The various theories of ore genesis explain how the various types of mineral deposits form within the Earth's crust. Ore genesis theories are very dependent on the mineral or commodity.
Ore genesis theories generally involve three components: source, transport or conduit, and trap. This also applies to the petroleum industry, which was first to use this methodology.
The biggest deposits are formed when the source is large, the transport mechanism is efficient, and the trap is active and ready at the right time.
Sources of hydrothermal solutions include seawater, formational brines (water trapped within sediments at deposition) and metamorphic fluids created by dehydration of hydrous minerals during metamorphism.
Metal sources may include a plethora of rocks. However most metals of economic importance are carried as trace elements within rock-forming minerals, and so may be liberated by hydrothermal processes. This happens because of
Transport by hydrothermal solutons usually requires a salt or other soluble species which can form a metal-bearing complex. These metal-bearing complexes facilitate transport of metals within aqueous solutions, generally as hydroxides, but also by processes similar to chelation.
This process is especially well understood in gold metallogeny where various thiosulfate, chloride and other gold-carrying chemical complexes (notably tellurium-chloride/sulfate or antimony-chloride/sulfate). The majority of metal deposits formed by hydrothermal processes include sulfide minerals, indicating sulfur is an important metal-carrying complex.
Sulfide deposition:
Sulfide deposition within the trap zone occurs when metal-carrying sulfate, sulfide or other complexes become chemically unstable due to one or more of the following processes;
Metal can also become precipitated when temperature and pressure or oxidation state favour different ionic complexes in the water, for instance the change from sulfide to sulfate, oxygen fugacity, exchange of metals between sulfide and chloride complexes, etcetera.
Metamorphic processes also control many physical processes which form the source of hydrothermal fluids, outlined above.
Ore deposits rarely fit snugly into the boxes in which geologists wish to place them. Many may be formed by one or more of the basic genesis processes above, creating ambiguous classifications and much argument and conjecture. Often ore deposits are classified after examples of their type, for instance Broken Hill Type lead-zinc-silver deposits or Carlin-type Gold deposits.
Classification of hydrothermal ore deposits is also achieved by classifying according to the temperature of formation, which roughly also correlates with particular mineralising fluids, mneral associations and structural styles. This scheme, proposed by Lindgren (1933) classified hydrothermal deposits as hypothermal, mesothermal, epithermal and telethermal.
This page has been organised by metal commodity; it is also possible to organise theories according to geological criteria of formation, as well as by metal association. Often ores of the same metal can be formed by multiple processes, and this is described by commodity.
Often, more recent weathering during the Tertiary or Eocene is required to convert the usual magnetite minerals into more easily processed hematite. Some iron deposits within the Pilbara of West Australia are placer deposits, formed by accumulation of hematite gravels called pisolites. These are preferred because they are cheap to mine.
Lead and zinc deposits are formed by discharge of deep sedimentary brine onto the sea floor (termed sedimentary exhalative or SEDEX), or by replacement of limestone, in skarn deposits, some associated with submarine volcanoes (called volcanic-hosted massive sulfide or VHMS) or in the aureole of subvolcanic intrusions of granite. The vast majority of lead and zinc deposits are Proterozoic in age. The immense Broken Hill, Century Zinc, Lady Loretta, and Mt Isa deposits in Australia, the sullivan, Red Dog and Jason deposits of North America and the Hindustan zinc belt in India are all SEDEX type deposits.
The limestone replacement type of deposit exemplifies the Mississippi Valley Type (MVT). Some of these occur by replacement and degradation of hydrocarbons, which are thought important for transporting lead.
The subvolcanic intrusion type of deposit is renowned for high silver grades, and typifies the deposits of Argentina, Bolivia and Peru. These deposits are essentially Cenozoic in age and are known as the Andean silver belt, the most recent example being San Cristobal with 450 million ounces of silver. These deposits form by discharge of fluids bearing incompatible elements from the cooling granite mass, and have low lead grades but exceptional silver enrichment.
Plate tectonics is the underlying mechanism for generating gold deposits. The majority of primary gold deposits fall into two main categories: lode gold deposits or intrusion-related deposits.
Lode gold deposits are generally high-grade, thin, vein and fault hosted. They are comprised primarily of quartz veins also known as lodes or reefs, which contain either native gold or gold sulfides and tellurides. Lode gold deposits are usually hosted in basalt or in sediments known as turbidite, although when in faults, they may occupy intrusive igenous rocks such as granite.
Lode-gold deposits are intimately associated with orogeny and other plate collision events within geologic history. Most lode gold deposits sourced from metamorphic rocks because it is thought that the majority are formed by dehydration of basalt during metamorphism. The gold is transported up faults by hydrothermal waters and deposited when the water cools too much to retain gold in solution.
Intrusive related gold (Lang & Baker, 2001) is generally hosted in granites, porphyry or rarely dikes. Intrusive related gold usually also contains copper, and is often associated with tin and tungsten, and rarely molybdenum, antimony and uranium. Intrusive-related gold deposits rely on gold existing in the fluids associated with the magma (White, 2001), and the inevitable discharge of these hydrothermal fluids into the wall-rocks (Lowenstern, 2001). Skarn deposits are another manifestation of intrusive-related deposits.
