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17 February 2003

Sulfidation State of Fluids in Active and Extinct Hydrothermal Systems: Transitions from
Porphyry to Epithermal Environments

Marco T. Einaudi1
Department of Geological and Environmental Sciences
Stanford University
Stanford, California 94305-2115

Jeffrey W. Hedenquist
Department of Geology and Geological Engineering
Colorado School of Mines
Golden, Colorado 80401-1887

E. Esra Inan
Department of Geological and Environmental Sciences
Stanford University
Stanford, California 94305-2115

Running title: Sulfidation state of hydrothermal fluids


In Press: Giggenbach Volume, Society of Economic Geologists and Geochemical Society,
Special Publication 10 (S.F. Simmons, ed.)

1
corresponding author, e-mail: [email protected]

Abstract
Use of the concept of "sulfidation state", in parallel with oxidation state, in the study of
ore deposits finds its beginnings with the studies of Reno Sales and Charles Meyer at Butte,
Montana. Experimental determination of the stability of sulfide minerals in terms of f S2 and
temperature followed, leading to definition of contrasts in ore-forming environments. More
recent studies of vapor compositions in active volcanic and geothermal systems allow direct
comparisons with geochemical environments deduced from petrologic study. In this paper, we
present a compilation of oxidation and sulfidation states of fresh igneous rocks from arc
environments and on sulfidation states of sulfide assemblages in calc-alkalic porphyry copper,
porphyry-related base-metal veins, and epithermal gold-silver deposits. These data are contrasted
with compositions of fluids from active systems by plotting vapor compositions on log f S2 –
1000/T, RH – 1000/T, RS – 1000/T diagrams, where RH ≈ log (X H2 / X H2O), RS ≈ log ( X H2 / X
H2S ) and X = mole fraction of the gas.

Oxidation states of andesitic arc magmas plot in a tight cluster between fayalite +
magnetite + quartz and pyrrhotite + pyrite + magnetite. On equilibrating below the solidus, arc
plutons deviate toward higher oxidation states. Sulfidation states of arc magmas are very low to
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low, lying between fayalite + magnetite + quartz + pyrrhotite and pyrrhotite + pyrite. A plot of
RH values versus measured temperatures for volcanic fumaroles reveals close agreement with the
isomolar SO2 = H2S curve (sulfur-gas buffer) to temperatures below 500 °C. Giggenbach
concluded from this observation that the oxidation state of the vapors is controlled by their
magmatic sulfur-gas composition, a conclusion consistent with oxidation state trajectories for
cooling plutons.
Reactive magmatic-hydrothermal fluids from active systems trend toward lower RH and
RS (higher oxidation and sulfidation states) with declining temperature, achieving minima at 200
to 100°C (RS = -1.5 to –3.0). Below 200 °C, RH and RS both increase abruptly (RS =0) through
interaction with wall rock. In contrast, geothermal liquids are relatively reduced, near neutral pH,
and their sulfidation state remains low to intermediate (RS =0) throughout the range 320-100°C.
This may be caused by a greater degree of fluid-rock interaction at depth, a smaller magmatic
component, or a distinct magmatic component. The reduced limit of geothermal compositions
has an RH value of about –3, equivalent to Giggenbach's rock buffer, where iron-bearing minerals
in fresh rock establish a “floor” to the oxidation state, just as the sulfur-gas buffer acts as a
“ceiling”.
The majority of porphyry copper deposits contain magnetite, either without sulfides or as
part of ore-grade assemblages containing bornite and/or chalcopyrite without pyrite. In some
deposits, pyrite + chalcopyrite dominates the ore zone. All of these assemblages are of
intermediate sulfidation state. High-temperature volcanic fumaroles plot largely in the bornite +
magnetite field, consistent with the view that porphyry copper assemblages precipitate from
magmatic volatiles that cooled along the sulfur-gas buffer. Base-metal veins associated with
porphyry copper deposits extend this cooling trend and display a range of sulfidation states from
very high in central zones (pyrite + digenite + covellite + enargite) to intermediate and low in
peripheral zones or latest stages (pyrite + tennantite + chalcopyrite).
In high-sulfidation (HS) epithermal deposits the sulfidation state ranges from high for
copper-rich enargite-bearing assemblages to intermediate for the later gold-rich tennantite-
tetrahedrite + pyrite assemblages, with similarities to and overlap with the base-metal veins. In
intermediate sulfidation (IS) epithermal deposits the full range of intermediate sulfidation states
is represented by the assemblage pyrite + chalcopyrite + tetrahedrite. The general similarity of
assemblages associated with gold in HS and IS deposits suggests a closer affiliation between
these two types than commonly thought. Low sulfidation (LS) epithermal deposits appear to be
distinct and show little variation from low and intermediate sulfidation states. Evidence for
transients in sulfidation state, due to boiling, local wall rock influence, or other factors, exists in
all three types of epithermal deposits.
Sulfide mineral assemblages in porphyry copper deposits, porphyry-related base-metal
veins, and HS-IS epithermal deposits, when taken together, describe a cooling path toward
increasing sulfidation states from RS = -1 at 600ºC to RS = -3 at 300ºC, followed by an abrupt
increase to RS = 0 as equilibrium with the rock buffer is achieved. This pattern, also evident in
fluid compositions from active magmatic-hydrothermal systems, suggests a continuum between
these deposit types. Fluid compositions in active hydrothermal systems span the complete range
of chemical and physical states that are commonly relegated to changing time in intrusion-
centered ore deposits.
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Introduction
Analogies have long been made between active and extinct hydrothermal systems in the
study of ore deposits, first in the early part of the 20th C in the context of epithermal deposits
(Ransome, 1907; Lindgren, 1933). In porphyry-type deposits, analogies evolved from
dominantly geological (e.g., Sillitoe, 1973), through dominantly physical (e.g., Henley and
McNabb, 1978), to integrative (White, 1981; Hedenquist and Lowenstern, 1994) as the data base
on geology and fluid composition in active systems expanded (e.g., Henley and Ellis, 1983;
Giggenbach, 1997).
The geochemical pathways taken by hydrothermal fluids can be described in terms of
many variables. One that has long spanned the disciplines of economic geology, petrology and
geochemistry is oxidation state (f O2 compared to a standard), a variable of particular importance
because of its effect on the speciation of sulfur in magmas and in aqueous fluids and its role in
metal transport (Barnes and Czamanske, 1967; Burnham, 1979; Burnham and Ohmoto, 1980;
Candela, 1992). Oxidation state can be estimated from mineral assemblages in igneous rocks
(e.g., Wones, 1981; Whitney, 1984) and ore deposits (Holland, 1959; Barnes and Kullerud, 1961;
Meyer and Hemley, 1967), and calculated from direct sampling in active systems (Giggenbach,
1987). The application of sulfur fugacity (or less precisely, partial pressure) migrated into the
geologic realm from metallurgy about the middle of the last century and its application to ores
(e.g., Merwin and Lombard, 1937; Sales and Meyer, 1949; McKinstry, 1959) closely paralleled
the use of oxygen fugacity in petrology. Sulfidation state, a function of both f S2 and temperature
(Barton and Skinner, 1967; Barton, 1970) has had limited application to the classification of ore
deposits (e.g., Heald et al., 1987) and the study of continua within classes (e.g., Barton et al.,
1995) despite the consistent framework it provides for systematizing sulfide mineral assemblages
and studying evolution of hydrothermal systems.
In this paper, our focus is on ores related to medium-K and high-K calc-alkaline
magmatic suites of both continental and oceanic arc environments. We consider deep porphyry-
copper environments as transitional into shallower porphyry-related base-metal vein and
replacement deposits (Meyer and Hemley, 1967; Einaudi, 1982; Hemley and Hunt, 1992) and
ultimately near the surface into epithermal gold-silver deposits (Sillitoe, 1973; Sillitoe, 1983;
Hedenquist et al., 1998; Muntean and Einaudi, 2001). If taken as a whole, sulfide mineral
assemblages in these deposits describe a "Lazy-L" shaped field on a log f S2 – 1000/T diagram
(Fig. 1). In a given district, such a field would represent the integrated evolutionary paths of
multiple batches of hydrothermal fluids, likely from different sources, as they undergo cooling,
depressurization, and variable degrees of interaction with their wall rocks. The environment
described is one of increasing sulfidation state on cooling from near magmatic temperatures
down to 300°C, at which point an abrupt decline in sulfidation state occurs. This same Lazy-L
pattern was deduced 35 years ago by Meyer and Hemley (1967), yet the analogy with fluid
pathways in active volcanic and geothermal systems was not appreciated at that time due to a
paucity of reliable analytical data on fluids. As discussed in this paper, fluids from active
systems (e.g., compilations by Giggenbach et al., 1986, Giggenbach, 1996, and references
therein) mimic this L-shaped trend in both sulfidation and redox states.
We first summarize aspects of terminology and the oxidation and sulfidation state of
magmas and wall rocks, then present an overview of the fluid chemistry of active hydrothermal
systems and compare this to the evidence from mineral assemblages in ore deposits. We touch on
processes that control the pathways of fluid evolution based on our integration of information
from these active and extinct systems.
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Terminology and Conventions


Mineral assemblages, associations, and zoning
Mineral assemblages commonly are defined as groupings of minerals that occur in direct
contact and that do not display evidence of reaction with one another (Barton et al., 1963). The
term mineral association is applied to groups of minerals that are characteristic of a given zone of
alteration or portion of a vein system, but which are not all in contact and were not necessarily
all deposited at the same time. Thus, pyrite, chalcopyrite, bornite, and magnetite is a common
association in potassic alteration zones in porphyry copper deposits, but the assemblages are
magnetite + bornite, bornite + chalcopyrite, or chalcopyrite + pyrite, but not bornite + pyrite in
this environment. In the text below minerals that are part of an assemblage are joined with plus
signs, and minerals that are part of an association are separated by commas.
Although mineral associations commonly are summarized in maps showing mineral
zoning, such maps are ambiguous because they represent patterns resulting from superposition of
multiple packets of fluids and migrating flow paths through time. To serve as a basis for
assessment of processes (and for ore finding), such maps need to be redrawn as a series of time
frames representing the zoning of mineral assemblages at given points in time. In order to draw
time frames, it is necessary to map time lines through the deposit. In porphyry deposits,
successive intrusions can serve as time lines to draw successive time-frames (e.g., Gustafson and
Hunt, 1975; Carten, 1986; Dilles and Einaudi, 1992) or space-time diagrams (Dilles et al., 2000;
Muntean and Einaudi, 2001). In vein deposits, time lines are more difficult to establish, but in
some cases these can be based on the presence of unique features such as sphalerite stratigraphy
(Barton et al., 1977; Hayba, 1997).
In spite of these ambiguities in the link between space and time, some common themes
are evident within the deposit types considered here. For example, in the early stages of zoned
base-metal veins found in some porphyry copper districts, minerals occurring in innermost zones
appear to have encroached outward onto minerals that comprised the next outer zones. In some
deposits (e.g., Main Stage veins at Butte, Montana: Sales and Meyer, 1949) this
contemporaneous zonal growth pattern was largely frozen in (prograde pattern). In other
deposits, minerals of the outer zones encroached onto the center of the deposit as isotherms
collapsed, and it is this late stage that is most prominently recorded by the temporal sequence of
minerals, especially sulfides (retrograde pattern). This time sequence may be seen in outcrop as
late pyrite veins cutting early quartz + chalcopyrite + bornite veins in many porphyry copper
deposits (e.g., El Salvador, Chile; Gustafson and Hunt, 1975) or recognized under the
microscope as late tennantite replacing enargite in many base-metal veins (e.g., McKinstry,
1963) and in some high-sulfidation epithermal gold deposits (e.g., Jannas et al., 1999; Claveria,
2001). These and other issues related to zoning and paragenesis and the use of paragenetic
diagrams have been reviewed by Hemley and Hunt (1992, p. 36-40). In the present paper, we
summarize these spatial and temporal patterns in tables and plot trends on phase diagrams. The
plotted trends are representative of the geochemical environments within cooling hydrothermal
systems and do not in general represent the trajectory of a single episode of hydrothermal fluid
flow. In some districts these changing environments are spatially separated (e.g., an outward
zonal pattern such as A-B-C, Fig. 1), in others they are superimposed (e.g., B superimposed on
A, followed by C superimposed on B, Fig. 1), but we have not attempted to make this distinction
on phase diagrams.
5

