info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Geochronologically constrained life cycles of telescoped porphyry-epithermal systems at the La Arena district, Northern Peru
Fecha
2023-04Registro en:
Ore Geology Reviews
Ore Geology Reviews, v. 155, 105375, April 2023
Autor
Santos, Alan N.
Guo, Weimin
Chen, Nian
Cerpa Cornejo, Luis Moroni
Kojima, Shoji
Institución
Resumen
La Arena and Alizar are porphyry-type Cu-Au-(Mo) deposits with associated Calaorco and Vanessa high-sulfidation epithermal mineralizations, respectively. In this study, we conducted multiple conventional geochronologic analyses on samples from La Arena district, with the objective to obtain precise a temporal relationship among porphyry emplacement, hydrothermal alterations, cooling, exhumation history and preservation, together with published age data for the district. A precursor quartz–diorite pluton and a late–mineral andesite porphyry bracketed the mineralization in the La Arena and Alizar porphyry deposits. Zircon U-Pb dating of these intrusive rocks display markedly concordant ages, with emplacement beginning and ending at 26.50 ± 0.23 to 25.36 ± 0.07 Ma at La Arena, and at 26.47 ± 0.08 to 25.30 ± 0.07 Ma at Alizar. 40Ar/39Ar chronologic data for hydrothermal biotite from the potassic zone ranges from 25.97 ± 0.16 to 25.73 ± 0.16 Ma in the Alizar, and hypogene alunite from the advanced argillic alteration yield an age of 25.66 ± 0.15 Ma in the Vanessa. The weighted mean apatite (U–Th)/He ages of the porphyry intrusions of the La Arena and Alizar range from 24.26 ± 0.56 to 23.42 ± 0.37 Ma. These geochronologic data reveal that the porphyry systems were emplaced intermittently for at least 1.2 m.y. during the late Oligocene (26.5 – 25.3 Ma). The porphyry intrusions would have been uplifted from its depth of formation at ~ 2 km suggested by telescoped and a short time period (0.07 m.y.; 40Ar/39Ar ages) between porphyries and associated high-sulfidation epithermal events. The cooling history from zircon crystallization at 800 ◦C to thermal collapse at 75 ◦C (apatite helium close temperature) lasted ~ 2.5 m.y. in the ore-systems. The thermal collapse occurred coeval with the Inca IV orogeny (~24 Ma), period of rapid uplift and exhumation in northern Peru (0.24 km/m.y.; (U-Th)/He age-elevation spectrum). If exhumation continued at the rate of 0.24 km/m.y. unroof of the ore-deposits lasted 5 m.y. (24–19 Ma). Since their exposure at ~ 19 Ma, these ore deposits were subjected to weathering and oxidation during 2.12 m.y. It is thus estimated that approximately 500-m thickness of materials have been removed from the Alizar and La Arena during uplift and erosion, including a large volume of ore. Subsequent volcanic activity occurred during the Quechua I orogeny (~17 Ma) at ca. 16.88 Ma, leading to burial and partially preservation of these ore deposits.