Upper Paleozoic mafic and intermediate volcanic rocks of the Mount Pleasant caldera associated with the Sn-W deposit in southwestern New Brunswick (Canada): Petrogenesis and metallogenic implications
Abstract
Upper Paleozoic ( 365 Ma) mafic and intermediate volcanic rocks of the Piskahegan Group constitute a subordinate part of the Mount Pleasant caldera, which is associated with a significant polymetallic deposit (tungsten-molybdenum-bismuth zones 33 Mt ore with 0.21% W, 0.1% Mo and 0.08% Bi and tin-indium zones 4.8 Mt with 0.82% Sn and 129 g/t In) in southwestern New Brunswick (Canada). The epicontinental caldera complex formed during the opening of the late Paleozoic Maritimes Basin in the northern Appalachians. The mafic and intermediate rocks make up two compositionally distinct associations. The first association includes evolved rift-related continental tholeiitic basalts, and the second association comprises calc-alkaline andesites, although both associations were emplaced penecontemporaneously. The basalts have low Mg# 0.34-0.40, smooth chondrite-normalized REE patterns with (La/Yb)n 5-6, primitive mantle-normalized trace element patterns without noticeable negative Nb-Ta anomalies, and their ɛNd(T) ranges from + 2.5 to + 2.2. The basalts were generated by partial melting of a transition zone between spinel and garnet mantle peridotite at a depth of 70-90 km. The calc-alkaline andesites of the second association have chondrite-normalized REE patterns that are more fractionated, with (La/Yb)n 7-8.5, but without significant negative Eu anomalies. Compared to the basaltic rocks, they have lower ɛNd(T) values, ranging from + 0.5 to + 1.9, and their mantle-normalized trace element plots show negative Nb-Ta anomalies. The ɛNd(T) values display negative correlations with indicators of crustal contamination, such as Th/La, Th/Nb and SiO2. The andesitic rocks are interpreted to have formed by assimilation-fractional crystallization processes, which resulted in the contamination of a precursor basaltic magma with crustal material. The parent basaltic magma for both suites underwent a different evolution. The tholeiitic basalts experienced shallow-seated fractional crystallization and evolved along a tholeiitic trend of "early iron" enrichment (non-oxic conditions). The contaminated magma of the second association followed a calc-alkaline fractionation trend of "no iron" enrichment (oxidizing conditions) characterized by a high PH2O and PO2 environment at the mid-crust levels. The Piskahegan Group, which is associated with an important polymetallic mineral deposit, differs from the numerous non-mineralized rift-related volcanic suites of the regional Upper Devonian to Lower Carboniferous successions in the Maritimes Basin by the presence of a significant amount of coeval calc-alkaline andesite, which may be an indicator of potential mineralization.
- Publication:
-
Lithos
- Pub Date:
- October 2016
- DOI:
- 10.1016/j.lithos.2016.07.020
- Bibcode:
- 2016Litho.262..428D
- Keywords:
-
- Bimodal volcanic rocks;
- Sn-W deposit;
- Petrogenesis;
- Crustal contamination;
- Devonian