Sulfidation state terminology


The terms "sulfidation" and "sulfidation state", and the concepts that surround them, have
a long history of development in the study of ore deposits. Table 1 serves to record part of that
history and to define and clarify the terminology. The references cited are among the highlights,
but are not intended as a comprehensive review. The large number of terms involved, including
"high-sulfur sulfides", "sulfidation", "sulfidation reactions", "sulfur fugacity", and "sulfidation
state", often are used as synonyms, whereas they have different meanings (Table 1).
We use the term sulfidation state as defined by Barton (1970) and in a manner analogous
to oxidation state (e.g., Wones, 1981), where the frame of reference is temperature and the
fugacity of S2 and O2 gas, respectively. The sulfur or oxygen fugacity of a system at any
temperature can be compared to standard mineral reactions (buffers), such as
4 Fe3O4 + O2 = 6 Fe2O3 (1)
magnetite hematite
for oxygen, or
2 FeS + S2 = 2 FeS2 (2)
pyrrhotite pyrite
for sulfur. The difference between the oxygen or sulfur fugacity implied by a natural mineral
assemblage compared with that of a buffer reaction forms the basis for assigning relative
oxidation or sulfidation states.
For ease of comparing the sulfidation state between different fluids and between fluids
and mineral assemblages, we introduce here an informal terminology based on sulfidation
reactions among minerals in the system Cu-Fe-As-S (reactions identified in Fig. 1) common to
porphyry copper deposits, porphyry-related veins, and epithermal precious-metal deposits. From
low to high, these are: "very low", "low", "intermediate", "high", and "very high" sulfidation
states. The boundary between intermediate and high sulfidation states is defined by the
sulfidation reaction
5 CuFeS2 + S2 = Cu5FeS4 + 4 FeS2 (3)
chalcopyrite bornite pyrite,
(Fig. 1) which approximately coincides with the sulfidation reaction
0.67 Cu12As4S13 + S2 = 2.67 Cu3AsS4 (4)
tennantite enargite,
and represents the transition between porphyry copper deposits (sensu stricto) and porphyry-
related base-metal veins (see below). Further, the sulfidation reaction
0.47 FeAsS + 1.41 CuFeS2 + S2 = 0.12 Cu12As4S13 + 1.88 FeS2 (5)
arsenopyrite chalcopyrite tennantite pyrite,
representing a lower limit to sulfidation state in IS epithermal deposits, effectively coincides with
the lower limit of intermediate sulfidation states as defined by the reaction (2).
Sulfidation state is neither a function of the sulfur content of a sulfide mineral or mineral
assemblage, nor a function of proximity of a given assemblage or fluid to the sulfur condensation
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curve. Regarding the first point, pyrite contains more sulfur than covellite, but its stability field
extends to lower sulfidation states than that of covellite (Fig. 1). Regarding the second point, the
sulfur condensation curve, which acts as a ceiling to f S2 at any given temperature, has a flatter
slope on a log f S2 - (1000/T) diagram than the sulfidation reactions used here to index sulfidation
state (Fig. 1). Because of this relation, each sulfidation state has an upper thermal limit.
We caution that the term sulfidation state is not strictly parallel to the terms "high
sulfidation" (HS) and "low sulfidation" (LS) used in the classification of epithermal deposits
(White and Hedenquist, 1990; Hedenquist et al., 1994a; Table 1), although sulfide assemblages
that characterize the major portion of many epithermal deposits (e.g., enargite in HS deposits)
are mostly consistent with the classification terms. Sulfidation state, as used here in the sense of
a mineral facies or in the context of mineral assemblages and fluids, can vary widely within
deposits, and, as pointed out by Barton (1970), can vary within a hand sample or crystal.
Different, hypothetical cooling paths can be drawn on a log f S2 – 1000/T petrogenetic
grid: gas-buffered, rock-buffered, and mineral-buffered paths. The latter two types of cooling
paths are treated at length below. A mineral-buffered path is one that is parallel to mineral
reaction lines – cooling takes place at constant sulfidation state, although the absolute value of
f S2 declines along such a path. As stressed by Barton (1970), hydrothermal fluids rarely follow
mineral-buffered paths, the mineral buffers being more correctly regarded as indicators of the
state of the system at a given point in space and time. Barton's (1970) Main Line environment
(Fig. 1), representing the common range of sulfidation states in ore-forming hydrothermal
systems and containing an infinite number of possible fluid trajectories, has a lower positive
slope than mineral buffers on a log f S2 – 1000/T diagram. Thus, this environment is one of
gradually increasing sulfidation state (although the value of f S2 decreases) with decreasing
temperature. One of the key themes of the present paper is to investigate such trajectories in
natural ores and active hydrothermal systems.
Relationship between sulfidation state, oxidation state, and pH
The valence state of sulfur was the basis used by Hedenquist (1987) in the original
definition of two end member "high sulfidation" and "low sulfidation" epithermal deposits
(Table 1). Aqueous and gas species in ore-forming fluids contain sulfur in valence, or oxidation,
states (n) that are either greater (e.g., in SO4=, n = +2) or less (in H2S, n = -2) than S2 (n = 0).
With this measure of oxidation state, two oxidation states can apply to a single sulfidation state
depending on whether the predominant aqueous species is sulfate or sulfide. However, if f O2 is
used as a measure of oxidation state, as in this paper, then in H2S-dominant fluids f S2 covaries
with f O2:
2 H2S + O2 = S2 + 2 H2O, (6)
and in SO4=-dominant fluids f S2 is inversely proportional to the cube root of f O2 at constant pH:
2 SO4= + 4 H+ = S2 + 3 O2 + 2 H2O. (7)
In the commonly recognized isothermal log f S2 -log f O2 and log f O2 – pH plots, the above
relations are expressed by a maximum in f S2 that lies along the aqueous sulfate-sulfide
predominance boundaries, where f S2 increases with increasing f O2 and decreasing pH (see
figures and discussion in Barnes and Kullerud, 1961; Barnes and Czamanske, 1967). Meyer and
Hemley (1967, p. 222) use equations such as (6) and (7) above to stress the "delicate
relationships" between f S2 and f O2 and pH, in which relatively low pH correlates with relatively
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high fugacities of both sulfur and oxygen (e.g., reaction 7) at high ratios of f S2/f O2, a correlation
amply supported by sulfide-silicate assemblages in ore deposits.
RS and RH as alternative expressions of sulfidation and oxidation state
Given the complex relationships just described between f S2, f O2, pH, and aqueous sulfur
species, and given the low concentrations of S2 gas below 600ºC, it can be argued that analysis of
geochemical systems is better conducted on the basis of actual reaction participants. Thus,
Giggenbach (1987) adopted the redox parameter RH = log (f H2 / f H2O), and the sulfidation state
parameter RS = log (f H2 / f H2S). The variables RS and log f S2 (and RH and log f O2) are equally
valid representations of phase equilibria. We use both representations and retain f S2 because of
its historical use in the study of ore deposits and its thermodynamic importance in the definition
of sulfide phase equilibria. The final story is best told with a combination of both sets of
variables.
Vapor compositions from active hydrothermal systems can be plotted directly on RH –
1000/T, RS – 1000/T, and log f S2 – 1000/T diagrams where RH ≈ log (XH2 / XH2O), RS ≈ log
(XH2 / XH2S), and X = analytical mole fraction (Appendix). We have vertically flipped the RH –
1000/T and RS – 1000/T diagrams from Giggenbach's original orientation so that the values of
RH and RS increase downward on the y-axis. In this view, the topology is similar to the log f O2 -
1000/T and log f S2 - 1000/T diagrams, respectively, typically used in petrology and ore deposit
studies (Fig. 2). As discussed below, vapors from active systems define a pattern similar to the
Lazy-L defined by sulfide assemblages of porphyry and epithermal affiliation (compare Figs. 1
and 2).

Magmas, Rock Buffers, and Gas Buffers


Oxidation and sulfidation states of magmas
Here we briefly summarize data on oxidation and sulfidation state of magmas because
these are the starting points for consideration of magmatic volatiles. The correlation between
oxidation state of magmas and the types of associated mineral deposits has been addressed in the
context of porphyry- and granitoid-related deposits (Burnham and Ohmoto, 1980; Einaudi et al.,
1981; Thompson and Newberry, 2000), and in the broader perspective of igneous controls on
metallogenesis (Ishihara, 1981; Barton et al., 1995; Barton, 1996; Jensen and Barton, 2000; John,
2001).
The oxidation state of magmas can be estimated on the basis of mineral associations and
contrasts in ferric/ferrous ratios or magnetic susceptibility. These qualitative approaches to
oxidation state, useful in metallogenetic analysis (e.g., Ishihara, 1981; Thompson and Newberry,
2000), are insufficient for our purpose, which is to compare quantitative estimates with analytical
data from active hydrothermal systems. For quantitative estimates of oxidation states the
compositions of coexisting ilmenite and titano-magnetite are particularly useful (Buddington and
Lindsley, 1964; Haggerty, 1976; Spencer and Lindsley, 1981; Hildreth, 1981), but also important
are assemblages containing iron-magnesium silicates and titanite (Wones, 1981; Dilles, 1987;
Andersen et al., 1991). The continuing refinement of solution models for Fe-Ti-oxides, pyroxene
and olivine (Andersen et al., 1993) means that past compilations of the oxidation state of
volcanic rocks (e.g., Haggerty, 1976) must be recalculated for internal consistency. Table 2
summarizes the sources of data used here to calculate the oxidation state of magmas and plutonic
8

rocks from arc and rift environments plotted on Figure 3. The result is not fundamentally
different from the well-known tendency for arc magmas to lie at higher oxidation states than rift
magmas (Hildreth, 1981; John, 2001). The former include the arc-related calc-alkaline magmas
associated with copper-rich porphyry and base- and precious metal vein deposits worldwide and
which are the focus of this paper. These arc magmas lie 2 RH units above the hematite +
magnetite buffer where the SO2/H2S fugacity ratio of magmatic-hydrothermal fluids ranges from
0.1 to 10 (Burnham and Ohmoto, 1980). Rift magmas include basalt and rhyolite of the Snake
River and Yellowstone hotspots (Hildreth, 1981) and the Northern Nevada Rift (John, 2001) that
straddle the quartz + magmatite + fayalite buffer (Fig. 3).
The sulfidation state of magmas is more difficult to estimate and has received less
attention than oxidation state because sulfides rarely preserve their magmatic identities on
cooling below solidus temperatures. Sulfidation states, mostly from andesitic arc environments,
and approximated by the composition of pyrrhotite in magmatic sulfide combined with
temperature estimates from Fe-Ti-oxides (Whitney and Stormer, 1983; Whitney, 1984; Drexler
and Munoz, 1988), are plotted on Figures 4 and 5 (Table 2). Arc magmas lie between the fayalite
+ magnetite + quartz + pyrrhotite buffer and the pyrrhotite + pyrite + s(liq) invariant point, at very
low to low sulfidation states (Fig. 4). Recent study of magmatic Cu-Fe-sulfide blebs in
intermediate to felsic plutonic and volcanic rocks of the Great Basin, western USA (Keith et al.,
1995; Keith et al., 1997; Borrock et al., 1999) are consistent with these relatively low sulfidation
states, appropriate for pyrrhotite + intermediate solid solution (which incorporates the
chalcopyrite composition at high temperatures), and bornite solid solution + magnetite.
"Rock buffer"
The "rock buffer" can be described as the sum of rock-forming minerals that interact with
a hydrothermal fluid at sub-magmatic temperatures and mediate its sulfidation-oxidation state
and total acidity (Barton, 1970; Hemley and Hunt, 1992). Minerals that are likely to be involved
as buffers are the ferromagnesian minerals with iron in different valence states: Fe+2 in pyroxene,
olivine, biotite, and magnetite; Fe+3 in biotite and magnetite. Giggenbach (1987) commented on
the problem of defining a rock buffer in volcanic-hosted hydrothermal systems: "In the absence
of detailed information on the buffer mineralogy…, it appears unjustified to presuppose the
presence of any of these minerals" (p. 148). He concluded that the method used by Fudali (1965)
and Carmichael and Ghiorso (1986) for estimating oxidation state of andesitic magmas can be
extended to rocks, and he used fayalite and hematite as thermodynamic proxies for the rock
buffer (Appendix), labeled the "Giggenbach rock buffer" on Figure 3.
Where does the Giggenbach rock buffer lie relative to mineral buffers? At 350°C, the
rock buffer lies close to magnetite + pyrrhotite + pyrite; at 500°C it coincides with both Ni +
NiO and K feldspar + quartz + magnetite + phlogopite (XFebio = 0.2), and at 800 to 1000°C it
intersects the center of the field of oxidation states of subduction-related arc magmas (Figs. 2 and
3). RH values of neutral-pH geothermal fluids lie on or slightly below this rock buffer, as
discussed below. Using the above relations, we show the approximate location of the rock buffer
on the log f S2 – 1000/T and RS - 1000/T diagrams (Figs. 2, 4 and 5), where it lies in the
lowermost part of Barton's (1970) Main Line sulfidation environment.
Just as magmas ranging from MOR basalt to continental arc dacite display oxidation
states that vary over 3 units RH (Fig. 3) and 2.5 units RS (Fig. 5), the rock buffer in any given
mineral deposit can deviate from the Giggenbach rock buffer. For example, the reaction of
9

peridotite to serpentinite could act to buffer hydrothermal fluids to low oxidation states, resulting
in low sulfidation state assemblages in the initial stages of ore deposition, as at the Mamut
porphyry copper deposit, Malaysia, where chalcopyrite ore contains pyrrhotite and magnetite
(Kosaka and Wakita, 1978). Alternatively, quartzite lacks buffering capacity in terms of both f O2
and f S2; a magmatic-hydrothermal fluid traveling through quartzite could evolve along the
sulfur-gas buffer (see below) toward high-sulfidation states at relatively high temperatures, as at
the Bingham porphyry copper deposit, Utah (Inan and Einaudi, 2002).
Magmatic sulfur-gas buffer
The SO2/H2S gas ratio of volatiles exsolved from relatively oxidized, I-type magmas
ranges from 0.1 to 10 (Ohmoto and Rye, 1979; Burnham and Ohmoto, 1980; Whitney and
Stormer, 1983; Whitney, 1984; Giggenbach, 1987). These gases may control the
oxidation/sulfidation state of hydrothermal fluids to temperatures as low as 350ºC if the sulfur
gases dominate over H2 and if the fluid does not react with its wall rocks due to high flow-
velocities and restriction to major fissures. On the other hand, the ratio may increase on phase
separation due to loss of H2S and H2 to the vapor or due to sulfide deposition, or may decrease as
a result of chemical exchange with wall rocks containing ferrous iron or carbonaceous matter
(Ohmoto and Rye, 1979). As discussed below, RH values of volcanic fumaroles above 500ºC lie
close to the isomolar sulfur-gas buffer where SO2/H2S = 1.0. Below 500-400ºC the compositions
of volcanic fumaroles and modern magmatic hydrothermal fluids are modified by partial reaction
with ferrous iron in wall rocks (Giggenbach, 1987). At 250ºC in neutral pH epithermal
environments the SO2/H2S gas ratios are in the range 10-6 to 10-4 (Barton et al., 1977) and the
sulfur-gas buffer no longer applies.
Oxidation and sulfidation states of fluids in cooling plutons
Volatiles that exsolve from and are in equilibrium with andesitic magmas at 800°C are at
a low sulfidation state, although mostly within four log units f S2 of sulfur saturation (Figs. 2A
and 4), are relatively oxidized and straddle the sulfur-gas buffer (Fig. 3). If such fluids cool in
equilibrium with their host rock (roughly the RH = -3 and RS = 0 isopleths, Figs. 3, 4, and 5; see
below), their sulfidation state increases only gradually, crossing into intermediate sulfidation
states as pyrrhotite is succeeded by pyrite at around 300°C. Such a path approximates the
"geothermal" path shown in these figures. In contrast, if magmatic volatiles cool along the
sulfur-gas buffer they pass into intermediate sulfidation states at much higher temperatures,
around 500°C, where magmatic sulfide blebs of pyrrhotite + intermediate solid solution are
converted to pyrite + chalcopyrite. At lower temperatures, near 350°C, magnetite is oxidized and
sulfidized to hematite + pyrite (Figs. 4 and 5). The few published data on oxidation states of
plutonic rocks that have equilibrated to temperatures as low as 400°C (Dilles, 1987; Cornejo and
Mahood, 1997; Core et al., 2001) suggest that sub-solidus cooling occurred along the sulfur-gas
buffer (Fig. 3), but there is an uncertainty of unknown magnitude in extrapolating the Fe-Ti-
oxide geobarometer to such oxidized conditions at these low temperatures.

