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Economic Geology; April 1998; v. 93; no. 2; p. 171-183; DOI: 10.2113/gsecongeo.93.2.171
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Laramide alteration of Proterozoic diabase; a likely contributor of copper to porphyry systems in the Dripping Spring Mountains area, southeastern Arizona

Eric R. Force

U. S. Geological Survey, Tucson, AZ, United States

Proterozoic diabase of the Dripping Spring range occurs as sills in the Proterozoic Apache Group and the Troy Quartzite and as intrustive sheets in basement rocks. The aggregate thickness of the diabase sills and intrusive sheets averages about 450 m in the part of the range showing little mid-Tertiary extension. Laramide alteration is of two types, dominated by chlorite and actinolite, respectively, and formed mostly from clinopyroxene. Actinolite-dominated assemblages are higher in Na and Ca. Hydrothermal biotite is common in the central areas of both alteration types. Laramide alteration forms two distribution patterns: a subsequent pattern centered on Laramide intrusions and small porphyry deposits, characterized by actinolitic alteration, and a more extensive branching linear pattern that follows Laramide structures, centered on the larger Ray porphyry deposit, extending toward other Laramide districts and showing both alteration types. Alteration has apparently mobilized copper and other metals from diabase. The freshest diabase samples average about 120 ppm copper with little variation. In chloritic alteration, about 100 ppm of this copper is expelled in the most completely altered rocks. In actinolitic alteration, diabase may either gain or lose copper during alteration. Chloritic alteration constitutes roughly 70 percent of the diabase alteration in the study area, where alteration averages 41 percent complete. This implies liberation of about 9X10 6 tons (t) copper from diabase alteration, significantly less than the 16X10 6 t copper in Laramide mineral deposits of the superdistrict Ray, Superior. Chilito. Christmas. However, diabase alteration may have been a significant component of the supply of copper to the Laramide mineral districts of the area. Synmineral magmatic sources of copper are not documented in this area. The distribution of Proterozoic diabase coincides with the central part of the southeastern Arizona copper province, which may thus owe much copper availability to an unusual abundance of diabase. However, many unanswered questions remain about metal supply from altering diabase.

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S. R. Titley and S. R. Titley
Crustal Affinities of Metallogenesis in the American Southwest
Economic Geology, September 1, 2001; 96(6): 1323 - 1342.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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