Distribution and genesis of some epizonal Zn-Pb and Au provinces in the Carpathian-Balkan region

The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
A. H. G. Mitchell
Organization:
The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
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12
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7086 KB
Publication Date:
Aug 1, 1996

Abstract

Most, if not all, of the six recognised post-Cretaceous, predominantly andesitic mineralised belts in the region are now thought to be subduction-related magmatic arcs. The Inner Carpathian arc and the Eastern Bosnia or Drina-Rhodope arc host numerous vein and replacement deposits with epithermal features and Zn-Pb+/-Ag as the predominant economic minerals. In contrast, the south Apuseni Mountains have produced over 1 600 t Au from epithermal veins but very little Zn-Pb. Recent age determinations and geophysical data from the Baia Mare district of the Inner Carpathians suggest that mineralisation succeeded volcanism by 1-2 m.y. and accompanied crustal extension and the cooling of a large, mushroom-shaped pluton whose boundaries define the mineral district. In the south Apuseni district, mineralisation can be explained by mixing of meteoric with low-salinity metamorphic water expelled during intrusion of mafic rocks into the middle or lower crust. The more continental or cratonic crust in the Drina-Rhodope and Inner Carpathian arcs precluded the input of low-salinity, Au-bearing metamorphic water; the Zn-Pb deposits formed where convecting meteoric water mixed with saline water, possibly introduced through carbonate rocks in the basement
Citation

APA: A. H. G. Mitchell  (1996)  Distribution and genesis of some epizonal Zn-Pb and Au provinces in the Carpathian-Balkan region

MLA: A. H. G. Mitchell Distribution and genesis of some epizonal Zn-Pb and Au provinces in the Carpathian-Balkan region. The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining, 1996.

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