Active Hydrothermal Systems


The petrologic studies discussed above used thermodynamic calculations to determine
variables such as f O2, f S2, and pH from observed mineral assemblages. In contrast, fluids
collected from active hydrothermal systems allow the reactants to be measured directly, thereby
eliminating the need for detailed thermodynamic calculation. For example, the ratio XH2/XH2O of
10

a fumarole sample reflects the oxidation state of the fluid, as these components are the principal
redox reactants. Furthermore, the ratio XH2/XH2S reflects the sulfidation state and can be directly
related to sulfide and oxide mineral assemblages through reactions incorporating these species
rather than O2 and S2.
Volcanic fumaroles – magmatic discharges and the S-gas buffer
On exsolution from a magma, an aqueous fluid may consist of a single phase of
intermediate salinity fluid, or, if the fluid has intersected its solvus, it will comprise a low-
salinity vapor and a dense, hypersaline liquid (Henley and McNabb, 1978; Shinohara, 1994). The
vapor, being more buoyant, separates and rises to the surface from its high-pressure source,
eventually discharging as a fumarole if it is not condensed by absorption into ground water or by
cooling at low water:rock ratios. Such expansion from high to low pressure results in adiabatic
cooling, typically of the order of 100°C (Giggenbach, 1987). A plot of log (XH2/XH2O), or RH,
values (Table 3) versus measured temperatures (Fig. 3, black stars) reveals that volcanic
fumaroles plot close to the sulfur-gas buffer, approximately one unit RH above arc magmas and
plutons at ~500 to >1000°C. The volcanic fumarole data, plotted at measured surface
temperatures, could be corrected to their original higher temperatures, where they would lie on
sulfur-gas buffer curves at higher pressures and overlap more closely the field of arc magmas.
The close relationship between XH2/XH2O ratios in volcanic fumaroles and the sulfur-gas
buffer (Fig. 3) extends to temperatures below 500 °C, an observation indicating that the SO2 and
H2S concentrations control the oxidation state of the vapors as they cool (Ohmoto and Rye,
1979; Burnham and Ohmoto, 1980; Giggenbach, 1987). Magmatic vapors do not plot at more
oxidized values than the sulfur-gas buffer, suggesting that this is a significant limiting condition,
at least at high temperatures. The resulting RS values decline from 1.0 to –1.5 over the sampled
temperature range of 1000 to 400°C, consistent with very low to low sulfidation states within the
pyrrhotite stability field, as defined in the previous section.
Magmatic-hydrothermal and geothermal systems - departure from S-gas buffer
We consider two end-member environments of intrusion-driven, active hydrothermal
systems below 500°C: magmatic hydrothermal and geothermal (Table 3). Surficial vapors
discharged from boiling magmatic-hydrothermal systems range up to 400°C, whereas
geothermal fluids at surface are largely <170°C. Magmatic-hydrothermal systems consist of
highly reactive liquids whereas geothermal systems are near neutral pH (Giggenbach, 1984,
1997). The difference in reactivity between the two systems is related to the contribution of
condensed magmatic volatiles (SO2, HCl, HF) on one hand, and the degree of wall-rock
interaction on the other (Giggenbach, 1992; Hedenquist, 1995). Despite these end-member
groupings, there is a spectrum of physical and chemical characteristics that span the range from
volcanic fumaroles to vapors discharged from magmatic-hydrothermal systems and in some
magmatic arcs there may be a genetic relationship between the magmatic-hydrothermal
environment and the near-neutral fluids that develop within the shallow portion of geothermal
systems (e.g., a vapor-cored geothermal system; Reyes et al., 1993). Such a genetic affiliation
may also apply to the ancient analogues of these end members, the high-sulfidation and
intermediate-sulfidation epithermal deposits (see below).
Magmatic-hydrothermal fluids are associated with many active volcanoes and discharge
vapors at temperatures from 400 to 80°C (Table 3) near summit craters, adjacent to high-
temperature volcanic fumaroles, or on the flank of the volcano. Chemical and isotopic evidence
indicate that such fluids originate from condensation of magmatic vapors into meteoric water
11

(Giggenbach, 1987; Giggenbach et al., 1990; Taran et al., 1992, 1998; Hedenquist et al., 1994b).
This process leads to the generation of a reactive liquid that, if sufficiently heated by magmatic
vapor, will begin to boil at shallow depth, generating the vapors that were sampled (Table 3). In
addition to vapor discharges, magmatic-hydrothermal liquids may reach the surface as hot
springs with a pH as low as 1.0 (Hedenquist, 1995). The compositions of some magmatic-
hydrothermal vapors lie close to the sulfur-gas buffer at temperatures >300°C, but most
compositions are more reduced, although the rock buffer is approached only at temperatures near
100ºC (Fig. 3, gray stars). The sulfidation state of these magmatic-hydrothermal systems (Fig. 4
and 5) shows an overall trend from intermediate at 400ºC to high at 150ºC, but in detail a wide
range is observed, from low to high, even very high. This may be intuitively predicted for such
reactive fluids because of the likelihood of large variations of water:rock ratio, in some cases on
a very local scale. Giggenbach (1992, p. 1936) likens such transient behavior to the movement of
a tennis ball between the two players, or major buffers, with the fluid ball getting caught
occasionally by the intervening network of mineral buffers.
What happens to the SO2 and H2S as the magmatic vapors cool and condense? In some
cases we see that SO2 remains in solution as H2SO3 at temperatures <130°C (Southern Bottom
field at Mutnovsky, Kamchatka, Table 3). Although thermodynamic calculations are hindered by
the nature of the acidic brine at Mutnovsky, Taran et al. (1992) argue that the measurements
indicate SO2 and H2S remain in equilibrium in solution at temperatures as low as 200°C. The
sulfur-gas buffer for aqueous solution is similar to that of vapor, but is shifted due to differences
in liquid-vapor distribution coefficients of the two gas species. The dominant process on cooling
to temperatures below 350 to 300°C is disproportionation of SO2 according to the reaction
4 SO2(g) + 4 H2O = 4 H2SO3(aq) = H2S(aq) + 3 H2SO4(aq) (8)
followed by dissociation of H2SO4 which yields H+ ion and ionized aqueous-sulfate species that
depend on pH (Fig. 3). Thus, at pH 3 appropriate for reactive magmatic-hydrothermal fluids, the
relevant reaction is
4 H2SO3(aq) = H2S(aq) + 3 H2SO4(aq) = H2S(aq) + 3 H+ + 3HSO4- , (9)
and at pH 6 appropriate for neutral-pH geothermal fluids the reaction is
4 H2SO3(aq) = H2S(aq) + 3 H2SO4(aq) = H2S(aq) + 6 H+ + 3SO4=. (10)
Dissociation of H2SO4 allows the buffering capacity of oxidized sulfur species to be consumed
by interaction with wall rock, leading to the departure of fluid compositions from the sulfur-gas
buffer at these lower temperatures. All of the data for the magmatic hydrothermal systems
compiled here plot in the H2S(aq)-predominance field at a pH of 3 (Fig. 3).
Geothermal liquids, in contrast to reactive magmatic-hydrothermal fluids, are closer to
equilibrium with their host rock (e.g., Giggenbach, 1981, 1984). These near-neutral pH fluids are
relatively reduced (Fig. 3, white stars) and their sulfidation state is typically low to intermediate,
near RS = 0 (Figs. 4 and 5) throughout the temperature range 300-100°C. All of the data for the
neutral-pH systems plot well into the H2S(aq)-predominance field at a pH of 6 (Fig. 3). The lower
(reduced) limit of geothermal compositions has an RH value of about –3, equivalent to
Giggenbach's (1987) rock buffer, which appears to establish a redox “floor”, just as the sulfur-
gas buffer acts as a redox “ceiling”.
These apparent limiting buffer reactions lead to several questions that are relevant to
understanding the evolution of ore fluids. If a fluid originates from magma at high temperature in
12

a state of equilibrium with the sulfur-gas buffer, what controls its evolutionary path as it cools?
What is the relative importance of fluid buffers versus mineral and rock buffers, and what is the
relative effect of processes such as liquid- and vapor-phase separation? Under what situations is
one control more influential than another, and can the relative importance of such controls
change in different positions within a hydrothermal system, and/or during its life history?
In order to consider these questions further, we first summarize the typical hydrothermal
mineral assemblages of porphyry and epithermal ore deposits (Table 41). In porphyry deposits,
hydrothermal assemblages span a wide thermal range, from near-magmatic temperatures to
<300°C, similar to the temperature range of volcanic fumaroles. In contrast, epithermal deposits
form at temperatures <300°C to as low as 100°C, similar to the lower-temperature end of
magmatic-hydrothermal and geothermal systems. We then integrate information on patterns of
mineral assemblages in ore deposits with the data from active hydrothermal systems to constrain
the space-time evolution and processes of fluid-mineral interaction in ore deposits.

Sulfide Assemblages in Porphyry and Epithermal Deposits

Porphyry copper deposits


The review that follows is limited to porphyry copper deposits associated with medium-K
and high-K calc-alkaline magmatic suites in subduction-related continental and oceanic arc
environments. We have not included the so-called reduced porphyry Cu-Au deposits of Rowins
(2000) because most lack the key features of porphyry-type deposits and many can be classed
with gold deposits related to reduced granites (e.g., Thompson and Newberry, 2000). We make
brief reference in the next section to porphyry and epithermal ores related to other magmatic
suites to point out contrasts with those discussed here.
Data on mineral assemblages and associations, compiled from 30 calc-alkaline porphyry
copper deposits, are generalized in Table 4. Note that this table does not achieve the ideals set
out above for time-space definition of assemblages. Rather, it lists assemblages as a function of
distance from the center of the deposits and generalizes that distal assemblages tend to migrate
inward with time and overprint proximal assemblages. Informal "types" (Table 4), likely
representing a continuum, have been identified on the basis of the opaque mineral assemblage
that dominates the ore zone. Use of assemblages representing the bulk of the ore-grade portions
of the deposits focuses the discussion on the dominant ore-depositional environment, but
questions remain regarding the possibility that in some deposits erosion has removed high-grade
ores of different character. In this context, depth of drilling is unlikely to be an issue, because the
majority of these deposits are relatively well-explored by deep drilling.
In Type-1 porphyries most of the high-grade copper ore consists of the assemblage
magnetite + bornite + digenite with biotite ± K feldspar (e.g., Batu Hijau, Indonesia; Yerington
Mine, Nevada). At the other end of the spectrum, in Type-4 porphyries most of the high-grade
ore consists of the assemblage chalcopyrite + pyrite with either biotite + K feldspar or sericite ±
chlorite (e.g., Sungun, Iran; Sierrita-Esperanza, Arizona). The majority of the 30 deposits
summarized contain magnetite, either as an early phase with or without minor bornite and/or
chalcopyrite (19 deposits) or as part of pyrite-absent assemblages containing digenite, bornite,

1
We have not included references in the text for those deposits listed in Table 4 unless we use additional sources for
a key observation; sources for deposits not listed in Table 4 are referenced in the text.
13

and/or chalcopyrite that constitute ore grade (9 deposits). In 19 of the deposits the highest
hypogene grades occur in rocks containing the assemblages bornite + magnetite, chalcopyrite +
magnetite, or bornite + chalcopyrite, all without pyrite. These deposits are represented by Meyer
and Hemley's (1967) "assemblage IV" (Fig. 6). Finally, 12 of the deposits (approximately 30%)
contain veins with high and very-high sulfidation state assemblages, and in a small number of
these deposits, the high-sulfidation veins represent a significant if not dominant part of the ore
(e.g., Collahuasi and Chuquicamata, Chile; Butte, Montana).
In order to plot an average evolutionary path that integrates all packets of fluid for
porphyry-copper deposits on diagrams such as Figure 1 we need constraints on temperature as
well as sulfidation state. The evidence comes largely from the study of fluid inclusions, but
linking a particular fluid inclusion assemblage to the ore-depositional event remains problematic.
The bulk of the evidence points to temperatures ranging from 700 to 350°C for K feldspar +
biotite assemblages and from 350 to 200°C for chlorite + sericite and quartz + sericite + pyrite
(Eastoe, 1978; Preece and Beane, 1982; Reynolds and Beane, 1985; Dilles and Einaudi, 1992;
Imai, 2001, Ulrich and Heinrich, 2001). Some recent studies (e.g., Bingham, Utah, Redmond et
al., 2001; Bajo de la Alumbrera, Argentina, Ulrich and Heinrich, 2001) show that K feldspar +
quartz + biotite ± magnetite formed at 700-400°C, but suggest that most of the chalcopyrite and
bornite began to precipitate in equilibrium with this assemblage at 400 to 350°C. Cooler fluids
were responsible for pyrite + chalcopyrite ore associated with chlorite + sericite at temperatures
of 350°C at Sierrita-Esperanza, 350-275°C at Santa Rita, New Mexico and at Far Southeast,
Philippines (Hedenquist et al., 1998), and 310-270°C for sericitic assemblages at Panguna, Papua
New Guinea. Based on the above assemblages and temperatures, the environment of porphyry
copper ores spans the range from 500°C at low sulfidation states to 270°C at intermediate
sulfidation states. The main-line environment for porphyry copper deposits does not cross the
reaction chalcopyrite + S2 = pyrite + bornite (bold arrow, Figs. 1 and 8).
Based on the data presented above, ore deposition at the relatively high temperatures of
potassic alteration in porphyry copper deposits took place over a range of sulfidation states from
low to intermediate. The ore assemblages of Type-1 and Type-4 porphyries, magnetite + bornite
and chalcopyrite + pyrite, respectively, partly overlap in sulfidation and oxidation states, but only
magnetite + bornite is stable at low sulfidation states, and chalcopyrite + pyrite is stable into the
higher range of intermediate sulfidation states (Figs. 6 and 7). Given the tendency for oxidation
and sulfidation state to increase with decreasing temperature, these differences in ore
assemblages could reflect higher temperatures of initial copper deposition in Type-1 porphyries
than in Type-4 porphyries, or sulfidation of low-grade magnetite + bornite mineralization to
chalcopyrite + pyrite ore in Type-4 porphyries. Additionally, differences in the composition of
associated igneous rocks (granodiorite-tonalite in Type-1, quartz monzonite-granite in Type-4)
could play a role, as shown to be the case by Barton et al. (1995) for porphyry copper deposits in
Mexico.
A contrast – very low sulfidation states of some ores related to alkaline magmatism
Sulfide mineral assemblages in many porphyry molybdenum and tungsten deposits
associated with highly evolved granites and alkaline magmatic suites (Carten et al., 1993; Jensen
and Barton, 2000) are of lower sulfidation state than those associated with the subalkaline
porphyry Cu-Au-Mo deposits treated here. Among the better documented molybdenum and
tungsten deposits in terms of sulfide assemblages are the Mount Pleasant porphyry W-Mo-(Sn)
and Burnthill W deposits, New Brunswick, and the Henderson porphyry Mo deposit, Colorado,
all belonging to the high-silica rhyolite-alkalic class of Carten et al. (1993).
14

At Mount Pleasant the assemblages native bismuth + arsenopyrite ± bismuthinite and


loellingite + arsenopyrite (Kooiman et al., 1986) formed at temperatures above 400ºC (Samson,
1990). Lower temperature polymetallic veins at Mount Pleasant contain tin-bearing sulfides,
sphalerite, galena, and chalcopyrite, lesser arsenopyrite and loellingite, and minor bornite,
tennantite, and pyrite (Kooiman et al., 1986). Note that the assemblage bornite + pyrite is not
implied. Burnthill contains native bismuth, loellingite, and pyrrhotite (MacLelland and Taylor,
1989). These New Brunswick deposits, therefore, show a cooling trend from very low sulfidation
states, whose upper limit is defined by the reaction loellingite + pyrrhotite + S2 = arsenopyrite,
through low sulfidation states (defined by pyrrhotite + native bismuth), to intermediate
sulfidation states at lower temperatures implied by pyrite, tennantite, and chalcopyrite (Fig. 8,
arrow labeled "Mt Pleasant").
At Henderson, pyrrhotite, indicative of low sulfidation states, is a minor mineral on the
flanks of the Seriate intrusion (Seedorff, 1988), where it formed around 350-400ºC (Fig. 8; arrow
labeled "H") and was overprinted by pyrite at 300-350ºC (E. Seedorff, unpublished data, 1987).
More widespread and characteristic of Henderson is magnetite ± pyrite, possibly overlapping the
porphyry copper deposits in terms of sulfidation state. Thus, Henderson lies at sulfidation states
that are intermediate between the relatively lower sulfidation states of the New Brunswick
tungsten deposits and the relatively higher sulfidation states of calc-alkalic porphyry-copper
deposits. Parallel contrasts are evident in comparing epithermal deposits associated with alkalic
igneous rocks with those associated with calc-alkalic igneous rocks. Although alkaline magmas
and their hydrothermal fluids are relatively oxidized, sulfide assemblages in related epithermal
ores are mostly of intermediate to low sulfidation state (Richards, 1995; Jensen and Barton,
2000; Sillitoe and Hedenquist, this volume).

