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Jinchuan Intrusion

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Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 December 2022
Economic Geology (2022) 117 (8): 1809–1825.
...Jian Kang; Xie-Yan Song; Ting-Mao Long; Qing-Lin Liang; Stephen J. Barnes; Lie-Meng Chen; De-Xian Li; Qi-Xing Ai; Ya-Lin Gao Abstract The Jinchuan Ni-Cu-platinum group element (PGE) sulfide deposit is one of the world’s major magmatic sulfide deposits. The Jinchuan intrusion originally consists...
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Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 December 2013
Economic Geology (2013) 108 (8): 1793–1811.
...Lie-Meng Chen; Xie-Yan Song; Reid R. Keays; Yu-Long Tian; Yu-Shan Wang; Yu-Feng Deng; Jia-Fei Xiao Abstract The Jinchuan Ni-Cu-(PGE) deposit is one of the world’s largest magmatic sulfide deposits. Recent studies have suggested that the Jinchuan intrusion originally comprised two individual...
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Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 January 2007
Economic Geology (2007) 102 (1): 75–94.
...Jérémie Lehmann; Nicholas Arndt; Brian Windley; Mei-Fu Zhou; Christina Yan Wang; Chris Harris Abstract Field mapping and petrological-geochemical investigation of the Jinchuan intrusion in north-central China clarifies how the intrusion was emplaced and provides a new model that explains how its...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 April 2004
The Canadian Mineralogist (2004) 42 (2): 371–392.
...Sybrand A. De Waal; Zhanghua Xu; Chusi Li; Hassina Mouri Abstract The Jinchuan ultramafic intrusion in western China has an elongate surface expression of about 6000 by 350 meters. It is one of several mafic–ultramafic intrusions found in the fault-bounded Longshoushan uplifted terrane...
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Image
Geologic map of the Jinchuan intrusion and surrounding rocks (modified from a 1965 unpub. report from the Sixth Geological Team of the Gansu Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources).
Published: 01 December 2023
Fig. 2. Geologic map of the Jinchuan intrusion and surrounding rocks (modified from a 1965 unpub. report from the Sixth Geological Team of the Gansu Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources).
Image
Occurrences of apatite from the lherzolite of the Jinchuan intrusion. A.-D. BSE (backscattered-electron) images of apatite in the lherzolite. B. Magnification of the rectangular area shown in (A). E. CL image of apatite in the lherzolite. F. BSE image for the same visual field as in (E). Mineral abbreviations: Amp = amphibole, Ap = apatite, Ccp = chalcopyrite, Chr = chromite, Mon = monazite, Phl = phlogopite, Pl = plagioclase, Ulv = ulvite.
Published: 01 August 2021
Fig. 3. Occurrences of apatite from the lherzolite of the Jinchuan intrusion. A.-D. BSE (backscattered-electron) images of apatite in the lherzolite. B. Magnification of the rectangular area shown in (A). E. CL image of apatite in the lherzolite. F. BSE image for the same visual field as in (E
Image
Microtextures of apatite from the lherzolite of the Jinchuan intrusion. A.-C. BSE images of apatite grains. D. Magnification of the rectangular area shown in Figure (C). Abbreviations: Ab = albite, Aln = allanite, Amp = amphibole, Cpx = clinopyroxene, Mon = monazite.
Published: 01 August 2021
Fig. 4. Microtextures of apatite from the lherzolite of the Jinchuan intrusion. A.-C. BSE images of apatite grains. D. Magnification of the rectangular area shown in Figure (C). Abbreviations: Ab = albite, Aln = allanite, Amp = amphibole, Cpx = clinopyroxene, Mon = monazite.
Image
Published: 01 June 2014
Table X Estimated chemical composition of the Samapleu and Jinchuan intrusion primary magmas.
Image
(a). Geologic map of the Jinchuan intrusion and cross sections of II-14 and II-36 in segment II, showing concentric lithologic zonation in the west part of the Eastern intrusion. (b). Cross section of the Western intrusion; cross section of the exploration lines of III-5 in segment III and I-24, I-16, and I-6 in segment I; and Cu-rich orebody beneath the intrusion found during underground exploration. Samples of this study are collected from ZK 71 (JC06-201 to JC06-248), ZK59 (ZK59-1 to ZK59-25), Location A (JC06-801 to JC06-804), Location B (JC06-806 to JC06-820), Location C (JC06-821 to JC06-822), Location D (I24-1 to I24-7), Location E (JC06-JC06-823), and Location F (L07-1 to L07-14). Modified after Sixth Geological Unit (1981, 1984), Jinchuan Nonferrous Metal Corporation (1997, 2003), Tang and Li (1995), and Song et al. (2009).
