The Gandy and Abolhassani epithermal precious and base metal deposits occur in the Torud-Chah Shirin mountain range in the Alborz magmatic belt of northern Iran. The mountain range is considered to be part of the Paleogene Alborz volcanic arc. The exposed rocks in the study area consist of a volcaniclastic sequence of thin-bedded siltstones and sandstones, lapilli tuffs, volcanic breccias, and intermediate lava flows at Gandy, and mostly andesitic flows at Abolhassani. The flows are middle to upper middle Eocene age and they show a typical arc geochemical signature, with low concentrations of Nb, Ta, Zr, Hf, and Ti.Variable hydrothermal alteration occurs in scattered outcrops, covering about 4 km 2 at Gandy and 1 km 2 at Abolhassani. The Gandy and Abolhassani areas are about 3 km apart, and each contains a small abandoned Pb-Zn mine. Mineralization at Gandy occurs in quartz sulfide veins and breccias and is accompanied by alteration halos of quartz, illite, and calcite up to 2 m wide. The mineralization is divided into three main stages: brecciation (I), fracture filling (II), and crustiform banding (III). Stage I is economically important in terms of precious metal content. Stage II consists of four substages and contains the majority of base metal ore with quartz, calcite, and barite. Native gold is commonly found within partially oxidized pyrite and secondary iron (hydr)oxides such as goethite in stage I and coexists with galena and chalcopyrite in stage II. The final stage is dominated by quartz and calcite. Mineralization in the Abolhassani veins occurred in three main stages. The first two stages, which are economically important, contain similar mineral assemblages, including quartz, calcite, barite, galena, sphalerite, pyrite, and chalcopyrite, whereas the final stage is dominated by quartz and calcite. No gold grains were found in the Abolhassani samples. The average (max) assays from 14 channel samples of Gandy veins are 14.5 (68.3) g/t Au, 30.6 (161) g/t Ag, 3.1 (13) wt percent Pb, 0.84 (3.8) wt percent Zn, and 1.0 (6.3) wt percent Cu. For comparison, the values from 19 channel samples of Abolhassani veins are 0.85 (6.0) g/t Au, 29.5 (115) g/t Ag, 6.4 (16.5) wt percent Pb, 1.2 (5.2) wt percent Zn, and 0.83 (7.7) wt percent Cu.Fluid inclusion and sulfur isotope compositions were analyzed for the sulfide-sulfate assemblages of stage II at Gandy and stages I and II at Abolhassani. In both cases fluid inclusion assemblages were examined mostly in subhedral crystals of sphalerite. The average homogenization temperatures (T h ) and salinities of fluid inclusion assemblages from Gandy range from 234°to 285°C, with a peak at about 250°C and 4.2 to 5.4 wt percent NaCl equiv. These T h values are in good agreement with isotopic temperatures from two sphalerite and galena pairs (236°and 245°C). The temperature and salinity values in fluid inclusion assemblages from the Abolhassani deposit range from 234°to 340°C and 6.7 to 18.7 wt percent NaCl equiv. Sulfide pairs of sphalerite-galena do not give reasonable isoto...
The Shanderman lamprophyre dykes crop out in the western part of the Alborz Mountains (Talesh). These rocks are classified as camptonites, composed of primary olivine, Ti‐rich diopside, kaersutite, biotite, plagioclase, K–feldspar, and minor Ti–rich spinels, magnetite, pentlandite–pyrrhotite/chalcopyrite, and powellite–scheelite. Secondary analcime–wairakite, serpentines, and prehnite are common minor minerals within the studied rocks. Olivine, Ti‐rich diopside, spinel, and amphibole show distinct chemical zoning. Spinels display a core‐to‐rim decrease in Cr2O3, MgO, and Al2O3 concentrations and an increase in TiO2 and FeOT (total Fe as FeO), reflecting the oxidation state increase due to hydrothermal fluid influx. Low SiO2 contents (<42 wt%), high MgO (12.44 to 13.98 wt%), and Fe2O3T (12.76 to 13.43 wt%), Cr (318–537 μg/g) and Ni (231–327 μg/g) contents indicate the ultrabasic nature of the rocks. The samples show potassic character (2.1–2.8 wt% K2O), along with elevated LREE and LILE, and also exhibit minor positive Eu anomalies (Eu/Eu* = 1.09 to 1.20). Olivine–spinel geothermometry indicates a maximum crystallization temperature of 1227 °C (ave. 988 °C ± 65 °C). Exsolution of pentlandite–pyrrhotite/chalcopyrite solid solutions occurred during magma cooling and crystallization. At lower temperatures, analcime–wairakite and prehnite partially replaced plagioclases. The geochemical modeling of the rocks indicates the Shanderman lamprophyre magmas were derived from low‐grade melting (<5%) of amphibole–bearing garnet lherzolite source without or with very few phlogopites. The primary magma of Shanderman lamprophyres was derived from a depth of ~135 km by partial melting of a metasomatized mantle source in a post‐collisional environment.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.