Porphyry-copper related base-metal vein deposits


Associated with some calc-alkaline porphyry-copper plutons are base-metal deposits in
which copper ores of very high- and high sulfidation state occur in veins, massive replacements,
and sulfide-cemented breccia bodies. Zoning is generally well-developed, from central enargite-
bearing copper ores associated with advanced argillic and/or sericitic alteration to outer
tennantite-bearing (Cu)-Pb-Zn ores associated with intermediate argillic alteration (Petersen,
1965; Meyer and Hemley, 1967; Einaudi, 1982; Bartos, 1989; Hemley and Hunt, 1992). Many
are superimposed on coeval porphyry-copper deposits and constitute the majority of copper ore
(e.g., Main Stage veins at Butte; Rosario and La Grande veins at Collahuasi, Chile; Main Stage
veins at Chuquicamata, Chile; see Table 4). Similar copper veins may be spatially separated from
their porphyry roots, such as the Magma vein (Hammer and Petersen, 1968) located 2 km north
of the recently discovered Magma porphyry copper deposit, Arizona (Manske and Paul, 2002),
or may have no known link to mineralized porphyries, such as the copper veins in the volcanic
diatreme at Cerro de Pasco, Peru (Graton and Bowditch, 1936; Petersen, 1965; Einaudi, 1977).
Sharing many of the features of porphyry-related base-metal veins are the HS epithermal Au-
(Cu) deposits with enargite ore in vuggy quartz associated with advanced-argillic alteration (see
below).
A common feature of porphyry-related veins is an early stage of sulfidation and
silicification of wall rocks accompanied by abundant pyrite as vein fill. This early pyrite-quartz
stage is followed by the deposition of Cu-Fe-As-sulfides within veins (e.g., Butte and many
others) or in pyrite-matrix intrusive breccias (e.g., Bisbee, Arizona; Bryant, 1968), with or
without additional pyrite. With time at a given point, the ore sulfides become increasingly
15

copper-rich, in the sequence chalcopyrite, bornite, digenite, and the transition in time and space
from tennantite to enargite occurs at or near the transition from pyrite + chalcopyrite to pyrite +
bornite (e.g., Butte; El Salvador, Chile; Magma vein, Table 4). This latter feature is so common
as to constitute evidence that the thermodynamic approximation for reaction 4, tennantite + S2 =
enargite (Craig and Barton, 1973), is one or two log units too low in f S2, or that the presence of
Sb, Fe, and Zn in natural ores stabilizes tennantite relative to enargite. Therefore, we empirically
adjusted reaction 4 upward on all figures.
Butte, Montana (Table 4), remains the touchstone against which all porphyry-related
veins are compared, in part because this deposit is the giant of its class, but more importantly
because of the detailed descriptions of the rocks and ores and the insightful interpretations by
Reno Sales and Chuck Meyer. The assemblage pyrite + digenite + covellite is present only in a
restricted area of the Central zone that is generally characterized by pyrite, chalcocite, and
enargite, with chalcocite the most abundant copper mineral. The Central zone is surrounded by a
Transition zone containing pyrite, bornite, chalcopyrite, and tennantite with residual sphalerite,
and a Peripheral zone containing Zn, Pb, and Ag sulfides and Mn carbonate. The broad patterns
of relative age of sulfides indicate that inner zones encroached on outer zones, as first suggested
on the basis of alteration (Sales and Meyer, 1949). For example, residual sphalerite is common in
tennantite + chalcopyrite ores of the Transition zone but is mostly replaced in the Central zone.
However, there are late reversals of the overall temporal sequence, interpreted by Sales and
Meyer (1949) to have taken place on cooling, such as bornite replacing chalcocite and tennantite
replacing enargite throughout the Intermediate zone (Meyer et al. 1968), a paragenetic sequence
noted in many similar deposits by McKinstry (1963).
Many porphyry-related veins exhibit patterns similar to those at Butte. The Main stage
veins at Chuquicamata and the Rosario vein, Collahuasi district, Chile are superimposed on
porphyry-style assemblages of intermediate sulfidation state (Table 4). Enargite appears to join
the Cu-Fe-sulfides late, and at Chuquicamata sphalerite occupies a high and/or fringe position
relative to enargite, analogous to Butte, El Salvador, and Magma. The youngest veins at
Chuquicamata and Rosario consist of the very-high sulfidation state assemblage covellite +
digenite ± pyrite. Thus, these deposits display the same increasing sulfidation state with time
seen at Butte, although zoning relations are less clear at Chuquicamata. A late reversal to lower
sulfidation state is recognized at Rosario, where late chalcopyrite replaced chalcocite and
digenite, and tennantite replaced enargite (Dick et al., 1994).
Chalcocite appears in some deposits as an important ore mineral in areas where wall
rocks were converted to quartz ± pyrophyllite ± dickite, as in the Central zone at Butte and in
high-level veins of the Magma porphyry deposit (Manske and Paul, 2002). Chalcocite represents
a significant departure from the typically very high- and high-sulfidation states of such areas,
being stable only at the transition from intermediate to low sulfidation states at temperatures near
300°C (Figs. 4 and 8). Wide fluctuations in sulfidation states are indicated, and this "anomalous"
chalcocite may represent a stage of ore deposition where much of the sulfur and H+ ion had been
consumed and the fluid had returned to its wall-rock buffer due to reaction at depth.
Epithermal gold-silver deposits
Epithermal precious-metal deposits have long been distinguished into two end-members
(Table 1), with a distinct difference noted in the associated alteration halo. In high-sulfidation
(HS) deposits, the host rock is a leached residue of quartz, commonly vuggy in texture, with a
halo of quartz + alunite ± pyrophyllite ± dickite, indicating relatively low pH fluids. In "low-
16

sulfidation" ("LS") deposits, halos of illite (or chlorite) ± adularia grade out to propylitic
alteration, indicating that the pH of the fluid was near neutral. Revision of this classification of
epithermal deposits into high-sulfidation, intermediate-sulfidation (IS, formerly "LS") and low-
sulfidation (LS) deposits (Table 4) has been suggested recently on the basis of further
examination of sulfide assemblages and magmatic-tectonic affiliations (John et al., 1999;
Hedenquist et al., 2000; John, 2001; Sillitoe and Hedenquist, this volume). Here we summarize
the space-time distribution of sulfide assemblages in these deposits, focusing on variability in
sulfidation states within single deposits, among deposits of the same class, and between classes.
In epithermal deposits many of the sulfidation reactions already referred to apply, but the
common occurrence of sphalerite in these deposits provides an additional useful measure of
sulfidation state. The mole percent FeS in sphalerite coexisting with pyrite or pyrrhotite is
continuously variable as a function of sulfidation state (Scott and Barnes, 1971; Czamanske,
1974): 40 to 20 mole percent FeS at low sulfidation states, 20 to 1 at intermediate sulfidation
states, 1.0 to 0.05 at high, and <0.05 at very high (Fig. 5). Unfortunately, there are few studies
that document sphalerite compositions in any detail and address the question of equilibrium with
iron sulfides.
Residual, vuggy quartz, a common but not determining characteristic of HS epithermal
deposits, typically contains disseminated pyrite and SiO2 concentrations >95 wt percent. It forms
bodies that flare out upwards and/or preferentially replace a lithologic unit. In many cases,
residual quartz lacks base and precious metals and constitutes a barren lithocap of advanced
argillic alteration (Sillitoe, 1995). In some cases, barren bodies of advanced argillic alteration
overlie porphyry copper deposits, as in the Yerington district, Nevada (Lipske and Dilles, 2000)
and El Salvador (Gustafson and Hunt, 1975; Watanabe and Hedenquist, 2001). In other cases,
after the leaching stage, copper and gold were introduced to form epithermal Au-(Cu) deposits
with abundant sulfides (e.g., Summitville, Colorado, and many others).
There are two typical sequences of mineral deposition in HS epithermal deposits. In one,
pyrite + enargite ± luzonite ± famatinite is early, followed by chalcopyrite + pyrite ± tennantite ±
sphalerite ± galena. Also post-dating the enargite assemblage is the gold stage, consisting of
electrum and gold tellurides, as at Lepanto (Claveria, 2001) as well as Goldfield, Nevada; El
Indio, Chile; and Kochbulak, Uzbekistan (Kovalenker et al., 1997). However, at Goldfield
electrum appears to predate tennantite, whereas at Lepanto and El Indio electrum post-dates
tennantite. In silver-rich deposits of this type, Ag sulfosalts are typically associated with the
tennantite ± tetrahedrite zone. At Julcani, Perú, this zone is distal from the central pyrite +
enargite assemblage (Deen et al., 1994). In the second sequence, as exemplified by Summitville
and La Mexicana, Argentina, there is a transition toward the surface from pyrite + tennantite +
chalcopyrite + sphalerite to pyrite + enargite ± luzonite ± sphalerite ± chalcopyrite. At Lahóca,
Hungary, tennantite is replaced by enargite, and gold is associated with pyrite relatively late in
the sequence, with or after enargite. In both sequences, barite is typically very late and shallow,
and can be associated with gold, as at Tambo, Chile (Jannas et al., 1999). Hypogene covellite is
rare in these deposits and where it occurs it commonly is the latest sulfide in vugs prior to filling
by native sulfur, as at Nansatsu, Japan (Hedenquist et al., 1994a). Thus, covellite in HS
epithermal deposits occupies the same temporal position as it does in many porphyry-related
base-metal vein deposits. There is a wide range of FeS content in sphalerite in HS epithermal
deposits (e.g., 0.02 to 7 mole percent at La Mexicana) suggesting a wide range of sulfidation
states from intermediate to very high (Fig. 5).
17

Based on the above summary, the sulfidation state in HS epithermal deposits ranged from
high for the enargite assemblage to intermediate for the tennantite-tetrahedrite + pyrite ±
chalcopyrite assemblage (Fig. 4). At Goldfield, Lepanto and Julcani, high sulfidation states
evolved to intermediate sulfidation states with time and/or distance from source. At Summitville,
La Mexicana, and Lahóca, the opposite was the case: intermediate sulfidation states evolved to
high sulfidation states at more shallow depths or with time. In some deposits, very high
sulfidation states were achieved at very shallow levels, but the timing relative to other
assemblages is not clear.
IS epithermal deposits that are also sulfide-rich share many of the sulfide assemblages of
HS deposits, except that the enargite-bearing assemblage is lacking (Table 4) and the Ag:Au
ratios are higher, at least 10:1, and typically >100:1. The total sulfide content can be highly
variable, from 1 to > 10 percent (Albinson et al., 2001). These features are characteristic of the
base-metal + silver veins of Mexico (Pachuca, Fresnillo), USA (Comstock Lode, Nevada;
Creede, Colorado), Perú, Romania and elsewhere. The veins have a halo of illite ± adularia
which grades downward to sericitic and outward to propylitic assemblages. The major sulfide
assemblage can be relatively simple, including combinations of sphalerite, galena, pyrite,
chalcopyrite, and tetrahedrite. Silver is present as Ag sulfosalts, and in some cases a large variety
of these minerals occur in trace quantities, either relatively late in the sequence (Pachuca) or
down the flow path (Creede). Sphalerite compositions range from <1 to 10 mole percent FeS,
locally up to 20 mole percent FeS (e.g., Creede; Barton et al., 1977), covering the full range of
intermediate sulfidation states (Fig. 5) but consistent with the assemblage pyrite + chalcopyrite +
tetrahedrite/tennantite (Fig. 4). Such fluctuations in the FeS content of sphalerite may be caused
by intermittent events such as boiling, local wall rock interaction, or by pulses of reduced fluids
of magmatic or sedimentary origin (Barton et al., 1977; Bethke and Rye, 1979).
A third class of epithermal deposit, the low sulfidation (LS) deposits, are found in
association with both subalkalic (including bi-modal thoeleiitic + calc-alkalic) and alkalic
igneous rocks. Here we focus on deposits related to subalkaline magmatic provinces (Table 4)
rather than alkaline (Jensen and Barton, 2000; Sillitoe and Hedenquist, this volume). Subalkalic
LS epithermal deposits are sulfide-poor, dominated by gold typically of bonanza grades, and can
be distinguished from HS and IS deposits on the basis of the ore-mineral assemblage (John et al.,
1999; Hedenquist et al., 2000; John, 2001). Alteration halos are narrow and consist of illite or
chlorite, with chlorite dominant in more mafic host rocks. These deposits appear to form at
relatively low temperature (< 220°C) and at shallow depths (< 250 m), in places immediately
beneath hot spring sinters, as at McLaughlin, California (Sherlock et al., 1995). The very low
sulfide content, <1 volume percent, is dominated by pyrite (in some cases with arsenian rims),
although marcasite also is common as a result of low temperatures. Gold as electrum, in places
dendritic (Saunders, 1994), is closely associated with naumannite (Ag2Se) (e.g., ginguro or black
ore at Hishikari and other bonanza deposits in Japan) or pyrite (Sleeper and Midas, Nevada) and
is typically present in bands of botryoidal quartz or chalcedony. Other sulfides are present only
in trace amounts, and include sphalerite, chalcopyrite, galena, Ag sulfosalts, and minor
occurrences of arsenopyrite and rare pyrrhotite as at Esquel, Argentina; Mule Canyon, Nevada;
Rio Blanco, Ecuador; and El Limon, Nicaragua (Sillitoe, 2002; John et al., 1999; J. Sutcliffe,
pers. commun., 2002; M. Gareau, pers. commun., 2002). Within the gold ore-zone the total base-
metal content is typically less than a few 100s ppm. Analyses of sphalerite from two Nevada
deposits indicate a range from 1 to 15 mole percent FeS (John, 2001). Mercury, As and Sb can
be highly anomalous due to the low temperature and shallow depth of formation, and orpiment,
18

realgar and stibnite are common minerals, typically late. At 200°C, orpiment is stable at high
sulfidation states and realgar at intermediate sulfidation states (Fig. 4), higher by several log
units f S2 than the low sulfidation states implied by arsenopyrite and pyrrhotite.

