Geochemical signature of earthquake-induced surface flooding by mineralized groundwater over the buried Atlántida deposit, northern Chile
Author(s) -
A. E. Brown,
Peter A. Winterburn,
Thomas Bissig
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
geochemistry exploration environment analysis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.346
H-Index - 41
eISSN - 2041-4943
pISSN - 1467-7873
DOI - 10.1144/geochem2018-065
Subject(s) - geology , groundwater , geochemistry , alluvium , salinity , galena , surface water , mineralization (soil science) , regolith , geomorphology , hydrology (agriculture) , mineralogy , sphalerite , soil science , pyrite , environmental science , oceanography , geotechnical engineering , physics , environmental engineering , astrobiology , soil water
At the buried Atlántida deposit (Cu–Au–(Mo)) in the Atacama Desert of Chile, highly saline pockets of fine-grained material 10 cm–3 m in diameter were identified on the alluvial surface using remote sensing and detailed regolith mapping. The median salinity (NaCl dominant) of the saline pockets is 2.2% compared to background alluvial material with a median salinity of 0.01%. Their distribution along mapped fault structures and the highly saline nature of the material suggest they form as an expression of groundwater forced through fractures to the surface during seismic activity. A targeted geochemical survey, oriented parallel to the orientation of the structures (sample spacing 250 m along structural trend) specifically sampling saline pockets on relatively old surfaces, was performed over the deposit. Deionized water extraction of soluble salts and analysis by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry revealed strong correlations of increasing salinity and increasing concentrations of porphyry copper pathfinder elements. Elevated responses of Se, Mo, Re and Te normalized to a groundwater volume proxy are present directly over the Atlántida deposit. This suggests the rate of erosion and sedimentation is slow enough in the Atacama Desert to preserve surficial anomalies as saline pockets, formed by periodic seismically induced surface flooding of groundwater along faults extending to surface. Targeted sampling of saline pockets along structural trends using weak leach geochemistry in terrains dominated by transported cover can serve as a routine exploration method for the potential discovery of buried copper porphyries and other styles of mineralization in the Atacama Desert of Chile.
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