“…Iron oxide-apatite (IOA) deposits, also known as magnetite-apatite deposits or Kirunatype deposits, are an important type of porphyrite Fe deposits that occurred sporadically over a considerable time span ranging from the Paleoproterozoic to the Pliocene; they are mainly found at convergent boundaries, such as the Kiruna and Grängesberg districts in Sweden, the Bafq and Zanjan districts in Iran, the Great Bear zone in Canada, the Adirondack and Missouri districts in the United States, the High Andes and iron belt in Chile, and the Ningwu and Luzong districts in eastern China . IOA deposits are characterized by massive and disseminated magnetite-apatite ± actinolite ores with Na, Ca, and K alteration and have a close spatial relationship with evaporite layers [2,4,18,[23][24][25][26][27][28][29], which dominantly comprise gypsum/anhydrite, halite, and carbonates [2,[30][31][32][33]. However, whether the evaporite layers are involved and play an important role in the formation of IOA ore deposits remains controversial.…”