Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2445/158759
Title: The Discovery of the Romero VMS Deposit and Its Bearing on the Metallogenic Evolution of Hispaniola during the Cretaceous
Author: Torró i Abat, Lisard
Proenza Fernández, Joaquín Antonio
Espaillat, Julio
Belén-Manzeta, Albert Joan
Román-Alday, María Clara
Amarante, Alberto
González, Norverto
Espinoza, Jorge
Roman-Alpiste, Manuel Jesús
Nelson, Carl E.
Keywords: Jaciments minerals
Roques volcàniques
Antilles
Mineral deposits
Volcanic rocks
West Indies
Issue Date: 6-Nov-2018
Publisher: MDPI
Abstract: The recently discovered Romero deposit, located in the Tres Palmas district, Cordillera Central of the Dominican Republic, has probable reserves of 840,000 oz gold, 980,000 oz silver and 136 Mlb copper. Mineralization is hosted by intermediate volcanic and volcaniclastic rocks of the lower stratigraphic sequence of the Cretaceous Tireo formation. The andesitic host rocks yield a U-Pb zircon concordia age of 116 ± 10 Ma. Au-Ag-Cu(-Zn) mineralization is divided into: (1) an upper domain with stacked massive sulfide lenses and sulfide dissemination within a 20-m-thick level of massive anhydrite-gypsum nodules, and (2) a lower domain with a high-grade stockwork mineralization in the form of cm-scale veins with open space fillings of fibrous silica and chalcopyrite, sphalerite, pyrite (+electrum ± Au-Ag tellurides). The δ34S values of sulfides from the upper (−7.6 and +0.9 ) and lower (−2.4 and +5.6 ) domains are consistent with a heterogeneous sourcing of S, probably combining inorganically and organically induced reduction of Albian-Aptian seawater sulfate. Despite this, a magmatic source for sulfur cannot be discarded. The δ34S (+19.2 and +20.0 ) and δ18O (+12.5 and +14.2 ) values of anhydrite-gypsum nodules are also consistent with a seawater sulfate source and suggest crystallization in equilibrium with aqueous sulfides at temperatures higher than 250 °C. These data point to a classification of Romero as a volcanogenic massive sulfide (VMS) deposit formed in an axial position of the Greater Antilles paleo-arc in connection with island arc tholeiitic magmatism during a steady-state subduction regime. Circulation of hydrothermal fluids could have been promoted by a local extensional tectonic regime expressed in the Tres Palmas district as a graben structure.
Note: Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.3390/min8110507
It is part of: Minerals, 2018, vol. 8, num. 11, p. 507
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2445/158759
Related resource: https://doi.org/10.3390/min8110507
ISSN: 2075-163X
Appears in Collections:Articles publicats en revistes (Mineralogia, Petrologia i Geologia Aplicada)

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
684750.pdf7.56 MBAdobe PDFView/Open


This item is licensed under a Creative Commons License Creative Commons