The Lightning Creek Cu-Au prospect is hosted by a cogenetic suite of plutonic, I-type granitoids. The dominant rock type is a porphyritic quartz monzodiorite that is intruded by more fractionated rocks, including monzogranite and alkali feldspar granite. A series of flat-lying sills are interpreted to be late-stage differentiates, based on their timing, mineralogy, and chemistry. In parts of the prospect there is pervasive sodic-calcic alteration (pyroxene after amphibole, albite after K feldspar and oligoclase) of the plutonic rocks. This alteration predates sill emplacement and is unrelated to veining or fracturing of any kind. The presence of small amounts of carbonate in the altered rocks suggests that the fluids were CO 2 bearing. Quartz and feldspar separates from these altered rocks have oxygen isotope compositions similar to those from fresh quartz-monzodiorite, suggesting that the fluids were hot and of magmatic composition. Sodium and Ca were added and K, Fe, Cl, and Cu were stripped during what is interpreted as an autometasomatic event. The sills display considerable textural and mineralogical complexity and evolved from equigranular, quartzofeldspathic rocks (aplites), with magmatic chemistry, to unusual Ferich rocks (albite-magnetite-quartz) that exhibit a range of bizarre spherulitic textures. Some of the albite and magnetite in the sills is secondary. Albite forms pseudomorphs after K feldspar (Na-Fe ± Ca alteration) along sill margins and within sills, at the contacts between different textural zones. Halos of disseminated magnetite + clinopyroxene (Fe-Ca ± Na alteration) are developed adjacent to early magnetite veins. Fluid inclusion studies indicate that these rocks crystallized at temperatures in excess of 500°C and at pressures in excess of 1.5 kbar. The range of spherulitic textures is taken to indicate crystallization under hydrous conditions with the episodic release of a fluid phase. This magmatic fluid phase was dominated by H 2 O, CO 2 , and chlorine and underwent phase separation into a CO 2-rich vapor and a hypersaline brine (33-55 wt % NaCl equiv). The hypersaline fluid was enriched in Fe (~10 wt %) and Cu (~1 wt %, PIXE analysis), in addition to Na, K, and Ca. Where this fluid was retained within Ferich portions of the sills, it caused CaFe ± Na alteration (pyroxene-albite ± magnetite growth at the expense of quartz). Where the fluid was expelled from the sills, it produced quartz-magnetite ± clinopyroxene ± albite veins (broadly coeval with the early magnetite veins). Although rich in Cu, these granitoid-derived magmatic fluids did not generate significant Cu(-Au) mineralization, perhaps because of the high temperatures involved and/or a lack of reduced sulfur in the fluids or host rock. However, the amount of iron present is estimated (from the aeromagnetic anomaly) to be in excess of 2,000 million tonnes (Mt). A later generation of calcite ± chlorite ± pyrite ± chalcopyrite veins contain traces of Cu-Au mineralization. Fluid inclusion and stable isotope work indicate that these ...
-Uranium-series data for groundwater samples from the Nopal I uranium ore deposit were obtained to place constraints on radionuclide transport and hydrologic processes for a nuclear waste repository located in fractured, unsaturated volcanic tuff. Decreasing uranium concentrations for wells drilled in 2003 are consistent with a simple physical mixing model that indicates that groundwater velocities are low (~10 m/y). Uranium isotopic constraints, well productivities, and radon systematics also suggest limited groundwater mixing and slow flow in the saturated zone. Uranium isotopic systematics for seepage water collected in the mine adit show a spatial dependence which is consistent with longer water-rock interaction times and 2 higher uranium dissolution inputs at the front adit where the deposit is located. Uranium-series disequilibria measurements for mostly unsaturated zone samples indicate that 230 Th/ 238 U activity ratios range from 0.005-0.48 and 226 Ra/ 238 U activity ratios range from 0.006-113. 239 Pu/ 238 U mass ratios for the saturated zone are <2 × 10 -14 , and Pu mobility in the saturated zone is >1000 times lower than the U mobility. Saturated zone mobility decreases in the order 238 U~2 26 Ra > 230 Th~2 39 Pu. Radium and thorium appear to have higher mobility in the unsaturated zone based on U-series data from fractures and seepage water near the deposit.
Here we report uranium and thorium isotopic ratios and elemental concentrations measured in solid reference materials from the USGS (BHVO‐2G, BCR‐2G, NKT‐1G), as well as those from the MPI‐DING series (T1‐G, ATHO‐G). Specifically created for microanalysis, these naturally‐sourced glasses were fused from rock powders. They cover a range of compositions, elemental concentrations and expected isotopic ratios. The U‐Th isotopic ratios of two powdered source materials (BCR‐2, BHVO‐2) were also characterised. These new measurements via multi‐collector thermal ionisation mass spectrometry and multi‐collector inductively coupled plasma‐mass spectrometry can now be used to assess the relative performance of techniques and facilitate comparison of U‐Th data amongst laboratories in the geoscience community for in situ and bulk analyses.
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