Discussion and Conclusions


Sulfidation state, referenced to stability fields of sulfide mineral assemblages as a
function of log fS2 and temperature, has been used to define Main Line ore-forming
environments and to identify evolutionary trends in individual deposits, supported by the many
examples cited here. However, this indicator, with rare exceptions (e.g., Barton et al., 1995), has
seen little use in comparisons between or within deposit types. Here we suggest that sulfidation
state (and its companion, oxidation state), in combination with RS and RH, can offer significant
insight into the commonality of fluid evolution between active and extinct hydrothermal systems,
as well as underscore distinctions and similarities between different classes of intrusion-centered
deposits.
Looping path of porphyry-copper and related base-metal vein deposits
At the deeper and hotter levels of the porphyry environment, mineral assemblages are
consistent with the fluid closely following the sulfur-gas buffer during cooling to temperatures of
500 to 400 °C, with this gas-buffered path causing pronounced increases in sulfidation and
oxidation states. The high-temperature volcanic fumaroles, our proxies for the higher-
temperature portion of the porphyry environment, plot largely in the bornite + magnetite and
chalcopyrite + magnetite fields (Fig. 7), consistent with the view that assemblages in porphyry
copper deposits are derived through exsolution and cooling of magmatic volatiles. The general
environment for porphyry copper deposits (gray arrow, Fig. 8) is variably modified by
excursions that result from such opposite extremes as mixing with magmatic SO2-bearing gases
in major fissures (white arrow "O", Fig. 8) or approaching the rock buffer in distal fractures
(white arrow "N", Fig. 8).
Sulfide assemblages in central portions of porphyry-related vein deposits represent the
peak in the trend toward increasing sulfidation state that we see in the porphyries. Mineral
reaction curves sweep to higher X H2 / X H2S (RS) values with declining temperature as the fluid
path sweeps to lower RS (Figs. 5 and 8), resulting in marked zonal and/or temporal changes in
Cu-Fe-As-S mineral assemblages that commonly are difficult to interpret. Hydrothermal fluids in
these deposits achieve their lowest value of RS = -3 (highest sulfidation state, approximately
equal to digenite +S2 = covellite) at temperatures near 300°C (arrow labeled "T" on Fig. 8). This
peak of reactivity results from cooling-induced generation of H+ (reactions 9 or 10) outrunning
the consumption of H+ through hydrolysis reactions with fresh wall-rocks (Meyer and Hemley,
1967). Reactivity is enhanced by boiling (Reed, 1997) and/or by addition of new SO2 from a
degassing magma chamber at depth (Brimhall, 1979, 1980; arrow labeled "SO2 flux", Fig. 8).
The path will be accentuated further if fluids are isolated from their rock buffer, a more likely
case in vein deposits than in fracture-controlled porphyry-type deposits. Thus, Sales and Meyer
(1949) concluded that high sulfidation states were achieved in the Central Zone at Butte because
fluids were restricted to fissures with sericite-pyrite walls. The same conclusion can be applied to
the early pyrite + enargite assemblage typical of residual quartz in HS epithermal deposits. In the
absence of wall rocks leached during earlier hydrothermal activity, acidic ore fluids
characteristic of very high sulfidation states are unlikely to develop.
19

From this peak in reactivity, the sulfidation state eventually declines as equilibrium with
fresh wall rock is achieved and as sulfur is lost from solution. The "isothermal looping path"
shown in Figure 6 "can therefore also be construed as the trace of a more gently curved path of
decreasing hydrothermal temperature" (Meyer and Hemley, 1967, p. 232), the Lazy-L pattern
shown in Figures 1, 2, and 8.
Looping path of active magmatic hydrothermal systems
The composite pattern of all volcanic fumaroles and active magmatic-hydrothermal
samples (Figs. 3, 4, and 5) mimics the looping path defined by porphyry-copper related ores,
although it is shifted to lower temperatures. In the active systems the trend toward higher
sulfidation and oxidation states on cooling is reversed at around 100-130ºC. The clearest
example of this reversal in RH and RS comes from White Island (Figs. 4 and 5), where five
samples were collected from 760 to 100°C fumaroles on a north-south traverse on the same day
in February, 1984 (Giggenbach, 1987). The 100°C sample has the lowest RSH (X SO2 / X H2S)
value (Table 3), indicating that SO2 has to a large extent been reduced to H2S through wall-rock
interaction, causing an increase in RH relative to other low-temperature samples. A similar
pattern is suggested by the data from Vulcano (Fig. 5), although samples at temperatures
between 300 and 100 °C are absent. The minimum RH and RS values for active fluids are near
115ºC whereas in porphyry-copper related deposits these minima are near 300ºC. This difference
is an artifact of surface sampling because a vapor separated from a 250-300ºC liquid at depth
will reach the surface at a maximum temperature of 171ºC, a function of the enthalpy of the
liquid (White et al., 1971). Most of the vapors generated from such fluids cool even more and
reach the surface at <130ºC. Therefore, a fundamental difference in actual reversal temperatures
between modern and ancient systems is unlikely.
HS deposits – variations on the theme of porphyry-related base-metal veins
HS epithermal Au-(Cu) deposits with enargite in residual quartz (e.g., Lepanto, La
Mexicana, Lahóca; Table 4) have many similarities to porphyry-related base-metal deposits.
These similarities extend beyond their common association with porphyry copper deposits, and
include structural style, ore textures, wall-rock alteration, and sulfidation states reflected in their
mineral assemblages. Many HS deposits hosted by residual quartz show a shift to lower
sulfidation states with time (Fig. 8), with enargite replaced by tennantite at the time of gold
deposition. In common with porphyry-related base-metal veins, this decline in sulfidation state is
likely because the enargite stage is far from equilibrium with wall rock outside the silicic host,
and the natural long-term tendency is for hydrothermal fluids to become reduced.
Differences between these two classes of deposits also are evident. Porphyry-related
base-metal veins typically are well zoned, whereas HS deposits are highly telescoped, suggesting
that the latter deposits formed at shallower depths in environments with steep thermal gradients.
Base-metal veins have a more complex mineralogy and metal suite that includes copper, zinc,
lead, and silver, and they tend to be associated with molybdenum-bearing, gold-poor porphyries.
In contrast, many HS epithermal Au-(Cu) deposits are associated with gold-rich porphyry copper
districts with minor molybdenum and other metals (cf., Barton et al., 1995).
HS epithermal deposits – affiliation with IS deposits
The gold-bearing sulfide assemblages of the HS epithermal deposits are similar to those
of IS deposits. IS veins are common on the margins of HS deposits (Sillitoe, 1999; Sillitoe and
Hedenquist, this volume); at Lepanto and Victoria, Philippines, these two styles of deposit are
20

closely related in both time and space (Claveria, 2001), although Victoria may be about 0.2 m.y.
younger. Indeed there may be some affiliation between HS and IS epithermal deposits, as
suggested by Reed (1997) on theoretical grounds, with differences in metal proportions (Cu-Au
versus Pb-Zn-Ag-Au, respectively) likely resulting from progressive, wall-rock induced
reduction and neutralization of reactive fluids, a process that affects concentrations of HCl, SO2
and H2S and consequently constrains metal concentrations in the fluid. A transition from HS to
IS epithermal deposits would be analogous to the transition commonly seen in porphyry copper
districts from proximal copper-dominated ores to distal lead-zinc-silver ores (Table 4).
Arc magmas and battle of the buffers
As noted earlier, the oxidation state of hydrothermal fluids from active systems
associated with andesitic arc magmas plot within the envelope established by the sulfur-gas
buffer and the rock buffer (Fig. 3). These two buffers overlap at magmatic temperatures, as gas
species appear to be in equilibrium with andesitic magma, but they diverge to 3 units of RH
difference at 300 °C. Thus, a condensed magmatic fluid will become progressively more reactive
relative to typical fresh host-rocks as the temperature decreases.
In contrast to volcanic fumarole compositions, where redox states are controlled by the
sulfur-gas buffer, most vapor compositions related to lower temperature acidic magmatic-
hydrothermal and near-neutral pH geothermal systems plot below the respective H2S(aq) = HSO4-
(pH 3) and H2S(aq) = SO4= (pH 6) predominance boundaries (Giggenbach, 1997) within the H2S(aq)
field (Fig. 3), suggesting an absence of buffering by aqueous-sulfur redox equilibria at
epithermal temperatures as concluded by Barton et al. (1977) for Creede. It is clear from Figure 3
that individual mineral buffers also do not match the fluid patterns.
Examination of fluid compositions in active systems on RH and RS diagrams (Figs. 3 and
5) highlights several features relevant to the above summary. High-temperature volcanic vapors
have a linear trend that reflects the correlation between RH (X SO2 / X H2O) and RSH (X SO2 / X
H2S). Measured values of X SO2 / X H2S of about 1 to 10, (or RSH of 0 to 1; Table 3) agree with
the ratio predicted from X SO2 / X H2O. From their high-temperature magmatic origins, the
cooling path of sampled magmatic-hydrothermal fluids from numerous individual localities
(Table 3; tie-lines on Figs. 3 and 5) evolve to lower RH and RS values (higher oxidation and
sulfidation states). This evolutionary trend may be a consequence of SO2 and H2S gases
dominating other redox gases (e.g., CH4 or H2; Table 3). Where SO2 ≈ H2S, the
disproportionation reaction (equations 8, 9 and 10) will lead to fluids having relatively high
oxidation and sulfidation states. Boiling may be important in some cases because it will result in
progressive oxidation of the residual liquid due to loss of H2 to the vapor phase. If the boiling
liquid is H2S-dominant, then the sulfidation state also will increase with a slope parallel to the
boiling trend shown in Figure 5 (Appendix). Divergence from the gas buffer begins at 400ºC,
where SO2 declines significantly, and below 300ºC SO2 gas joins S2 gas as a negligible species
for all reasonable hydrothermal environments. At these lower temperatures, H2 and H2S remain
the dominant gases, and near the rock buffer H2 = H2S (RS = 0), typical of geothermal fluids
(Table 3) and LS epithermal gold deposits.
Reduced geothermal systems and subalkalic LS epithermal deposits
In contrast with the acidic fluids of magmatic-hydrothermal systems, the near-neutral pH
fluids from geothermal systems have generally lower sulfidation and oxidation states at 300-
200°C, but overlap with the magmatic-hydrothermal fluids at 100°C near the rock buffer. As
21

suggested by the RH and RS diagrams (Figs. 4 and 5), the 300-200°C geothermal samples are all
stable with respect to pyrite + magnetite, but lie close to the pyrrhotite field, consistent with the
mineral assemblages in subalkalic LS epithermal deposits. Perhaps these LS deposits reflect a
greater degree of water:rock interaction, or form from fluids with a smaller magmatic
component. Alternatively, for some LS deposits hydrothermal fluids may be related to reduced
tholeiitic magmas in rift settings (John, 2001) (Figs. 2B and 3). In reduced hydrothermal
systems, simple cooling, even accentuated by boiling, is unlikely to result in any appreciable
increase in sulfidation state. We interpret the geothermal fluids compiled in this paper to be
analogs both for IS epithermal deposits and for subalkalic LS epithermal Au deposits of
extensional arcs (e.g., Bodie, California; Hishikari, Japan: see Sillitoe and Hedenquist, this
volume).
Concluding remarks
Variability of sulfidation and oxidation states of ore assemblages is a ubiquitous feature
in the ore deposits considered here. This variability is a complex function of thermally
prograding and retrograding hydrothermal episodes, and of intermittent events such as boiling,
local wall rock interaction, or input of new hydrothermal fluids of magmatic or non-magmatic
origin, all taking place as hydrothermal conduits shift location. On considering the complexities
of sulfide assemblages at Butte, Sales and Meyer (1949) concluded that "the fact that a
recognizably systematic district-wise pattern of mineralization and alteration has emerged is
more surprising than the fact that there are frequent local divergences from that pattern" (p. 467).
They conclude that microtextures between minerals are commonly ambiguous, and can only be
interpreted within the context of the deposit-scale mineral-distribution patterns.
Considering individual epithermal deposits, local divergence of sulfidation state from the
norm can lead to apparent inconsistencies with the overall classification into HS, IS and LS
types. Although there may be problems with the classification scheme, as there are with many
others, we stress that the classification terms highlight only one aspect (the sulfide mineral
assemblage) of the combination of features, including magmatic, tectonic, hydrothermal, and
geochemical, that should be used in classifying. Importantly, though, variability of sulfidation
state within deposits blurs distinctions, suggests continua between deposit types, and indicates
that common processes are active in different deposit types.
Regarding continua in terms of evolutionary paths, the sulfidation and redox
environments of deposits discussed in this paper show a bimodal spectrum consisting of, on the
one hand, oxidized porphyry copper and related base-metal veins and HS epithermal deposits,
possibly including an affiliation with IS epithermal deposits down the flow path, and, on the
other hand, relatively reduced LS epithermal gold deposits. A bimodal spectrum is also seen in
active hydrothermal systems, with the first represented by fumaroles and magmatic-
hydrothermal fluids associated with andesitic arc magmas, and the second represented by the
neutral-pH geothermal systems.
The tendency for oxidized magmas to be associated with high-sulfidation deposits and for
reduced magmas to be associated with low-sulfidation deposits is seen in the contrast between
andesitic arc-related IS deposits and bimodal rift-related LS deposits in the western U. S. (John,
2001). However, there are many exceptions, including the relatively oxidized alkaline igneous
rocks associated with deposits characterized by low to intermediate sulfidation states (Richards,
1995; Jensen and Barton, 2000). Differences among intrusion-related deposits is in part a
consequence of the degassing of magmas that have different initial redox-volatile compositions,
22

but changes in these initial compositions due to loss of sulfur to the near-surface environment,
seawater influx, or effects of local wall rocks are likely to blur the distinctions in many cases.
Samples from different portions of an active hydrothermal system provide information on
the spatial evolution of fluids and the processes that influence fluid composition. The data on
measured fluid compositions represent a single time frame in the life history of a given system,
ranging from a single day of sampling (e.g., White Island, New Zealand; Giggenbach, 1987) to at
most a half century of monitoring. By contrast, information from ore deposits provides an
indication of the temporal and spatial evolution of hydrothermal systems that encompass a
lifetime of several 10 thousand to a few 100 thousand years, although the link between time and
space continues to be elusive in most districts. In this context, we note that samples from a
variety of individual active systems span the whole time-space range seen in individual ore
deposits of porphyry affiliation, reinforcing the concept of contemporaneous zonal growth
proposed by Reno Sales and Charles Meyer.

Acknowledgements
Discussions over the years with Mark Barton, John Dilles, Werner Giggenbach, Julian
Hemley, Dave John, Chuck Meyer, John Proffett, and Eric Seedorff are particularly
acknowledged. Werner Giggenbach contributed to many of the ideas presented here concerning
hydrothermal fluids and processes, and fluid interaction with rocks and minerals. His insight also
allowed him to take new approaches to the interpretation of the evolution of active and extinct
hydrothermal systems, approaches that we find are consistent with the record preserved in ore
deposits. Specific aspects of this paper were discussed with Yuri Taran, Shinohara H., and Noel
White, and we are grateful for their input. We thank Paul Barton, Mike McKibben, Richard
Sillitoe, Stuart Simmons, and Yuri Taran for their extensive review comments that helped to
clarify our thinking and presentation.
23

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volcano-hydrothermal system of El Chichón Volcano, Chiapas, Mexico: Bulletin of Volcanology, v. 59, p.
436-449.
Taran, Y. A., Hedenquist, J. W., Korzhinsky, M. A., Tkachenko, S. I., and Shmulovich, K. I., 1995, Geochemistry of
magmatic gases from Kudryavy Volcano, Iturup, Kuril Islands: Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, v. 59,
p. 1749-1761.
Taran, Y. A., Pilipenko, V. P., Rozhkov, A. M., and Vakin, E. A., 1992, A geochemical model for fumaroles of the
Mutnovsky Volcano, Kamchatka, USSR: Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, v. 49, p. 269-
283.
Taran, Y. A., Rozhkov, A. M., Serafimova, E. K., and Esikov, A. D., 1991, Chemical and isotopic composition of
magmatic gases from the 1988 eruption of Klyuchevskoy Volcano, Kamchatka: Journal of Volcanology
and Geothermal Research, v. 46, p. 255-263.
Taylor, R. P., Lux, D. R., MacLellan, H. E., and Hubacher, F., 1987, Age and genesis of granite-related W-Sn-Mo
mineral deposits, Burnthill, New Brunswick, Canada: Economic Geology, v. 82, p. 2187-2198.
Thompson, J. F. H., and Newberry, R. J., 2000, Gold deposits related to reduced granitic intrusions, in Hagemann, S.
G., and Brown, P. E., eds., Gold in 2000, Reviews in Economic Geology 13, Society of Economic
Geologists, p. 377-400.
Toulmin, P., III, and Barton, P. B., Jr., 1964, A thermodynamic study of pyrite and pyrrhotite: Geochimica et
Cosmochimica Acta, v. 28, p. 641-671.
Ueda, A., and Itaya, T., 1981, Microphenocrystic pyrrhotite from dacite rocks of Satsuma-Iwojima, Southwest
Kyushu, Japan and the solubility of sulfur in dacite magma: Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology, v.
78, p. 21-26.
Ulrich, T., and Heinrich, C. A., 2001, The evolution of a porphyry Cu-Au deposit, based on LA-ICP-MS analysis of
fluid inclusions: Bajo de la Alumbrera, Argentina: Economic Geology, v. 96, p. 1743-1774.
Watanabe, Y., and Hedenquist, J. W., 2001, Mineralogic and stable isotope zonation at the surface over the El
Salvador porphyry copper deposit, Chile: Economic Geology, v. 96, p. 1775-1797.
West, R. J., and Aiken, D. M., 1982, Geology of the Sierrita-Esperanza deposit, Pima mining district, Pima county,
Arizona, in Titley, S. R., ed., Advances in geology of the porphyry copper deposits, southwestern North
America: Tucson, University of Arizona Press, p. 433-465.
White, D. E., 1981, Active geothermal systems and hydrothermal ore deposits: Economic Geology, 75th
Anniversary Volume, p. 392-423.
White, D. E., Muffler, L.J.P., and Truesdell, A.H., 1971, Vapor-dominated systems compared with hot-water
systems: Economic Geology, v. 66, p. 75-97.
White, N. C., and Hedenquist, J. W., 1990, Epithermal environments and styles of mineralization: variations and
their causes, and guidelines for exploration: Journal of Geochemical Exploration, v. 36, p. 445-474.
Whitney, J. A., 1984, Fugacities of sulfurous gases in pyrrhotite-bearing silicic magmas: American Mineralogist, v.
69, p. 69-78.
Whitney, J. A., and Stormer, J. C., 1983, Igneous sulfides in the Fish Canyon Tuff and the role of sulfur in calc-
alkaline magmas: Geology, v. 11, p. 99-102.
Wolff, J. A., and Storey, M., 1983, The volatile component of some pumice-forming alkaline magmas from the
Azores and Canary Islands: Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology, v. 82, p. 66-74.
Wones, D. R., 1981, Mafic silicates as indicators of intensive variables in granitic magmas: Mining Geology, v. 31,
p. 191-212.
Xirouchakis, D., Lindsley, D. H., and Frost, B. R., 2001, Assemblages with titanite (CaTiOSiO4), Ca-Mg-Fe olivine
and pyroxenes, Fe-Mg-Ti oxides and quartz; Part II, Application: American Mineralogist, v. 86, p. 254-264.
31

