A RE-EVALUATION OF MINERALISED ORDOVICIAN INTRUSIVES IN THE LACHLAN FOLD BELT: IMPLICATIONS FOR TECTONIC AND METALLOGENIC MODELS.
Phillip Blevin, GEMOC ANU
Ordovician porphyry-style Cu-Au mineralisation in the central
Lachlan Fold Belt is related to intrusive complexes of diverse
compositional character. The intrusive suite at Copper Hill is
medium-K calcalkaline in character, those at Goonumbla and Rain
Hill are transitional from high-K calcalkaline to "shoshonitic"
(in terms of K2O versus SiO2), while the intrusive complex at
Cadia is "shoshonitic". The intrusive suites at Cargo
and Lake Cowal appear to be medium-K calcalkaline in character.
Surprisingly, of all these suites examined in this study, only
that at Cadia is actually "potassic" in the strict sense
(i.e. molecular K/Na > 1). All the intrusive suites are silica
near-saturated to saturated, with magmatic quartz being more abundant
(and appearing paragenetically earlier) in the medium-K suites.
Plagioclase phenocrysts in the more K-rich suites are commonly
mantled by alkali feldspar, a result of peritectic reactions during
crystallisation, and not high temperature K metasomatism. Pyroxene
compositions are typical of calcalkaline arc rocks in terms of
Ca-Fe-Mg end member components and Al-Ti relationships. Mineralogical
evidence for alkaline and/or silica undersaturated magmatic affinities
are absent from all the intrusives.
Incompatible trace element abundances are significantly lower
than for other "shoshonitic" rock suites from various
tectonic settings, and most closely match those from arc related
medium- to high-K calcalkaline rocks. The relative abundances
of incompatible trace elements are proportional to the K content
of each suite with the exception of Rain Hill. K2O contents in
the K-rich suites increase rapidly with increasing SiO2 compared
to changes in K2O content in the medium-K suites. Internal differentiation
within the suites is controlled by fractional crystallisation
and cumulate processes dominantly involving plagioclase and clinopyroxene.
Low to very low Ni contents in all suites are consistent with
early olivine removal. Eu anomalies do not increase significantly
despite plagioclase fractionation, presumably due to high magmatic
O2 conditions. The Ordovician intrusive suites (including
similarly aged granitoids) are chemically distinct from granitoids
of Silurian and Devonian age in having lower Rb, Y and HREE, and
higher Sr and K/Rb at any given SiO2 value.
The systematic relationships between petrography, mineralogy,
rock composition and inter-element ratios argue persuasively against
any one of these features (e.g. quartz phenocrysts, graphic groundmass
textures, low K contents etc) being due to post crystallisation
alteration, metamorphism etc. The mineralised Ordovician intrusive
suites show a systematic progression in petrographic and compositional
character from rocks of indisputable medium-K calcalkaline affinity
to high-K calcalkaline affinity, and finally to relatively more
enriched rocks. Given their relationship to calcalkaline rocks,
these enriched equivalents would be better termed as "very
high-K calcalkaline" instead of "shoshonitic".
The use of the terms "shoshonite" or "shoshonitic",
even if correctly applied using IUGS classification criteria,
obscures the genetic relationship between such rocks and their
contemporaneous, less K- and incompatible element-enriched calcalkaline
equivalents.
These results have implications for metallogenic and tectonic
models for the LFB. Porphyry Cu-Au style mineralisation is commonly
associated with arc-related calcalkaline magmatism, and the Ordovician
of the LFB provides no exception in that regard if indeed contemporaneous
subduction was present. The occurrence of Cu-Au mineralisation
in suites of diverse compositional character suggests that models
linking the metallogenic potential of these suites to incompatible
element enrichment processes requires critical re-evaluation.
Similarly, models arguing against the existence of contemporaneous
subduction during the Ordovician on the grounds that "normal"
calcalkaline rocks are absent need to be reassessed. Given the
above results for the intrusive components of the Ordovician System
in NSW, a contemporaneous subduction scenario cannot be discounted
on these grounds.
Acknowledgments: This work was undertaken as part of AMIRA
project P425. Project sponsors are thanked for their support and
their generous permission to publish.
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