The Relationship Between Late-Orogenic Extension and Hydrothermal Ore Formation - New Age Constraints From The Central Rhodopes, South Bulgaria

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A194 Goldschmidt Conference Abstracts 2003

The relationship between late- Establishment of the phosphorous


orogenic extension and hydrothermal cycle in early Archean oceans
ore formation New age constraints TAKESHI KAKEGAWA
from the Central Rhodopes, south Graduate School of Science, Tohoku University, Japan
Bulgaria [email protected]

MAJKA KAISER-ROHRMEIER1, ALBRECHT V.QUADT1, The geochemical cycle of phosphorous in early oceans is
ROBERT HANDLER2, MARIA OVTCHAROVA1AND an important problem for the origin and early evolution of life.
CHRISTOPH HEINRICH1 However, the phosphorous chemistry in early oceans is poorly
1
IGMR, ETH Zrich, Sonnegstr. 5, CH-8092 Zrich, understood. Seawater/rock interactions were common
Switzerland phenomena on the Archean ocean floor, producing chemically
2
Institute for Geology, University of Salzburg, Austria altered hyaloclastite and pillow lavas. Chemistry of Archean
oceans can be constrained by examining these pillow lavas
The Madan Dome, Central Rhodopes, south Bulgaria, is and hyaloclastite. The petrography, chemical analyses and
considered to be a large metamorphic core complex of late elemental mapping using the X-ray analytical microscope
Alpine age (Ivanov et al., 2000, Field guide, ABCD-GEODE were performed on pillow lava samples collected from the 3.8
workshop, Borovets). It is an ideal setting to study the Ga Isua, 3.5 Ga Pilbara and 2.7 Ga Abitibi regions. 3.5Ga and
relationship between late-orogenic geodynamics and 2.7 Ga pillow lavas are less metamorphosed and still
magmatism, hydrothermal fluid flow and ore formation. This containing primary volcanic glasses (palagonite). Margins of
study utilizes high-precision Rb-Sr, U-Pb and Ar-Ar pillow lavas from both regions are intensively carbonatized,
geochronology to constrain the timing of extension, due to the seawater/rock interaction under high P C O 2
exhumation, acid magmatism and lead-zinc mineralization in conditions. Abundant apatite crystals are found in
the Madan Dome. carbonatized pillow margins. These apatite crystals were most
Since the Late Cretaceous, compression led to nappe likely precipitated during the Archean seawater/rock
thrusting, followed by amphibolite facies metamorphism interaction using oceanic phosphates. The similar texture,
peaking in the Oligocene. In the subsequent extensional phase, chemistry and mineralogy were found in the Isua pillow lavas,
a detachment system developed, followed by the exhumation although it is questionable if occurrence of apatite in Isua
of the highly metamorphosed footwall of the Madan Dome. pillow lavas represents the primary feature. The results of this
The detachment is crosscut by undeformed silicic dykes, study suggest that phosphate were probably accumulated in
which are locally cut by large vein- and carbonate- the early Archean oceans at least since 3.5 Ga. There exists a
replacement lead-zinc deposits and altered to carbonate and large possibility that the continental weathering already
sericite-bearing assemblages. Most economic deposits are controlled the phosphate cycle, thus biological productivity, at
hosted in high-grade gneisses and interbedded marbles. the early Archean stage.
Rb-Sr (biotite-feldspar) and Ar-Ar (biotite) isochrons from
footwall gneisses reveal ~300 cooling ages of ~33-36Ma in
the center of the dome and significantly younger ages at its
western rim. These latter ages are likely affected by late fluid
disturbance. Older ages of ~40Ma and ~50Ma are dominant in
the northwestern footwall of the dome, whereas the northern
hanging wall gneisses record an age of ~31Ma. U-Pb zircon
ages from the silicic dykes range from ~32-30Ma. Ar-Ar
dating on white micas grown in the ore veins and their
alteration haloes show ages around 30.5Ma in the southern
and around 29.5Ma in the northernmost of several ore fields.
Rb-Sr and Ar-Ar ages from hanging and footwall gneisses
reveal a rapid but complex cooling history during updoming.
There is no significant change in foot and hanging wall
thermal history, therefore the interpretation of this dome as a
core complex could not be confirmed until now. Post-doming
silicic magmatism and hydrothermal vein formation overlap
within the dome as a whole, but vein mineralization is
distinctly younger in individual ore fields where both are
precisely dated.

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