
Main Dike Swarm of the Northern Part of the Chakylkalyan Megablock and Their Potential Ore Content (On the Example of the Yakhton Dike Swarm, Southern Uzbekistan)
Author(s) -
T. Yarboboev,
Sh.Kh. Sultanov,
I. Ochilov
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
bûlletenʹ nauki i praktiki
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2414-2948
DOI - 10.33619/2414-2948/60/10
Subject(s) - mineralization (soil science) , dike , geology , geochemistry , metallogeny , magmatism , mineral resource classification , tectonics , mineral exploration , mining engineering , seismology , soil science , pyrite , sphalerite , soil water
The study of mineralogical and geochemical properties of gold deposits is an urgent task for the geological industry, especially in the new areas under study. Without reliable information about the geological factors that lead to the formation of ore deposits and the mechanisms of deposit accumulation, it is impossible to ensure reliable scientific forecasting of the mineral potential of the regions, the effective creation of mineral resources of enterprises and mining, the stable operation of the mining industry. Our study of gold deposits was aimed at understanding these important issues of the ore formation problem. This is the urgency of the case. The role of the dictators of the Yakhton ore deposit as important structural material and mineral components of the leading types of ore-magmatic systems is being assessed. A peculiar feature of the geological structure of the ore area is the close paragenetic relationship of mineralization by rocks of the dike kids complex. Mineralization is localized in two stages and has bimetallic properties (gold, tungsten). The mineralization in the upper layer is localized in the corpus carbonate rocks of Yakhton (mainly garnet-pyroxene content). In the lower stage, mineralization is governed by a northeastern tectonic attenuation zone, which includes area concentrations of Au and W and areal mineralized zones that are part of the dike of the Yakhton region. Determining the spatial, age, and genetic relationships of mineralization with magmatism is a major problem of metallogeny.