diagrams. Nevertheless, the stage I metasomatised granites can be appropriately characterised in these diagrams, whereas the characterisation of the stage II granites will lead to erroneous interpretations. The close spatial association of these high heat producing ferroan granites with iron oxide-copper-gold (IOCG), U and REE mineralisation in the region indicates a genetic link between the metasomatism and the mineralisation. World-class IOCG, U and REE deposits are associated with metasomatised ferroan granites, suggesting that such a relationship may act as a critical first-order exploration target for undiscovered mineral deposits.

KW - Albitisation

KW - Aravalli orogen

KW - Ferroan granites

KW - IOCG metallogeny

KW - Khetri complex

KW - Metasomatism

KW - NW India

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U2 - 10.1007/s00531-014-1005-x

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JO - International Journal of Earth Sciences

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