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Geological Characteristics of the Furong Tin Orefield, Hunan, 40 Ar‐ 39 Ar Dating of Tin Ores and Related Granite and Its Geodynamic Significance for Rock and Ore Formation
Author(s) -
Jingwen MAO,
Xiaofeng LI,
Wen CHEN,
Xiaoming LAN,
Shaoliu WEI
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
acta geologica sinica ‐ english edition
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.444
H-Index - 61
eISSN - 1755-6724
pISSN - 1000-9515
DOI - 10.1111/j.1755-6724.2004.tb00158.x
Subject(s) - isochron , biotite , tin , geology , geochemistry , greisen , muscovite , skarn , mineralization (soil science) , amphibole , cassiterite , mineralogy , metallurgy , materials science , fluid inclusions , quartz , paleontology , soil science , soil water
Furong, Hunan, is a large tin orefield discovered in China in recent years, which is mainly of the skarn‐greisen‐chlorite type. On the basis of the geological characteristics of the orefield, 40 Ar‐ 39 Ar dating was performed on muscovite from greisen‐type tin ore and biotite from related amphibole‐biotite granite, which yielded three sets of age data, i.e., a plateau age of 157.5±0.3 Ma and an isochron age of 156.9±3 Ma for amphibole‐biotite granite; a plateau age of 156.1±0.4 Ma and an isochron age of 155.7±1.7 Ma for the Sanmen greisen‐type tin ore; and a plateau age of 160.1±0.9 Ma and an isochron age of 157.5±1.5 Ma for the Taoxiwo greisen‐type tin ore. The three sets of age data coincide well with each other. They not only accurately reflect the timing of rock and ore formation but also indicate close relations between granite and tin deposits. In addition, the plateau ages of all three sets suggest that no subsequent thermal perturbation event occurred after the formation of granite and tin deposits. The Furong tin orefield is a component part of the southern Hunan large tungsten‐tin polymetallic deposit concentration area and also a representative deposit formed in the time interval of 160–135 Ma in four peaks of Mesozoic tungsten‐tin mineralization in the South China region. They might still correspond to the middle and late stages of the major geodynamic transition from a N‐S‐ to an E‐W‐direction in eastern China.