CADIC   02618
CENTRO AUSTRAL DE INVESTIGACIONES CIENTIFICAS
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Multi-isotope approach for the identification of metal and fluid sources of the Arroyo Rojo VMS deposit, Tierra del Fuego, Argentina
Autor/es:
BIEL, C.; BILLSTROM, K.; FANLO, I.; SUBÍAS, I.; ACEVEDO, R.D.
Revista:
ORE GEOLOGY REVIEWS
Editorial:
ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
Referencias:
Lugar: Amsterdam; Año: 2016 vol. 79 p. 241 - 253
ISSN:
0169-1368
Resumen:
The Arroyo Rojo deposit, located in Tierra del Fuego, is the most important polymetallic, volcanic-hosted massive sulphide in the rhyolitic belt of the Fuegian Andes. The best intercepts in drill holes indicate a true thickness of 18.6 m and concentrations of 2.2% Cu, 3.9% Pb, 14.5% Zn, 140 g/t Ag, 1.1 g/t Au). This deposit, located near the town of Ushuaia, is hosted in a Middle Jurassic volcanic and volcanoclastic sequence. Massive and semimassive bodies display stacked lenticular morphologieswith disseminated mineralization in both the footwall and hanging wall. The associated hydrothermal alteration systemis partially conformablewith the layering of the volcanic rocks. The ores and host rocks display a penetrative tectonic foliation and were metamorphosed to             greenschist facies.Previous studies have not resulted in a consensus regarding the nature and the source of ore-forming fluids and the style of deposition of the sulphides at Arroyo Rojo. In this study, both stable and radiogenic isotopes were used develop a better understanding of these aspects of the deposit.Hydrogen and oxygen isotopes indicate that an evolved seawater mixed with significant contributions from other fluid reservoirs such as magmatic and/or metamorphic waters was the most likely source of the oreforming fluids. These fluids underwent significant interaction with the underlying volcanic and sedimentary rocks, which promoted partial (Sr isotopes) or full (Pb isotopes) homogenization of radiogenic isotopes.δ34SCDT values suggest that the sulphur was derived from several sources: biogenic reduction of seawater sulphate (BSR) in a restricted to closed basinwas mixed with a heavier component derived frominorganic reduction of seawater sulphate (TRS) and possibly from sulphur leached from igneous footwall rocks and/or direct contribution from magmatic fluids.Lateral infiltration of hydrothermal fluids resulted in the formation of a halo of semimassive to disseminated ore due to the replacement of porous, reactive glassy and breccia tuffs.As a result of the hydrothermal circulation, two styles of mineralization are observed in the Arroyo Rojo deposit: a stringer zone and a halo of semimassive to disseminated ore corresponding to sub-seafloor replacement, and syn-sedimentary mineralization consisting of massive sulphides.This model is consistent with the geodynamic context of the study area: a narrow, deep-marine volcano-tectonic rift parallel to the Andean side of South America and related to the initial break-up of Gondwana (ca. 145 Ma).