Figures

Fig. 1. Log fS2 – 1000/T diagram defining the relative sulfidation state of hydrothermal fluids, the Main Line ore-
forming environment from Barton (1970), and the evolutionary path of fluids in porphyry copper and porphyry-
related vein deposits (see text for discussion of A, B, and C). lo = loellingite; other abbreviations in Table 4.
Sulfidation reactions from Barton and Skinner (1979).
32

Fig. 2. Generalized log fS2 –


1000/T (A), RH - 1000/T (B),
and RS – 1000/T (C) diagrams
illustrating the interrelation
between these diagrams and the
generalized sulfidation and
redox state of arc magmas and
compositional trends of
hydrothermal fluids from active
systems. Positions of sulfur-gas
buffer and rock buffer (see text)
in A and C are speculative.
Based on Figures 3, 4, and 5.
33

Fig. 3. RH - 1000/T diagram showing redox states of magmas (Table 2) and fluids from active hydrothermal systems
at 1 bar (Table 3), plotted over a grid of mineral reactions at 500 bars. Fluid compositions are deemed representative
of their type, based on compilations or the original source, as referenced in Table 3. Dash-dot lines join fluid
compositions from the same locality. Large star indicates composition of volcanic crater lakes (Giggenbach, 1992).
The "rock buffer" and sulfur-gas buffer (isomolar SO2(g) = H2S(g)) are from (Giggenbach, 1987). The predominance
boundary H2S = HSO4- at pH = 3 is relevant to magmatic-hydrothermal fluids; the boundary H2S = SO4= at pH = 6 is
relevant to geothermal fluids. Mineral abbreviations: Kspar = K feldspar; all others as in Table 4. See Appendix for
further details on data sources and method of calculation.
34

Fig. 4. Log fS2 – 1000/T diagram, contoured for RS, showing sulfidation state of magmas (Table 2) and fluids from
active hydrothermal systems (Table 3) plotted over a grid of mineral sulfidation reactions at 1 bar. Dash-dot lines
join fluid compositions from the same locality. Sulfidation states of magmas are based on pyrrhotite compositions in
volcanic rocks using equations in Toulmin and Barton (1964) and Scott and Barnes (1971) combined with
temperature estimates as in Figure 3. Sulfidation reactions used to define sulfidation states and those representing
limits to assemblages commonly cited in the text are in bold; all sulfidation reactions are from Barton and Skinner
(1979) and Myers and Eugster (1983) at 1 bar pressure with the exception of reaction tn = en which is based on
natural occurrence (see text). See Table 4 for mineral abbreviations, and Appendix for details of calculations.
35

Fig. 5. RS – 1000/T diagram showing sulfidation state of magmas (Table 2) and fluids from active hydrothermal
systems (Table 3) plotted over a grid of mineral sulfidation reactions at 1 bar. RS – 1000/T values for volcanic rocks
as in Fig. 4 (sources in Table 2). Dash-dot lines join fluid compositions from the same locality. The trend expected
for a liquid boiling from 300 to 150°C is based on data in Giggenbach (1980; see Appendix). SO2 = H2S gas buffer
and Giggenbach's "rock buffer" cannot be calculated in terms of RS and are approximated from their positions in
Figure 3. Mineral reactions are from Barton and Skinner (1979) and Myers and Eugster (1983). Contours of mole
percent FeS in sphalerite coexisting pyrrhotite or pyrite are from Scott and Barnes (1971) and Czamanske (1974).
See Table 4 for mineral abbreviations and Appendix for log fS2 to RS conversion.
36

Fig. 6. Log fS2 – Log fO2 diagram at 250°C modified from Meyer and Hemley (1967) illustrating the looping path
through time and space in porphyry and porphyry-related vein deposits. Lines of constant pH are dashed (bold
where signifying predominance boundaries between aqueous sulfur species). Fields defined and labeled with roman
numerals by Meyer and Hemley are: I. Covellite, digenite, chalcocite, and pyrite with advanced argillic or sericitic
alteration; II. Chalcocite, bornite, pyrite, or chalcopyrite, bornite, pyrite with zoned sericitic and intermediate argillic
alteration; III. Chalcopyrite + pyrite with zoned sericitic (relict K feldspar) and intermediate argillic; and IV.
Chalcopyrite + magnetite, or bornite + magnetite with potassic alteration. Also shown are fields for the epithermal
deposits from Heald et al. (1987) and John (2001). Mineral abbreviations as in Table 4.
37

Fig. 7. RS – RH -T diagram constructed at 600, 300 and 100°C illustrating compositional relations between fluids
from active systems and phase equilibria in the system Cu-Fe-S-O. Stability fields of bornite + magnetite and
chalcopyrite + pyrite are highlighted by dark and medium shading, respectively. Fluid compositions from Table 3
are plotted on isothermal sections by projection along the average slope of tie-lines shown on Figures 3 and 5.
Thermal windows used are: 900 to 440°C projected onto the 600°C section; 360 to 240°C onto the 300°C section;
and 155 to 82°C onto the 100°C section. At 600°C the bulk fluid plots in the magnetite + bornite ± chalcopyrite
field, at 300°C it straddles the chalcopyrite + magnetite and chalcopyrite + pyrite fields, and at 100°C it straddles the
pyrite + chalcopyrite and pyrite + bornite ± digenite fields, a pattern that is consistent with assemblages documented
in porphyry, porphyry-related vein deposits, and some epithermal deposits (Table 4). Phase relations among
stoichiometric Cu-Fe-S-O minerals based on data in Barton and Skinner (1979) and Myers and Eugster (1983)
recalculated to RS and RH as discussed in Appendix.
38

Fig. 8. Log fS2 – 1000/T diagram, contoured for RS, illustrating fluid environments in porphyry copper, porphyry-
copper related base-metal veins, and epithermal Au-Ag deposits in terms of a series of possible cooling paths that
are influenced by processes discussed in text. Fluid environments are based on sulfide assemblages summarized in
Table 4, temperatures discussed in text, and sulfidation reactions from Barton and Skinner (1979). Arrow labeled
"porphyry Cu-Au-Mo" refers to early- and intermediate-age assemblages deposited at approximately 500 to 350°C
and low to intermediate sulfidation states. Arrows labeled "N" and "O" represent deviations from the main-line
environment. Transition to late assemblages at high sulfidation states and to porphyry-related "zoned base-metal
veins" at or below 350°C is indicated by gray arrow labeled "T". Sulfide assemblages in the latter deposits describe
a return from very high sulfidation to the intermediate sulfidation states of the "rock buffer". Similarly, HS
epithermal deposits consist of an early Cu-rich, high sulfidation state assemblage followed by a Au-rich stage at
intermediate sulfidation states. IS epithermal deposits (not shown) form at about 250 °C and mostly at intermediate
sulfidation states. LS epithermal gold veins are shown near 200 °C and at low to intermediate sulfidation states near
the rock buffer. Other porphyry-type deposits that form at low and even very low sulfidation states (dark, thin
arrows labeled "Mount Pleasant" W-Mo and related Sn-Zn-Cu veins, and parts of Henderson Mo (labeled "H"; see
text) are shown for contrast to porphyry Cu and related vein deposits.
39

Appendix
Calculation of Mineral and Gas Equilibria

Rock, mineral, and gas buffer curves


All redox data for volcanic and plutonic rocks (Table 2) are based on assemblages
involving pyroxenes, iron-titanium oxides and titanite. Most have been recalculated in terms of T
and log f O2 for internal consistency using QUILF (Andersen et al., 1991; Andersen et al., 1993).
Giggenbach's (1997) "rock buffer" (Fig. 3) is based on the relation
4 FeO1.5 = 4 FeO + O2, (A1)
with a(FeO) / a (FeO1.5) = 1. This buffer approximates the average RH value of subduction-related
calc-alkaline magmas, and at 400 to 600°C it is close to both Ni + NiO and K feldspar +
magnetite + quartz + phlogopite (mole fraction annite = 0.2).
Mineral equilibria plotted in Figures 3 and 5 and listed below (Table A) were calculated
at 500 bars pressure using SUPCRT92 (Johnson et al., 1992) with the exception of hematite-
bearing reactions (Figs. 3 & 5) which were adjusted with equation 14 of Myers and Eugster
(1983) in order to be consistent with prior RH and RS diagrams published by Giggenbach.
In the system Fe-S-O (Fig. 3), only the phase relations involving magnetite (or hematite)
are shown for reference to magnetite-bearing igneous rocks; the stability field of FeSO4 is
ignored. Location of invariant point magnetite + hematite + pyrite + pyrrhotite + s(l) is based on
the calculated intersection of the reactions pyrite = pyrrhotite + s(l) and pyrite = magnetite + s(l).
The SO2(g) = H2S(g) isomolar curve ("sulfur-gas buffer"),
2/3 H2S(gas) + O2 = 2/3 SO2(gas) + 2/3 H2O, (A2)
plotted on log (f H2 / f H2O) – 1000/T (Fig. 3),was calculated using standard equilibrium constants
of formation at different total pressures (D. R. Stull, 1969, in Giggenbach, 1987).
The equilibrium boiling trend for residual liquid (pure water) illustrated in Figure 5 was
calculated from 300ºC to 100ºC using vapor-liquid gas distribution coefficients for H2 and H2S
from Table 2 of Giggenbach (1980). The boiling trend reflects the higher solubility of H2 relative
to H2S in the vapor phase.

Recalculation of total discharge (Table 3)


We calculated RH and RS values for the wells listed in Table 3, which were reported for
total discharge (all at temperatures <300ºC), to allow comparison with vapors discharged from
fumaroles. Calculations used temperature-dependent vapor-liquid gas distribution coefficients, Bi
= xv,i /x l,i for H2 and H2S from Table 2 of Giggenbach (1980).

Justifiction of RH ≈ log (XH2 / XH2O) and RS ≈ log (XH2 / XH2S) for modern fluids
We follow Giggenbach (1987, p. 146-147) in making the assumption that for gases in
which H2O is the major component, the uncorrected analytical mole ratio (e.g., XH2 / XH2S) is
approximately equivalent to the fugacity ratio (e.g., f H2 / f H2S). That is, the ratio of the activity
coefficients do not deviate much from unity. This assumption introduces unknown errors in
comparing analytical RH and RS values for fluids with computed RH and RS values for mineral
reactions (Figs. 3, 4 and 5).
40

RH and log f O2
Log f O2 values calculated for rocks, mineral reaction curves, the sulfur-gas buffer, and
the predominance boundaries for aqueous sulfur species (Table A) were converted to RH, where
RH = log (f H2 / f H2O), using equation 15.6 of Giggenbach (1997):
log f O2 = 5.3 – 25,552/T - 2 RH, (A3)
for T in Kelvins.

RS and log f S2
Log f S2 values calculated for sulfide mineral reactions were converted to RS, where RS =
log (f H2 / f H2S), in Figure 5, and RS values for fluids given in Table 3 were converted to log f S2
values in Figure 4, on the basis of the free energy change for the reaction
2 H2S(g) = 2 H2(g) + S2(g) (A4)
at 1 bar (Barton and Skinner, 1979), yielding the expression
log f S2 = 4.9 – 9,251/T - 2 RS, (A5)
for T in Kelvins.

Approximate sulfur-gas buffer on log f S2 – 1/T and RS – 1/T plot


The relation
2/3 H2S(g) + 4/3 H2O + S2 = 2/3 SO2(g) + 2 H2S(aq) (A6)
can be used to plot the sulfur-gas buffer on a log f S2 – 1000/T diagram at constant aH2S(aq) and
constant pressure (Inan and Einaudi, 2002). Reaction A6 has a moderately negative slope on a
log f S2 – 1000/T diagram, indicating that if a hydrothermal fluid were to cool along the sulfur-
gas buffer at constant pressure and constant aH2S(aq), then the sulfidation state would increase at a
significantly higher rate than is documented by active magmatic-hydrothermal systems or
deduced from sulfide assemblages in ore deposits formed at T > 350ºC. In order to achieve a log
f S2 – 1/T trajectory such as shown on Figures 1, 2A, 4, and 8 above 350ºC and retain SO2(g)/H2S(g)
= 1, hydrothermal fluids must depressurize, and/or loose sulfur. Such changes, appropriate for
the high-temperature porphyry environment, could lead to the relatively flat trajectories shown
on Figures 4 and 5 as "approximate SO2(g) = H2S(g) gas buffer".
41

Tables
Table 1. History of concepts involving the aqueous S-H-O system and sulfidation state as applied to fluids and mineral
assemblages in porphyry Cu and epithermal Au-Ag deposits

Concept or Process Definition or Conclusion Sources Comments


1906-1909 "Direct volcanic hypothesis", ore solutions Ransome, 1907, 1909 Recognized presence of chemically
Hypogene alunite in epithe emanated from magma, acid and then distinct epithermal environments
ores neutralized by reaction with rock. Later following study of Goldfield deposit,
changed to "solfatarism and oxidation Nevada; interpreted close association of
model", alunite formed by oxidation of alunite with ore minerals as result of
magmatic aqueous sulfur in the near- acidic hypogene fluid related to
surface. fumaroles from degassing magma.
1933 Deposits classed on the basis of ore Lindgren, 1933 Concluded that epithermal deposits
Classification of mineralogy as either gold-, silver-, or formed from near neutral-pH waters
epithermal deposits base-metal rich. similar to those discharged from hot
springs; qualifyingly accepted Ransome's
alunite-quartz type.
1933-1950 Magmatic-hydrothermal fluids start off Bowen, 1933; Fenner, 1933 Acidic origins of magmatic-
acid and become alkaline as they react hydrothermal fluids, based on studies of
with their wall rock. Yellowstone hot springs, contrary to
Graton (below).

