Mineralogy, chemistry, and fluid-aided evolution of the Pea Ridge Fe oxide-(Y + REE) deposit, southeast Missouri, USA
Mineralogy, chemistry, and fluid-aided evolution of the Pea Ridge Fe oxide-(Y + REE) deposit, southeast Missouri, USA (in A special issue devoted to Proterozoic iron oxide-apatite (+ or -REE) and iron oxide copper-gold and affiliated deposits of southeast Missouri, USA, and the Great Bear magmatic zone, Northwest Territories, Canada, John F. Slack (prefacer), Louise Corriveau (prefacer) and Murray W. Hitzman (prefacer))
Economic Geology and the Bulletin of the Society of Economic Geologists (December 2016) 111 (8): 1963-1984
- alteration
- breccia pipes
- Cambrian
- chemical composition
- crystal chemistry
- electron probe data
- experimental studies
- fluid inclusions
- fluorapatite
- geologic thermometry
- igneous rocks
- inclusions
- intergrowths
- intrusions
- iron ores
- isotope ratios
- isotopes
- Lamotte Sandstone
- mass transfer
- Mesoproterozoic
- metal ores
- metals
- metasomatism
- mineral composition
- mineral inclusions
- Missouri
- monazite
- O-18/O-16
- ore bodies
- oxygen
- Paleozoic
- phosphates
- pipes
- Precambrian
- Proterozoic
- rare earth deposits
- rare earths
- recrystallization
- reworking
- rhyolites
- stable isotopes
- temperature
- textures
- thin sections
- United States
- Upper Cambrian
- upper Precambrian
- volcanic rocks
- xenotime
- yttrium
- zoning
- southeastern Missouri
- Pea Ridge Deposit
- kiruna-type deposits
The Kiruna-type Pea Ridge iron oxide-apatite (IOA) deposit is hosted by a sequence of 1.47 Ga rhyolite tuffs of the St. Francois Mountains, southeast Missouri, USA. It consists of a series of altered zones composed mainly of amphibole, magnetite, hematite, and quartz, together with the presence of several rare earth element (Y + REE)-rich breccia pipes. In many cases, the fluorapatite within these zones is rich in inclusions of monazite, iron oxide, and quartz inclusions, plus minor xenotime. Monazite and minor xenotime are also found intergrown as inclusions in the fluorapatite, as well as in surrounding recrystallized magnetite and hematite in the magnetite ore. Monazite and xenotime typically occur as inclusions within both oxides. Monazite-(Ce) and xenotime-(Y) are both relatively poor (<2 wt %) in ThO (sub 2) and UO (sub 2) No significant compositional differences exist in the (Y + REE) chemistry between monazite and xenotime inclusions in fluorapatite compared to grains intergrown with magnetite and hematite, suggesting that these two REE-rich minerals are cogenetic. Monazite-xenotime geothermometry and geochronology of monazite inclusions in fluorapatite provide evidence that formation/remobilization of the (Y + REE) phosphates took place at ca. 50 degrees to 400 degrees C, approximately 5 to 10 m.y. after emplacement of the main iron oxide-phosphate orebody. Evidence from field relationships and fluid inclusion chemistry, together with the massive recrystallization and remobilization of fluorapatite, monazite, xenotime, and iron oxides at Pea Ridge, suggest a subvolcanic origin coupled with a strong metasomatic reworking of the IOA deposit.