{"title":"Geological characteristics and ore‐forming conditions of the Tasikmadu porphyry Cu–Au prospect in Trenggalek, East Java, Indonesia","authors":"Arifudin Idrus, Genki Kaneko, Ryohei Takahashi, Finlan Adhitya Aldan, Trifatama Rahmalia, Hinako Sato","doi":"10.1002/gj.5042","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Tasikmadu is a newly discovered porphyry Cu–Au prospect in the eastern Sunda arc, Indonesia. This study aimed to elucidate salient diagnostic characteristics and ore‐forming conditions of the prospect. Fieldwork and various laboratory analyses for a suite of representative samples were performed for mineralogy, bulk‐geochemistry, mineral chemistry and ore fluid characterization. The study area is composed of three diorite porphyries, that is, fine‐grained, medium‐grained and coarse‐grained diorite porphyry, respectively. The intrusions are calc‐alkaline with a high Sr/Y value, which is similar to many ore‐bearing intrusions in the eastern Sunda arc. Ore mineralization occurs in quartz veins and veinlet stockwork, centred in the potassic zone, and dominated by chalcopyrite and bornite occurring in A and B veins, which cut earlier barren (EB) and M veins. The mineralization core has an average grade of 0.63 wt% Cu and 0.25 ppm Au, respectively. Outwardly, the potassic zone changes to the propylitic zone, which still bears copper in the quartz and pyrite veinlets, although the grade is low. Fluid inclusion microthermometry revealed that the A and B veins in the potassic zone formed at 464 and 390°C by hypersaline boiling fluids, respectively. The temperature temporally and spatially decreased, that is, in the propylitic zone, the quartz veinlets formed at 260–400°C. Hypogene mineralization that formed the A veins occurred at 1.5 km below the palaeosurface, indicating a relatively shallow depth as a porphyry deposit. Nevertheless, the δ<jats:sup>34</jats:sup>S<jats:sub>CDT</jats:sub> values of sulphides range from −2.0 to −0.1‰, inferring a magmatic origin. The Tasikmadu prospect shares some similarities compared with other porphyry deposits worldwide, but it also reveals unique characteristics that differ from others, for example, potassic‐altered rocks are only typified by secondary biotite without/rare secondary K‐feldspar reflecting the lack of magma contamination by continental crustal components. In addition, current surface geological features and shallow depth erosion level of the prospect may imply that the potential of Cu–Au mineralization underneath is still open to depth.","PeriodicalId":12784,"journal":{"name":"Geological Journal","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":1.4000,"publicationDate":"2024-08-17","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Geological Journal","FirstCategoryId":"89","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1002/gj.5042","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"地球科学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"GEOSCIENCES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Tasikmadu is a newly discovered porphyry Cu–Au prospect in the eastern Sunda arc, Indonesia. This study aimed to elucidate salient diagnostic characteristics and ore‐forming conditions of the prospect. Fieldwork and various laboratory analyses for a suite of representative samples were performed for mineralogy, bulk‐geochemistry, mineral chemistry and ore fluid characterization. The study area is composed of three diorite porphyries, that is, fine‐grained, medium‐grained and coarse‐grained diorite porphyry, respectively. The intrusions are calc‐alkaline with a high Sr/Y value, which is similar to many ore‐bearing intrusions in the eastern Sunda arc. Ore mineralization occurs in quartz veins and veinlet stockwork, centred in the potassic zone, and dominated by chalcopyrite and bornite occurring in A and B veins, which cut earlier barren (EB) and M veins. The mineralization core has an average grade of 0.63 wt% Cu and 0.25 ppm Au, respectively. Outwardly, the potassic zone changes to the propylitic zone, which still bears copper in the quartz and pyrite veinlets, although the grade is low. Fluid inclusion microthermometry revealed that the A and B veins in the potassic zone formed at 464 and 390°C by hypersaline boiling fluids, respectively. The temperature temporally and spatially decreased, that is, in the propylitic zone, the quartz veinlets formed at 260–400°C. Hypogene mineralization that formed the A veins occurred at 1.5 km below the palaeosurface, indicating a relatively shallow depth as a porphyry deposit. Nevertheless, the δ34SCDT values of sulphides range from −2.0 to −0.1‰, inferring a magmatic origin. The Tasikmadu prospect shares some similarities compared with other porphyry deposits worldwide, but it also reveals unique characteristics that differ from others, for example, potassic‐altered rocks are only typified by secondary biotite without/rare secondary K‐feldspar reflecting the lack of magma contamination by continental crustal components. In addition, current surface geological features and shallow depth erosion level of the prospect may imply that the potential of Cu–Au mineralization underneath is still open to depth.
期刊介绍:
In recent years there has been a growth of specialist journals within geological sciences. Nevertheless, there is an important role for a journal of an interdisciplinary kind. Traditionally, GEOLOGICAL JOURNAL has been such a journal and continues in its aim of promoting interest in all branches of the Geological Sciences, through publication of original research papers and review articles. The journal publishes Special Issues with a common theme or regional coverage e.g. Chinese Dinosaurs; Tectonics of the Eastern Mediterranean, Triassic basins of the Central and North Atlantic Borderlands). These are extensively cited.
The Journal has a particular interest in publishing papers on regional case studies from any global locality which have conclusions of general interest. Such papers may emphasize aspects across the full spectrum of geological sciences.