Placer deposits are sourced from pre-existing gold deposits and are secondary deposits. Placer deposits are formed by alluvial processes within rivers, streams and on beaches. Placer gold deposits form via gravity, with the density of gold causing it to sink into trap sites within the river bed, or where water velocity drops, such as bends in rivers and behind boulders. Often placer deposits are found within sedimentary rocks and can be billions of years old, for instance the Witwatersrand deposits in South Africa. Sedimentary placer deposits are known as 'leads' or 'deep leads'.
Placer deposits are often worked by fossicking, and panning for gold is a popular pastime.
Laterite gold deposits are formed from pre-existing gold deposits (including some placer deposits) during prolonged weathering of the bedrock. Gold is deposited within iron oxides in the weathered rock or regolith, and may be further enriched by reworking by erosion. Some laterite deposits are formed by wind erosion of the bedrock leaving a residuum of native gold metal at surface.
Sulfide phases only form in ultramafic magmas when the magma reaches sulfur saturation. This is generally thought to be nearly impossible by pure fractional crystallisation, so other processes are usually required in ore genesis models to explain sulfur saturation. These include contamination of the magma with crustal material, especially sulfur-rich wall-rocks or sediments; magma mixing; volatile gain or loss.
Often platinum is associated with nickel, copper, chromium, and cobalt deposits.
Sulfide type nickel deposits are formed in essentially the same manner as platinum deposits. Nickel is a chalcophile element which prefers sulfides, so an ultramafic or mafic rock which has a sulfide phase in the magma may form nickel deposits. The best nickel deposits are formed where sulfide accumulates, much like in a placer gold deposit, in the base of lava tubes or volcanic flows — especially komatiite lavas.
Komatiitic nikel-copper sulfide deposits are considered to be formed by a mixture of sulfide segregation, immiscibility, and thermal erosion of sulfidic sediments. The sediments are considered to be necessary to promote sulfur saturation.
Some subvolcanic sills in the Thompson Belt of Canada host nickel sulfide deposits formed by deposition of sulfides near the feeder vent. Sulfide was accumulated near the vent due to the loss of magma velocity at the vent interface. The massive Voisey's Bay nickel deposit is considered to have formed via a similar process.
The process of forming nickel laterite deposits is essentially similar to the formation of gold laterite deposits, except that ultramafic or mafic rocks are required. Generally nickel laterites require very large olivine-bearing ultramafic intrusions. Minerals formed in laterite nickel deposits include gibbsite.
The world's major copper deposits are formed within the granitic porphyry copper style. The source of the copper is generally considered to be the lower crust or mantle where the granite melt forms. The copper is enriched by processes during crystallisation of the granite and forms as chalcopyrite — a sulfide mineral, which is carried up with the granite.
Sometimes granites erupt to suface as volcanoes, and copper mineralisation forms during this phase when the granite and volcanic rocks cool via hydrothermal circulation.
Sedimentary copper forms within ocean basins in sedimentary rocks. Generally this forms by brine from deeply buried sediments discharging into the deep sea, and precipitating copper and often lead and zinc sulfides directly onto the sea floor. This is then buried by further sediment.
Often copper is associated with gold, lead, zinc and nickel deposits.
Uranium is also found in nearly all coal at several parts per million, and in all granites. Radon is a common problem during mining of uranium as it is a radioactive gas.
Uranium is also found associated with certain igenous rocks, such as granite and porphyry. The Olympic Dam deposit in Australia is an example of this type of uranium deposit. It contains 70% of Australia's share of 40% of the global low-cost recoverable uranium inventory.
Geoscience Australia Uranium Infosheet
Greisen granite is another related tin-molybdenum and topaz mineralisation style.
Carbonatite intrusions are an important source of these elements. Ore minerals are essentially part of the unusual carbonatite mineralogy.
Phosphate deposits are also formed from alkaline igneous rocks such as nepheline syenites, carbonatites and associated rock types. The phosphate is, in this case, contained within magmatic apatite, monazite or other rare-earth phosphates.
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Elder, D. & Cashman, S. Tectonic Control and Fluid Evolution in the Quartz Hill, California, Lode-gold Deposits. Economic Geology, 87, pp1795-1812, 1992.
Evans, A.M., 1993. Ore Geology and Industrial Minerals, An Introduction., Blackwell Science, ISBN 0-632-02953-6
Groves, D.I. 1993. The Crustal Continuum Model for late-Archaean lode-gold deposits of the Yilgran Block, Western Australia. Mineralium Deposita 28, pp366-374, 1993.
Lang, J.R. & Baker, T., 2001. Intrusion-related gold systems: the present level of understanding. Mineralium Deposita, 36, pp477-489, 2001.
Lindberg, W., 1922. A suggestion for the terminology of certain mineral deposits. Economic Geology, '17, pp. 292-294.
Lowenstern, J.B., 2001. Carbon dioxide in magmas and implications for hydrothermal systems. Mineralium Deposita, 36, pp490-502, 2001.
Pettke, T; Frei, R.; Kramers J.D. & Villa, I. M. 1997. Isotope systematics in vein gold from Brusson, Val d'Ayas (NW Italy); (U+Th)/He and K/Ar in native Au and its flid inclusions. Chemical Geology, 135, pp173-187, 1997.
White, A.J.R, 2001. Water, restite and granite mineralisation. Australian Journal of Earth Sciences, 48, pp551-555 2001.
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