Alkaline or acid Magmatic-hydrothermal fluids start off Graton and Bowditch, 1936 Alkaline origins of magmatic-
magmatic volatiles? alkaline and become acid through boiling hydrothermal fluids, based on studies of
and hydrolysis of H2S. base-metal ores at Cerro de Pasco, Peru,
contrary to Bowen and Fenner (above).

Hot springs-epithermal From explosive volcanic phenomena and Schmidt, 1950 Schmidt notes that "acid sulfate" phase
analogy fumaroles to geysers and hot springs, of alteration at Goldfield is equivalent to
chemical environment varies from acid & the kaolinite-alunite-quartz alteration
oxidizing to alkaline & reducing. seen in active hot-springs, both the result
of largely unmodified magmatic gases.
Further notes clay alteration by steam-
heated groundwaters.
1947-1963 Sulfide assemblages with a high sulfur- Sales and Meyer, 1949; The sulfur content of an assemblage is
Sulfur content of sulfide content denote a high chemical potential McKinstry, 1959, 1963 not an intensive variable. Therefore, this
assemblages: of sulfur. implication is correct only if metal ratio
implications for in successive assemblages (in this case
chemical potential of S Increasing sulfur content of assemblages Sales and Meyer, 1949; Cu:Fe at Butte, Montana) does not
in paragenetic sequence implies increasing McKinstry, 1959, 1963 change, a situation unlikely to be the
chemical potential of S through time. general case, as noted by Gustafson
(1963).
1967 Formation of an assemblage of higher Meyer and Hemley, 1967 As defined, term does not require an
"Sulfidation" sulfur-content. increase in f S2. For example, the
reaction magnetite + 3 S2 = 3 pyrite + 2
O2 can proceed isothermally on
decreasing f S2 if f O2 decreases
sufficiently.

Path of "increasing Assemblages at Butte record an increase Meyer and Hemley, 1967 First integration of mineral assemblages
sulfidation" in both f S2 and f O2 with time from early and geochemistry to arrive at
py-bn-cp to late py-cv-dg.1 evolutionary path for hydrothermal fluids
in porphyry and vein systems in context
of sulfidation and oxidation states.
42

1967 Relatively high acidity, high f S2 and f O2 Meyer and Hemley, 1967 Solution composition commonly remains
Link between at high ratios of f S2 / f O2 are implied by close to H2S = H2SO4 boundary. If, on
f S2 and f O2 assemblages such as py-cv-dg. cooling, H+ generation accelerates, the
cooling path will diverge toward higher f
S2 and then trend back toward the rock
buffer (i.e., the "looping path").2

1960-1970 A reaction that produces a new Barton et al., 1960; Barton and Term generally applied to reactions that
"Sulfidation reaction"3 assemblage of higher sulfidation state (not Skinner, 1967; Barton, 1970 involve sulfur in the form of hypothetical
necessarily one of higher sulfur-content) S2 gas and that appear as univariant lines
on a log f S2 - 1/T diagram. Example: 2
FeS + S2 = 2 FeS2. Conceptually
analogous to oxidation/reduction
reactions involving O2 or H2; distinct
from "sulfidation" (formation of an
assemblage of higher sulfur content).

"Sulfidation state"4 (of A function of both f S2 and T, the Barton et al., 1960; Barton and Sulfide "petrogenetic grid" (log f S2 –
sulfide assemblages and sulfidation state is defined relative to Skinner, 1967; Barton, 1970 1/T) introduced, describing a
fluids) experimentally determined sulfidation continuum of sulfidation states, which
reactions. can increase or decrease during fluid
evolution. General path on cooling is
deduced to be one of increasing
sulfidation state (Barton's 1970 "Main
Line").
1977-1987 Mineral assemblages at Creede, Colorado, Barton et al., 1977 Determined activities of S2 and O2, pH,
indicate predominance of SO2. total S, in equilibrium with hm, py, Fe-
chl, relatively oxidized assemblage.

SO2/H2S gas ratios Ratios of dominant magmatic sulfur gases Burnham and Ohmoto, 1980; SO2/H2S fugacity ratio of magmatic
"sulfur-gas buffer" are near unity, an equilibrium that, if Giggenbach, 1987 vapor phase andesitic magmas ranges
maintained, is an oxidizing f O 2 – T from 0.1 to 10; in absence of wall-rock
cooling path relative to FMQ or HM exchange, ratio may remain unchanged
buffers. as vapors cool to 500 to 350ºC.

Magmatic gas ratios calculated from data Whitney and Stormer, 1983; SO2/H2S fugacity ratios for the Fish
on Fe-Ti-oxide and pyrrhotite Whitney, 1984 Canyon tuff, San Juan Mtns, Colorado,
compositions. range from 0.6 to 2.9, average 1.6.
43

1981-1994 Classification of porphyry-related systems Einaudi et al., 1981; Einaudi, Oxidized (porphyry-Cu, Cu-skarns,) vs
based on sulfidation & oxidation state of 1982 reduced (Sn-W porphyries, W skarns)
mineral assemblages combined with ore based on mineral assemblages;
morphology. correlation with magma types.
Sulfidation state contrasts between
endmember porphyry-Cu (intermediate
Classification of sulfidation state) and porphyry-related
porphyry-related and base-metal vein/replacement deposits
epithermal deposits (high and very high sulfidation states).

Epithermal deposits classed by mineralogy Bethke, 1984; Hayba et al., Endmember chemical environments
and deduced fluid chemistry into 1985; Heald et al., 1987 proposed for epithermal deposits with
"Adularia-Sericite" and "Acid Sulfate". implications for sulfidation & oxidation
states: adularia-sericite relatively lower
sulfidation-oxidation state than acid-
sulfate deposits.

Epithermal deposits classed by high (HS) Hedenquist, 1987; White and Proposed that an intrinsic characteristic
vs low (LS) oxidation (valence) states of Hedenquist, 1990 of the fluid of the two end-members be
sulfur (n) in the fluid (e.g., n = +4 in SO2 used for classification: acidic and
and n = -2 in H2S). oxidized vs neutral pH and reduced.
Terminology does not relate directly to
sulfide mineralogy or sulfidation state,
yet it results in classification of
epithermal deposits similar to acid-
sulfate (HS) and adularia-sericite (LS).

Epithermal deposits classed by dominant Hedenquist et al., 1994a Noted that typical sulfide assemblages in
sulfides and deduced fluid chemistry into these two end-member systems consisted
"high sulfidation" (HS) and "low of pyrite-enargite and pyrite±pyrrhotite
sulfidation" (LS) types. with a variety of base metal sulfides, i.e.,
relatively high and low sulfidation states,
respectively, as defined by Barton and
Skinner (1967).
High (HS), intermediate Classification of epithermal deposits based John et al., 1999; Hedenquist et Integration of tectonic settings, intrinsic
(IS), and low sulfidation on tectonic settings, igneous associations, al., 2000; John, 2001 oxidation state of magmas, and
(LS) epithermal deposits sulfidation state, and oxidation state. mineralogy of deposits leads to a
proposed continuum of sulfidation states
in HS and IS epithermal deposits,
contrasted with distinct LS deposits.
1
for mineral abbreviations, see Table 4.
2
See Meyer and Hemley (1967), p. 231-232 and their Fig. 6.9.
3
See Barton and Skinner (1967, 1976) for an authoritative review of the geochemistry of sulfide minerals.
4
Definition of sulfidation state used in present paper, with respect to mineral assemblages and fluids.
This table is restricted to the porphyry and epithermal environments and to processes & concepts related to volatile components and their link to
sulfidation state; it thereby leaves out important contributions on topics of ore-depositional processes, evidence from light stable isotopic and
fluid inclusion studies, and classifications based on morphology or metal content.
44

Table 2. Sources of data on the oxidation and sulfidation states of magmas plotted on Figures 3, 4, and 5

Geologic Source for QUILF Source for


Name in Figure Location Province/Tectonic Magma Rock oxidation used to sulfidation
keys Setting Series Type State (Rh) recalculate state (Rs)2
T and fO21

Volcanic Rocks
Pinatubo Western Luzon, Active Island arc CA D Imai et al. No; authors no data
Philippines (1993) use QUILF
Rabaul New Britain, Active Island arc CA A, D, R Heming and No; authors Heming and
Papua New Carmichael use QUILF Carmichael
Guinea (1973) (1973)
Satsuma- Kikai caldera, Active Island arc CA D no data Ueda and
Iwojima Japan Itaya (1981)
Nevado del Central Cordillera, Active Continental CA A, D Fournelle Yes no data
Ruiz Colombia arc (1990); Melson
et al. (1990)
St. Helens Mount St. Helens, Active Continental CA D Melson and Yes Nordlie et al.
Cascades, arc Hopson (1981) (1983)
Washington, USA
Bishop Tuff Long Valley Continental, CA R Hildreth (1977) Yes Hildreth
caldera, transtensional (1977)
California, USA
Fish Canyon La Garita caldera, Central San Juan CA QL Xirouchakis et Authors Whitney and
Colorado, USA volcanic Field al. (2001) provide Stormer
lower limit (1983)
based on
QUILF
Julcani Peru Continental arc KCA D, R Drexler and Yes Drexler and
Munoz (1988) Munoz
(1988)
Western Great Basin, Continental arc, KCA A, D, R John (2001) Author uses no data
Andesite Nevada (Tonopah, transtensional QUILF
Paradise Range
and Kate Peak)
and Walker Lane,
California (Bodie
Hills), USA

Northern Great Basin, Continental rift KT B, BA, John (2001) Author uses no data
Nevada Rift Nevada & Oregon, R Quilf
USA
Taupo & North Island, New Taupo Volcanic CA RD Rutherford and Yes Rutherford
Coromandel Zealand Zone, Coromandel Heming (1978) and Heming
peninsula (1978)
Azores – Mid-Atlantic MOR related A B Wolff and Yes Wolff and
Canary Islands Ridge, Spain fracture zones Storey (1983) Storey
(1983)

Plutonic Rocks
La Gloria Central Chilean Continental KCA GD, Cornejo and Yes no data
Andes, Chile magmatic arc QM Mahood, (1997)
Yerington Yerington Continental CA GD, Dilles (1987) Yes no data
batholith, magmatic arc QM
Nevada, USA
Wasatch-Oquirrh Wasatch (Park Continental back- KCA M Core (2001) Yes no data
45

Premier stock) arc


and Oquirrh
(Last Chance
stock)
Mountains, Utah
Oslo Rift Central & Continental rift A M Neumann Yes no data
Southern Oslo (1976)
Rift, Norway
1
QUILF (Andersen et al., 1991; Andersen et al., 1993) was used to recalculate temperature and log f O2 from data on assemblages involving
pyroxenes, iron-titanium oxides and titanite given in the references listed. Log f O2 values were then converted to Rh (Rh ≈ log [ X H2 / X H2O ])
using equation 15.6 of Giggenbach (1997).
2
LogfS2 – 1/T values for volcanic rocks are taken from the references listed, without recalculation, and converted to Rs (Rs ≈ log [ X H2 / X H2S
]) using the relations 2 H2S(g) = 2 H2,(g) + S2,(g) from SUPCRT92 (Johnson et al., 1992).
Magma series abbreviations: A = alkalic, CA = calcalkalic, KCA = high-K calcalkalic, KT = high-K tholeiitic
Rock type abbreviations: see Table 3.
46

Table 3. Measured compositions of vapors discharged from volcanic fumaroles, magmatic-hydrothermal and geothermal fumaroles,
plus total discharge from some geothermal wells.
Rock
System Location type 1 T (oC) H 2O 2 CO2 2 SO2 2 H2S 2 HCl 2 HF 2 H2 2 RH 3 RS 4 RSH 5 Refs 7
Volcanic fumaroles
Erta'Ale Ethiopia AB 1130 794000 104000 67800 6200 4200 na 14900 -1.73 0.38 1.04 a,b
Galeras Colombia D 642 914800 59800 8415 5725 7160 620 2850 -2.51 -0.30 0.17 a,g
Klyuchevskoy Kamchatka B 1100 977300 1200 900 20 14200 2500 5900 -2.22 2.47 1.65 a,k
Momotombo Nicaragua BA 844 950500 23800 7000 4900 3500 290 8700 -2.04 0.25 0.15 a,h
Mt. Usu SE Hokkaido D 690 993000 3600 320 180 340 60 2000 -2.70 1.05 0.25 a,f
Ngauruhoe New Zealand A 640 960000 16050 10200 6800 2500 na 1420 -2.83 -0.68 0.18 a
Papandayan Indonesia A 400 959000 29360 6750 2900 1250 33 140 -3.84 -1.32 0.37 a,e
St. Helens 6 Washington D 650 986000 8800 670 900 700 200 4000 -2.39 0.65 -0.13 o
Satsuma Iwojima S Kyushu R 877 973600 5095 8180 1640 5306 277 6070 -2.21 0.57 0.70 a,I
Showa Shinzan?? SE Hokkaido D 800 980000 12000 430 4 530 240 6300 -2.19 3.20 2.03 a,j
Vulcano Italy TB 620 861000 119000 6800 4800 4530 1010 1510 -2.76 -0.50 0.15 a
White Island, 84 New Zealand D 760 927000 52900 8150 2450 5180 300 3020 -2.49 0.09 0.52 c,d
White Island, 84 New Zealand D 457 941000 29100 13200 3300 12450 na 540 -3.24 -0.79 0.60 d
White Island, 88 New Zealand D 495 920000 60100 10000 6000 2400 28 400 -3.36 -1.18 0.22 a,f
Augustine 6 Alaska D 870 847700 22700 61800 6800 10100 860 5400 -2.20 -0.10 0.96 x
Etna 6 Italy AB 928 919000 14000 28000 na 25000 5000 7000 -2.12 na na o
Kudryavy, 91 S Kurils BA 870 921000 27000 23300 5800 6600 610 13000 -1.85 0.35 0.60 m
Kudryavy, 91 S Kurils BA 585 951000 24900 11800 3900 5000 570 1700 -2.75 -0.36 0.48 m
Lewotolo Lomblen, NTT A 490 766000 120000 77700 9200 1260 369 540 -3.15 -1.23 0.93 y
Merapi Java A 900 940000 43000 5000 5000 2000 100 5000 -2.27 0.00 0.00 w
Tolbalchik Kamchatka B 1020 979400 200 1100 300 10400 3000 5500 -2.25 1.26 0.56 v
Unzen N Kyushu A 818 955000 27000 4370 2430 2610 na 7740 -2.09 0.50 0.25 u
Magmatic hydroth.
El Chichon, 83 Mexico TA 115 992400 7100 170 240 250 na 140 -3.85 -0.23 -0.15 n
El Chichon, 95 Mexico TA 101 841600 142600 400 2200 400 6 1040 -2.91 -0.33 -0.74 n
El Ruiz Colombia A 82 955000 23400 19800 1760 59 <10 86 -4.05 -1.31 1.05 a,e
Kuju Iwoyama, 61 S Kyushu R 400 969000 4500 6900 14100 4800 970 1000 -2.99 -1.15 -0.31 p
Kuju Iwoyama, 84 S Kyushu R 320 993000 910 1800 2800 1200 42 28 -4.55 -2.00 -0.19 p
Kuju Iwoyama, 84 S Kyushu R 165 992000 1800 2200 2600 1800 67 5 -5.30 -2.72 -0.07 p
Kudryavy, 91 S Kurils BA 130 950000 22500 23000 2600 110 5 20 -4.68 -2.11 0.95 m
Manza karabuki NE Honshu A 94 992000 1460 220 6290 20 na 0.54 -6.26 -4.07 -1.46 z
Mutnovsky funnel, 83 Kamchatka BA 360 987000 5190 4020 1640 975 260 884 -3.05 -0.27 0.39 a,l
Mutnovsky S bottom,
83 Kamchatka BA 106 981000 13585 1045 2740 60 1 106 -3.97 -1.41 -0.42 l
Mutnovsky upper, 83 Kamchatka BA 272 988000 9820 290 1020 160 10 350 -3.45 -0.46 -0.55 l
Mutnovsky N bottom,
83 Kamchatka BA 97 978000 12400 2400 6310 550 9 110 -3.95 -1.76 -0.42 l
Nasu mugen NE Honshu A 149 996000 2980 120 520 60 na 26 -4.58 -1.30 -0.64 z
Showa Shinsan SE Hokkaido D 336 998900 420 34 45 260 na 340 -3.47 0.88 -0.12 c
Vulcano crater Italy TB 285 918000 69000 2950 2850 6700 na 10 -4.96 -2.45 0.01 j
Vulcano beach Italy TB 100 910760 86430 nd 1920 nd nd 94 -3.99 -1.31 na q
White Island, 84 New Zealand D 197 947000 40600 3760 840 7260 na 21 -4.65 -1.60 0.65 c,d
White Island, 84 New Zealand D 106 951000 44200 1820 2080 60 na 19 -4.70 -2.04 -0.06 c,d
White Island, 84 New Zealand D 100 960000 36300 270 1730 260 na 122 -3.90 -1.15 -0.81 d
Zao NE Honshu A, D 96 977000 19800 2400 120 nd na 4.3 -5.36 -1.45 1.30 z
Geothermal
Campi Flegrei Italy 155 845000 153000 na 1780 31 na 226 -3.57 -0.90 na c
Darajat Java A 104 942000 54000 nd 2440 87 na 945 -3.00 -0.41 na c
Krafla Iceland B 300 985000 13150 nd 350 nd na 360 -3.44 0.01 na c
Ketetahi New Zealand A 136 956400 37800 nd 1300 nd na 1020 -2.97 -0.11 na c
47

