Abstract At the central Maratoto valley prospect, southern Coromandel Peninsula, New Zealand, andesite flows and dacite breccias host rare porphyry-style quartz veins that are telescoped by widespread epithermal veins and alteration. Early porphyry-style quartz veins, which lack selvages of porphyry-style alteration, host hypersaline fluid inclusions that contain several translucent daughter crystals, including halite and sylvite. Overprinting epithermal veins and alteration are divided into two stages. Main-stage epithermal alteration and veins are characterised by the successive deposition of pyrite, quartz, and ankerite-dolomite veinlets coupled with intense alteration of the wall rock to quartz, illite, interlayer illite-smectite (≤10% smectite), chlorite, pyrite, ankerite, and dolomite. Late-stage epithermal veins and alteration are characterised by the formation of calcite and siderite veinlets, coupled with overprinting of the wall rocks by both these minerals.Multiphase fluid inclusions in a porphyry-style quartz vein formed at temperatures >400°C and trapped hypersaline magmatic fluid. Lower temperature secondary liquid-rich inclusions in the porphyry-style quartz vein homogenise between 283 and 329°C and trapped a dilute fluid with <1.8 wt% NaCl equivalent. Inclusions in later epithermal quartz and calcite veins homogenise between 240 and 280°C (av. 260°C) and trapped a dilute fluid with apparent salinities of <2.9 wt% NaCl equivalent. Based on homogenisation and salinity data, secondary inclusions in porphyry-style quartz veins may have formed 700-950 m deeper than telescoping epithermal veins.Main-stage epithermal ankerite and dolomite have δ18O(VSMOW) values of 13.5-18.1, whereas late-stage epithermal calcite has δ18O(VSMOW) values of 3.1-5.1. Calculated isotopic compositions for the fluid in equilibrium with ankerite-dolomite and calcite at 260°C, averages 6 and -3, respectively. The enriched value for main-stage ankerite-dolomite suggests formation from waters that underwent significant water-rock exchange, whereas isotopically lighter water that formed late-stage calcite underwent little water-rock interaction.We propose a three-stage model to explain telescoped veins and alteration styles at the central Maratoto valley prospect area. Porphyry-style quartz veins were the first to form from hot hypersaline multi-cation magmatic fluids. These are telescoped by later widespread epithermal veins and alteration following descent of the paleowater table possibly due to rapid erosion or sector collapse of a volcanic edifice. Main-stage epithermal alteration and deposition produced quartz, chlorite, illite, interlayered illite-smectite, pyrite, and isotopically heavy ankerite-dolomite from deeply circulating upwelling alkali chloride waters. Late-stage collapse of the hydrothermal system resulted in the formation of overprinting calcite and siderite from isotopically lighter descending marginal steam-heated CO2-rich waters.
Keywords central Maratoto valley; Coromandel Volcanic Zone; porphyry deposit; epithermal deposit; telescoping; hydrothermal alteration; carbonates; fluid inclusions; oxygen and carbon isotopes
G03001; Online publication date 25 February 2004
Received 23 January 2003; accepted 10 November 2003
New Zealand Journal of Geology & Geophysics, 2004, Vol. 47: 39-56
0028-8306/04/4701-0039 © The Royal Society of New Zealand 2004
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