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Sulfid Evolution in Komatiit-gebundenen Nickellagerstätten

Antragsteller Dr. Sebastian Staude
Fachliche Zuordnung Mineralogie, Petrologie und Geochemie
Förderung Förderung von 2018 bis 2022
Projektkennung Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Projektnummer 407352165
 
Erstellungsjahr 2021

Zusammenfassung der Projektergebnisse

Samples from the Archaean komatiite-hosted Ni-sulfide deposits as well as from the komatiites itself were investigated to understand processes involved in komatiite emplacement and the sulfide ore evolution. Results of this study concerning komatiite emplacement are: (1) Remnants of vents of komatiite eruption fissures (dykes) are rare due to komatiite melt properties. A very low viscosity, laminar flow and eruption above the liquidus temperature causes the eruption fissure to close after eruption without leaving a trace of its former existence. (2) High-MgO komatiites rarely form pillow lavas (as known from basaltic lavas) as they need a low flow rate only possible a flow edges. The observed pillows are one to two orders of magnitude smaller than the basaltic counterparts. (3) Interspinifex ore formed during injection of younger komatiite melt into older sulfide melt causing an emulsion between them. Upon cooling olivine crystallized and thus destabilized the emulsion causing both melts to separate and leaving olivine crystals in sulfide behind. Results for the sulfide evolution are: (1) Most of the economical upgrading of the sulfide melt by the silicate melt occurred prior to the formation of a sulfide melt pool at the base of the komatiite channel based on 33S data. (2) Trace element data of massive sulfides suggest that the crystallization started at the edge and the crystallization front pushed a boundary layer liquid, containing incompatible elements, towards the center. In the central area droplets of an immiscible Co-As-Te-Bi melt exsolved from the last sulfide melt. (3) Combining textures from Moran with other magmatic sulfide deposits showed that the loop texture can be regarded as igneous texture. (4) Two net-textured ore layers were identified at Moran. Textures and trace element chemistry of sufides suggests that the basal layer formed by olivine sinking into and floating on top of the sulfide melt, whereas the second layer formed by sulfide melt infiltrating olivine cumulate and replacing interstitial silicate melt. (5) Younger hydrothermal activity can mobilize the magmatic Ni to form rare hydrothermal pentlandite under very reduced conditions at temperatures > 450 °C. The source of the sulfur to form the ore deposits were investigated using 33S data confirming the sedimentary sulfides were molten and entrained into the komatiite melt and subsequently enriched in magmatic S and economic metals.

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