Anomalous Enrichment of Silver in Organic Matter of the Songxi Shale-hosted Ag-Sb Deposit in Northeastern Guangdong

The silver contents of organic matter in the host rocks of the Songxi shale-hosted Ag-Sb deposit of northeastern Guangdong, South China, have been directly determined using the electron microprobe technique. The silver contents in two types of organic matter, marine vitrinite and solid bitumen, vary...

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Published inActa geologica Sinica (Beijing) Vol. 76; no. 2; pp. 249 - 256
Main Authors Kai, HU, Chensheng, YU, Dongsheng, MA, Jianping, ZHAI, Wenlan, ZHANG, Zhenyu, XIAO
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.06.2002
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Summary:The silver contents of organic matter in the host rocks of the Songxi shale-hosted Ag-Sb deposit of northeastern Guangdong, South China, have been directly determined using the electron microprobe technique. The silver contents in two types of organic matter, marine vitrinite and solid bitumen, vary in the range from 100′10-6 to 350′10-6, which are from tens of times to thousands of times higher than those of the host rocks in the ore deposit. The average silver content of the organic matter is also several times higher than the pay grade of silver for commercial mining of the ore deposit. It is quite obvious that the organic matter of the host rocks in the ore district is characterized by an anomalous enrichment of silver. The results of this study indicate that the silver anomalies in the organic matter have been derived from both the host rocks and the silver-bearing fluids of the Songxi black shale ore source. In the course of sedimentation and later hydrothermal reworking, organic matter was able to entrap the element silver from source rocks and silver-bearing fluids through complexation and reduction, so that silver could be further enriched (or precipitated) in the solid bitumen. The quantitative assessment in this study suggests that the distribution of solid bitumens in the ore district may be considered an indication for mineral exploration.
Bibliography:11-2001/P
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ark:/67375/WNG-JFWQB7HX-D
ArticleID:ACGS90
istex:F5BAB1EA58753CFF9560E7BBD77DD5E3D4E10210
Born in October 1961; graduated from the Department of Geology in Nanjing University in 1984 and received his Ph.D. in 1993 at Nanjing University and CSIRO of Australia as a program of joint‐education. Now he is a professor in the Department of Earth Sciences at Nanjing University, and has long been engaged in the study of ore geology and geochemistry. E‐mail
kaihu@nju.edu.cn
ISSN:1000-9515
1755-6724
DOI:10.1111/j.1755-6724.2002.tb00090.x