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ES 3210 ECONOMIC MINERAL DEPOSITS Types of Natural Waters Stephen J. Piercey Ryohei Morimoto (University of Tokyo), 1952. Explosion from the Bayonnaise Rocks submarine volcano in Japan's central Izu Islands breaches the sea surface on September 23, 1952 ES 3210 ECONOMIC MINERAL DEPOSITS • Supplementary: Robb(2005) Sections 3.1 & 3.2 [Natural Waters] Natural Waters that Can Contribute to Ore Forming Fluids from Robb (2005) METEORIC WATER • Water with its most recent origin being from the hydrological cycle (i.e., it has been in contact with the atmosphere) • • Second largest reservoir of liquid water on Earth In the context of ore deposit formation this is groundwater infiltrated (downward into) the crust through seepage of original surface waters METEORIC WATER • Exists in the interstitial pores and fracture structures of rocks • Can penetrate to very deep levels along faults and fractures, and therefore circulates throughout the crustal regime • A meteoric water component has been detected in a wide variety of ore-forming fluids • Important in epithermal Au deposits SEAWATER • • Seawater comprises 98% of Earth’s liquid water • Seawater is weakly saline (3.5 wt.% total dissolved salts), and quite consistent in its global composition Substantial amounts of water have covered the Earth’s surface (as oceans) for most of its history SEAWATER • • Principal solutes are Na+, K+, Ca2+, Mg2+, Cl-, HCO3- SO42- • It is the principal component of the fluids for volcanogenic massive sulfides, and other important types of ore deposit (e.g., SEDEX). Seawater is often entrained and convected in hydrothermal systems – particularly those associated with submarine volcanism and magmatism “Near surface” water budget of the Earth Robb (2005); Figure 3.2 Seawater entrained in hydrothermal convention at mid-ocean ridges Robb (2005); Figure 3.6c CONNATE WATER • Water included within the interstitial pore spaces of sediments as they are deposited is connate (or formational) water • Connate water is therefore originally meteoric water or seawater • It is released by various processes during burial and induration of sediments CONNATE WATER • Deep basinal waters commonly become quite saline (more saline than seawater) • Processes that increase salinity include “membrane”filtration by shales, and the assimilation of evaporitic sequences • The expulsion of connate brines by later processes of basin dewatering are important in the genesis of MVTs and related ore deposit types. CONNATE WATERS IN LARGE SEDIMENTARY BASINS VARIATION OF SALINITY WITH DEPTH Robb (2005); Figure 3.2 MAGMATIC WATER • Almost all magmas contain some amount of dissolved H2O (and CO2, Cl and other volatiles) • Processes of crystallization, cooling and decompression during their emplacement can cause the exsolution of a separate magmatic fluid phase MAGMATIC WATER • These fluids are hot (typically 600°-800°C) and can develop high salinities and metal contents • They play a primary role in the formation of, for example, porphyry Cu deposits • They are also detected as a component in the ore-forming fluid of many other deposit types. From Ridley (2013) METAMORPHIC FLUIDS • Fluids are often released during phase transformations that affect the breakdown of hydrous minerals • These fluids may contain H2O, CO2, CH4, sulphur species, and other volatile components • They tend to have low salinities, and low contents of reduced sulphur • Important for orogenic Au deposits Summary • • • • Meteoric - e.g., impt in some ore deposits (epithermal Au). Seawater - e.g., impt in VMS, SEDEX (+/-MVT). Connate brines - e.g., impt in sediment-hosted deposits. Metamorphic - e.g., impt in some gold deposits.