Distribution of critical metals in evolving pyrite from massive sulfide ores of the Iberian Pyrite Belt
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Abstract
With >90 known deposits containing original reserves of >2400 Mt of sulfide ore, the Iberian Pyrite Belt (IPB) is
the largest volcanogenic massive sulfide (VMS) province on Earth. In these evolving mineral systems, texturally
different pyrite exhibits characteristic mineralogy and trace element fingerprints. Pyrite (Py-1), which is well
preserved in the polymetallic ores that crystallized at the earliest stage of VMS deposit formation, consists of
kernels of pyrite framboids surrounded by concentric colloform bands and ended by faceted outlines. It is rich in
some metals like Pb, Zn, Sb and As (mostly hosted as nano-to-micron-sized particles, including galena, tetrahedrite
and arsenopyrite) but depleted in Cu, Co and Bi. In contrast, pyrite from the pyritic and Cu-rich ore
overprinted by late fluids exhibits spongy-looking (Py-2) or homogenous (Py-3) cores surrounded by external
facets with crystallographic continuity across the whole single grains due to re-crystallization. Py-2 is depleted in
most trace elements with the exception of Au and Bi, which occur both in solid solutions and as nano-to-micronsized
inclusions. Py-3 has the highest Cu, Ag, Co and Ni (mainly associated to nano-to-micron-sized particles of
tennantite, chalcopyrite and gersdorffite) and the lowest Au contents in the form of native gold. The progressive
increase in metal contents from inner to outer parts of Py-1 matches with the onset of the economic metal
endowment of VMS deposits in the IPB, whereas Py-2 and Py-3 are associated with metal shoot processes that led
to both leached and high-grade ores, very likely when mafic rocks were emplaced into the footwall of the
deposits
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Bibliographic citation
Yesares, L., Piña, R., González-Jiménez, J. M., Sáez, R., Ruíz de Almodóvar, G., Fanlo, I., Manuel Pons, J., & Vega, R. (2023). Distribution of critical metals in evolving pyrite from massive sulfide ores of the Iberian Pyrite Belt. In Ore Geology Reviews (Vol. 153, p. 105275). Elsevier BV. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.oregeorev.2022.105275