Rock
System Location type 1 T (oC) H 2O 2 CO2 2 SO2 2 H2S 2 HCl 2 HF 2 H2 2 RH 3 RS 4 RSH 5 Refs 7
Broadlands well 25 New Zealand R/D 290 994900 4890 nd 47 nd nd 9 -2.88 0.23 na r
Kawerau well 19 New Zealand R, A 275 998300 1560 nd 65 nd nd 5 -2.93 -0.10 na s
Mokai well 6 New Zealand R 319 998900 1015 nd 43 nd nd 1.1 -4.21 -0.76 na s
Rotokawa well 6 New Zealand R 301 987600 2120 nd 120 nd nd 9 -3.04 -0.22 na s
Waiotapu well 7 New Zealand R 242 999000 920 nd 53 nd nd 5 -2.47 0.13 na t
Wairakei well 72 New Zealand R 260 999800 250 nd 10 nd nd 0.7 -3.57 -0.08 na r

1
Abbreviations for igneous rocks: A = andesite, AB = alkali basalt, B = basalt, BA = basaltic andesite, D = dacite, GD = granodiorite, M =
monzonite, QL = quartz latite, QM = quartz monzonite, R = rhyolite, TA = trachyandesite, TB = trachybasalt.
2
µmols/mol
3
RH = log (XH2 / XH2O), where X = analytical mole fraction
4
RS = log (XH2 / XH2S), where X = analytical mole fraction
5
RSH = log (XSO2 / XH2S), where X = analytical mole fraction
6
composition recalculated (”restored”) by original author
7
References: a, Giggenbach (1996); b, Giggenbach and LeGuern (1976); c, Giggenbach et al. (1986); d, Giggenbach (1987); e. Giggenbach et al.
(1990); f, Giggenbach and Matsuo (1991); g, Martini (1993), h, Menyailov et al. (1986); i, Shinohara et al. (1993); j, Mizutani and Suguira
(1982); k, Taran et al. (1991); l, Taran et al. (1992); m, Taran et al. (1995); n, Taran et al. (1998); o, LeGuern (1988); p, Mizutani et al. (1986); q ,
Chiodini et al. (1995); r, Giggenbach (1980); s, Giggenbach (1995); t, Hedenquist and Browne (1989); u, Ohba et al. (1994); v, Menyailov et al.
(1984); w, Allard (1983); x, Symonds et al. (1990); y, Poorter et al. (1991), z, Kiyosu (1983)
Note: vapors from magmatic hydrothermal systems interact with acidic fluid; geothermal vapors derive from near-neutral pH fluid. RH and RS
values for geothermal wells calculated using vapor-liquid distribution coefficients (Giggenbach, 1980) to allow comparison of total well
discharge compositions to vapors discharged from fumaroles.
na, not available; nd, not detected
48

Table 4: Summary of alteration and sulfide mineral assemblages in subalkaline porphyry-Cu1, porphyry-related base-metal vein2,
and epithermal Au-Ag deposits.

Porphyry Cu Left to right: time toward present and/or decreasing depth and/or distance increasing from center3
examples early age3, higher T intermediate age3 late veins3, lower T, references

Type 1 porphyry: major mt-dg-bn in highest grade Cu ore


Batu Hijau; early mt (B, M) bn+cp, cp cp+py, mt py+bn, sl+gl+tn (CC, Clode et al., 1999;
Panguna; 4
; mt+dg+bn, (K) (or hm)+cp CS) Eastoe, 1978; Proffett,
Yerington mine mt+bn+cp5 (CS, QSP) 1979
(K)

Type 2 porphyry: major mt-bn-cp in highest grade Cu ore


Bajo de l'Alumbrera; early mt (M, bn+cp cp+py, py+gl+sl (P); py+en Ulrich & Heinrich, 2001;
Dos Pobres; K); mt+bn, (CC) hm(or (AA) Langton & Williams,
Rosario Porphyry mt+bn+cp (K) mt)+cp (CS, 1982; Dick et al., 1994
Rosario vein
(under Rosario vein) QSP)

Type 3 porphyry: major to moderate dg-bn or bn-cp, mt absent or minor in highest grade Cu ore
Bingham; early mt (M, cp+py, cp+py, (po+cp at Morrison); John, 1978; Redmond et
Chuquicamata; K), rare po+cp; mt+cp+p cp+py+bn others: py+bn+en, al., 2001; Ossandon et al.,
El Salvador; dg+bn+cp; y5 (B) (QSP); later py+en+cv (AA); 2001; Gustafson & Hunt,
1975; Gibbins, 2000;
Grasberg; bn+cp (EDM6, cp+py+tn+ latter is ore at Pollard & Taylor, 2002;
Morrison K) sl (IA)
Chuquicamata Carson & Jambor, 1976

Type 4 porphyry: major cp-py, minor cp-bn or mt-cp-py in highest grade Cu ore
Butte7, Magma early mt (M, bn-cp, cp, cp+py py (QSP); cp+py (C), Manske and Paul, 2002;
Porphyry (deep B); bn+cp, cp, cp+py (K, (QSP, CAS, cp+py+sl, gl (SC, CC); West and Aiken, 1982;
lateral to Magma cp+py (EDM7, B) SC) ore at Butte & Preece and Beane, 1982;
Graybeal, 1982;
Vein); Sierrita- K, B) Magma:
Hezarkhani and
Esperanza; Silver py+cc+dg+bn (AA); Williams-Jones, 1998;
Bell; Sungun py+bn+cp (QSP)

Porphyry-Cu Related Base-Metal Veins2, very high to intermediate sulfidation states


examples central or deep3 intermediate3 distal or shallow3 references
Butte Main Stage, py, cc, en, cv; py, cc, py, bn, cc, py, cp, tn, (bn), sl, (py, gl, rho); Sales and Meyer,
(superimposed on en en; relicts relicts of sl rho, (sl, py, gl); 1949; Meyer et al.,
porphyry-style ore) of sl Ag, (gl, sl, rho, 1968; Proffett, 1979
py)
Chuqicamata Main Early: py, cp, bn; py, py+cp+bn; py, tn Lopez, 1939;
Stage, bn, dg, (en); Late: py, bn, dg, (en); Ossandón et al., 2001
(superimposed on dg, cv, (en); en, (py, py, dg, cv, (en)
early porph-style bn- sl); en, sl, cv, dg; cv,
cp, mt-cp) dg, (py, hm)

Rosario vein, py-cp-(tn), py-bn- cp, cp-py py Hunt, 1985; Dick et


Collahuasi (on top of (en), cc-dg-cv al., 1994; Clark et al.,
Rosario porphyry) 1998

Epithermal Au-Ag: left to right: time toward present and/or decreasing depth and/or distance increasing from center
examples alteration sulfide temporal sequence variation references

High-Sulfidation epithermal: py-en veins, AA halos, Cu-rich, some affiliated with porphyry Cu deposits
Lepanto (over porphyry), VQ-AA en+lz+py cp+tn+sl+g late Au te w/ time, or Hedenquist et al., 1998;
El Indio, Goldfield QSP, l ±py or Ag sf on margin Jannas et al., 1999;
py Ransome, 1909

La Mexicana, Lahóca, AA-VQ py+tn+cp tn±en±fm, py+en+ w/ dec Losada-Calderón and


Summitville (all over py ±Au Au+py fm, Au te depth or McPhail, 1996; Gatter et al.,
49

porphyry) or Au+ba time 1999; Stoffregen, 1987

Intermediate-Sulfidation epithermal: base-metal sulfide & Ag-rich veins


Pachuca, Fresnillo, adul, sl+gl+py+ Ag sf, ±cp, sl FeS 1- w/ time or Geyne et al., 1963; Gemmell
Creede, Comstock Lode QSP, cp+tt Au 25 mole% distance et al., 1988; Barton et al.,
IA, P 1977

Low-Sulfidation epithermal: sulfide poor, Au (Ag) bonanza veins


Sleeper, Midas, IA py-mc py+Au±na late or w/ time, Saunders, 1994; John et al.,
McLaughlin, Hishikari Ag sf, ch shallow multiple 1999; Sherlock et al., 1995;
(sl, tt, cp) op, rl, cn veins Izawa et al., 1990

1
in porphyry-type deposits, the position of molybdenite is not included in this table, although in most deposits it post-dates the main stage of
veinlet copper ores and predates the late base-metal veins
2
additional examples and summaries of these deposits or ore-styles can be found in Einaudi (1982) and Bartos (1989)
3
Asemblages listed are representative of the types of deposits. but not every deposit within a type contains all of the assemblages listed for that
type. Only time-space diagrams can accurately portray evolution; in general, the early (high-T)-to-late(low-T) progression summarized here is
from the perspective of the highly mineralized zone, but "late" or "distal" assemblages may be forming at the same time as "early" or "central"
assemblages on the system scale. Also, early or high-temperature assemblages in porphyries commonly are repeated many times; high
temperature = approx 550 to 400ºC; intermediate temperature = approx 350ºC; low temperature = approx 300 to 250ºC; epithermal deposits form
around 250 to 200ºC.
4
alteration types temporally associated with the sulfide assemblages in the porphyry and vein deposits are listed in parentheses; see abbreviations
below.
5
sulfide assemblages in bold represent the highest grade of copper in most of the porphyry deposits listed under a given type
6
in the deposits listed under Type 3, EDM is recognized only at Bingham
7
refers to pre-Main Stage at Butte; in the deposits listed under Type 4, EDM is recognized only at Butte
Sulfide abbreviations: asp = arsenopyrite; bn = bornite; cc = chalcocite; cn = cinnabar; cp = chalcopyrite; dg = digenite; en = enargite; fm = famatinite; gl =
galena; hm = hematite; lz = luzonite; mc = marcasite; mt, = magnetite; na = naumannite; op = orpiment; po = pyrrhotite; py = pyrite; rl = realgar; sb =
stibnite; sf = sulfosalts; sl = sphalerite; te = tellurides; tn = tennantite, tt = tetrahedrite
Gangue abbreviations: adul = adularia; ch = chalcedony; qz = quartz, rho = rhodocrosite; dol = dolomite
Alteration abbreviations: (AA) = "advanced argillic"; (AC) = albite-chlorite-calcite; (B) = biotite; (CAS) = chlorite-albite-calcite; (CC) = carbonate-chlorite-
clay); (CS) = chlorite-sericite; (EDM) = "early dark micaceous", biotite, phengite, K-feldspar, andalusite, corundum; (IA) = "intermediate argillic",
montmorillonite-kaolinite-illite, biotite chloritized, K-feldspar stable/metastable; (K) = "potassic", quartz, phlogopite, rutile, K-feldspar, anhydrite; (M) =
amphibole-albite-magnetite; (P) = "propylitic", chlorite, epidote, calcite, albite; (QSP) = "phyllic, sericitic", quartz-sericite-pyite; (SCC) = sericite-chlorite-
carbonate, (VQ) = vuggy quartz.
50

Table A. Reactions shown on RH and RS diagrams


RH diagram (Fig. 3)
3 Fe2SiO4 + O2 = 2 Fe3O4 + 3 SiO2
fayalite mt qz

2 Ni + O2 = 2 NiO

2 KFe3AlSi3O10(OH)2 + O2 = 2 KAlSi3O8 + 2 Fe3O4 + 2 H2O


annite K feldspar mt

3 FeS + O2 = 3/2 FeS2 + 1/2 Fe3O4


po py mt

3/2 FeS + O2 = 1/2 Fe3O4 + 3/2 S


po mt sulfur
1
4/3 FeS2 + O2 = 2/3 Fe2O3 + 8/3 S
py hm sulfur
1
4 Fe3O4 + O2 = 6 Fe2O3
mt hm
1
20/3 CuFeS2 + O2 = 4 FeS2 + 4/3 Cu5FeS4 + 2/3 Fe2O3
cp py bn hm

1/2 H2S(aq) + O2 = 1/2 SO4-2(aq) + H+ 2


1/2 H2S(aq) + O2 = 1/2 HSO4-(aq) + 1/2 H+ 3
4
2/3 H2S(gas) + O2 = 2/3 SO2(gas) + 2/3 H2O

RS diagram (Fig. 5)
Fe + H2S(gas) = FeS + H2
iron po

2 Fe2SiO4 + H2S(gas) = Fe3O4 + FeS + 2 SiO2 + H2


fayalite mt po qtz

FeS + H2S(gas) = FeS2 + H2


po py

3 Fe3O4 + 2 H2S(gas) = 4 Fe2O3 + FeS2 + 2 H2


mt hm py

5 CuFeS2 + 2 H2S(gas) = Cu5FeS4 + 4 FeS2 + 2 H2


cp bn py

H2S(gas) = S + H2 5
Sulfur
Calculated at 500 bars pressure, unless noted
1
these reactions are adjusted in Figs. 2 - 8 to be compatible with magnetite +
hematite equilibrium data from Myers and Eugster (1993)
2
defines the predominance boundary for aqueous sulfur species at pH = 6
(this pH is approximately neutral in the epithermal temperature range)
3
defines the predominance boundary for aqueous sulfur species at pH = 3
4
used to define the "sulfur-gas buffer" at 1, 30, and 1000 bars based on data
in Giggenbach (1987)
5
defines saturation with respect to liquid sulfur, "sulfur condensation"
Mineral abbreviations as in Table 4.

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