W-Sn mineralisation in calc-silicate rocks of the Basal Amphibolite unit at Messelingscharte (Felbertauern area, Austria)
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Research output: Thesis › Master's Thesis
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TY - THES
T1 - W-Sn mineralisation in calc-silicate rocks of the Basal Amphibolite unit at Messelingscharte (Felbertauern area, Austria)
AU - Ordosch, Alexander
N1 - embargoed until null
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - An unusual W-Sn mineralisation occurs at Messelingscharte in Early Palaeozoic amphibolites of the Basal Amphibolite unit in the Tauern Window. Four types of scheelite mineralisation are distinguished. (1) Scheelite-bearing calc-silicate pods, (2) Discordant, deformed scheelite-quartz veins, (3) Scheelite in concordant mylonitic quartz-amphibolite layers, (4) Scheelite on joint surfaces. Type 1 and 2 are assumed to be pre-Alpine (Variscan?) formations. The Basal Amphibolite consists of various amphibolites, hornblende-biotite schist, hornblende fels and hornblende-biotite gneiss; the latter preserves intrusive contacts with the amphibolites but is co-magmatic. The amphibolites exhibit geochemical signatures, similar to enriched back-arc basalts. The calc-silicate rocks occur as metre-sized irregular shaped pods. They are composed of major clinozoisite, quartz, and plagioclase with minor to accessory scheelite, titanite and chlorite. Bulk geochemistry reveals high concentrations of W (≤6.14 mass% WO3), Sn (≤1254ppm SnO2), Be (≤41ppm) and transition metals (Cu, Pb, Zn; ∑≤2500ppm) in these rocks. Three scheelite generations are distinguished based on micro-textures, zoning, Mo-content and luminescence colour. The first generation is coarse-grained and Mo-rich (0.82-1.7 mass% MoO3) and normally preserved in the cores of large scheelite porphyroblasts. It is interpreted as primary pre-Alpine (Variscan?) scheelite. Scheelite generations 2 and 3 from Messelingscharte are Mo-poor/free and are interpreted as metamorphic mobilisations and recrystallisation products formed during Variscan (?) and/or Young Alpine regional metamorphism. Hence, it is concluded that, similar to Felbertal scheelite deposit (Scheelite 1 and 2 there), pre-Alpine Mo-rich scheelite was overprinted by two stages of metamorphism. An unique feature of scheelite mineralisation at Messelingscharte is the association of W with Sn. Clinozoisite and titanite were identified as the main Sn-bearing phases (clinozoisite ≤3.00 mass% SnO2, =0.09 apfu; titanite ≤6.48 mass% SnO2). Sn-bearing clinozoisite (large anhedral grains with irregularly shaped Sn-rich lamella) was also affected by metamorphic recrystallisation; the fine-grained, euhedral metamorphic clinozoisite is Sn-free. Substitution of (Al,Fe)3+ by (Sn,Ti)4+ is explained by simultaneous incorporation of divalent cations like Fe2+. Titanite shows patchy irregular zoning defined by Sn-content and rarely hosts very small (
AB - An unusual W-Sn mineralisation occurs at Messelingscharte in Early Palaeozoic amphibolites of the Basal Amphibolite unit in the Tauern Window. Four types of scheelite mineralisation are distinguished. (1) Scheelite-bearing calc-silicate pods, (2) Discordant, deformed scheelite-quartz veins, (3) Scheelite in concordant mylonitic quartz-amphibolite layers, (4) Scheelite on joint surfaces. Type 1 and 2 are assumed to be pre-Alpine (Variscan?) formations. The Basal Amphibolite consists of various amphibolites, hornblende-biotite schist, hornblende fels and hornblende-biotite gneiss; the latter preserves intrusive contacts with the amphibolites but is co-magmatic. The amphibolites exhibit geochemical signatures, similar to enriched back-arc basalts. The calc-silicate rocks occur as metre-sized irregular shaped pods. They are composed of major clinozoisite, quartz, and plagioclase with minor to accessory scheelite, titanite and chlorite. Bulk geochemistry reveals high concentrations of W (≤6.14 mass% WO3), Sn (≤1254ppm SnO2), Be (≤41ppm) and transition metals (Cu, Pb, Zn; ∑≤2500ppm) in these rocks. Three scheelite generations are distinguished based on micro-textures, zoning, Mo-content and luminescence colour. The first generation is coarse-grained and Mo-rich (0.82-1.7 mass% MoO3) and normally preserved in the cores of large scheelite porphyroblasts. It is interpreted as primary pre-Alpine (Variscan?) scheelite. Scheelite generations 2 and 3 from Messelingscharte are Mo-poor/free and are interpreted as metamorphic mobilisations and recrystallisation products formed during Variscan (?) and/or Young Alpine regional metamorphism. Hence, it is concluded that, similar to Felbertal scheelite deposit (Scheelite 1 and 2 there), pre-Alpine Mo-rich scheelite was overprinted by two stages of metamorphism. An unique feature of scheelite mineralisation at Messelingscharte is the association of W with Sn. Clinozoisite and titanite were identified as the main Sn-bearing phases (clinozoisite ≤3.00 mass% SnO2, =0.09 apfu; titanite ≤6.48 mass% SnO2). Sn-bearing clinozoisite (large anhedral grains with irregularly shaped Sn-rich lamella) was also affected by metamorphic recrystallisation; the fine-grained, euhedral metamorphic clinozoisite is Sn-free. Substitution of (Al,Fe)3+ by (Sn,Ti)4+ is explained by simultaneous incorporation of divalent cations like Fe2+. Titanite shows patchy irregular zoning defined by Sn-content and rarely hosts very small (
KW - Wolfram
KW - Zinn
KW - Lagerstätte
KW - Hohe Tauern
KW - Tauern Fenster
KW - Skarn
KW - Kalksilikatgestein
KW - Amphibolit
KW - Basisamphibolit
KW - Geochemie
KW - Scheelit
KW - Klinozoisit
KW - Titanit
KW - tungsten
KW - tin
KW - mineral deposit
KW - Hohe Tauern
KW - Tauern Window
KW - skarn
KW - amphibolite
KW - Basal Amphibolite
KW - geochemistry
KW - scheelite
KW - clinozoisite
KW - titanite
M3 - Master's Thesis
ER -