Published: 01 December 2013
Fig. 2 (a). Geologic map of the Jinchuan intrusion and cross sections of II-14 and II-36 in segment II, showing concentric lithologic zonation in the west part of the Eastern intrusion. (b). Cross section of the Western intrusion; cross section of the exploration lines of III-5 in segment III
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(a). Geologic map of the Jinchuan intrusion and surrounding rocks. The Roman numerals identify four of five mining districts. The insets show the location within China and the geology of the Longshoushan belt. The position of the Tamazigou section is show in the larger inset. (b). Cross sections through the Jinchuan intrusion. The map was originally from Tang (1993) but has been modified by Chai and Naldrett (1992a), with additional detail added here from an unpublished 1:1000 map of Jin Ao, Jinchuan Mining Company.
Published: 01 January 2007
F ig . 1. (a). Geologic map of the Jinchuan intrusion and surrounding rocks. The Roman numerals identify four of five mining districts. The insets show the location within China and the geology of the Longshoushan belt. The position of the Tamazigou section is show in the larger inset. (b
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Map of the main part of the Jinchuan intrusion in Mining District II (simplified from an unpublished 1:1000 map of Jin Ao, Jinchuan Mining Company), showing locations of detailed maps and sections (Figs. 5, 6, 11).
Published: 01 January 2007
F ig . 3. Map of the main part of the Jinchuan intrusion in Mining District II (simplified from an unpublished 1:1000 map of Jin Ao, Jinchuan Mining Company), showing locations of detailed maps and sections (Figs. 5 , 6 , 11 ).
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Section across the southeastern end of the Jinchuan intrusion in mining Mining District II, at 38°28′17 N, 102°10′39 E. The section lies below and to the right of the part of the intrusion shown in Figure 3. The ornamentation indicates the direction of foliation in each of the fault-bounded blocks.
Published: 01 January 2007
F ig . 11. Section across the southeastern end of the Jinchuan intrusion in mining Mining District II, at 38°28′17 N, 102°10′39 E. The section lies below and to the right of the part of the intrusion shown in Figure 3 . The ornamentation indicates the direction of foliation in each of the fault
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Relative abundance of rock types in the Jinchuan intrusion derived from normative data (see text for details).
Published: 01 April 2004
F ig . 6. Relative abundance of rock types in the Jinchuan intrusion derived from normative data (see text for details).
Series: Reviews in Economic Geology
Published: 01 January 2011
DOI: 10.5382/Rev.17.06
EISBN: 9781629490243
... T able 1. Compositions (wt %) of Estimated Primary and Parental Magmas for the Jinchuan Intrusion, Selected Ferropicrite and High Mg Basalt Sample SiO 2 TiO 2 Al 2 O 3 Cr 2 O 3 FeO Fe 2 O 3 MnO MgO CaO Na 2 O K 2 O P 2 O 5 Total Jinchuan primary...
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Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 May 1999
Economic Geology (1999) 94 (3): 343–356.
...Stephen J. Barnes; Tang Zhong-Li Abstract Chrome spinels occur in olivine-rich cumulates in the Jinchuan intrusion, host to one of the largest known accumulations of magmatic Ni-Cu in the world. The chemistry and mode of occurrence of these spinels is compared with those in two other similar...
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 November 2005
Economic Geology (2005) 100 (7): 1349–1361.
...Edward M. Ripley; Arindam Sarkar; Chusi Li Abstract The Jinchuan intrusion hosts one of the largest magmatic Ni-Cu sulfide deposits in the world. Net-textured and disseminated pyrrhotite, pentlandite, and chalcopyrite are found in olivine-rich rocks (60–80 vol %) that occur as a northwest-southeast...
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Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 December 2000
Economic Geology (2000) 95 (8): 1701–1717.
... intrusions of the Karoo flood basalt province. Jinchuan spinels share the features of high Ti contents and anomalously low equilibration temperatures with the Noril’sk-Talnakh spinels. Mg ilmenites are a feature of the Siberian and Jinchuan intrusions. They are attributed to crystallization of ilmenite from...
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Image
Schematic section showing the stratigraphy of the northeastern part of the Longshoushan belt, as exposed along the Tamazigou Valley, and the approximate locations of the Jinchuan intrusion and Tamazigou peridotite lenses. The Jinchuan intrusion is oriented approximately parallel to the near-vertical disconformity at the base of the Sinian Formation. Rotation of the section brings both the disconformity and the intrusion to a horizontal orientation.
Published: 01 January 2007
F ig . 2. Schematic section showing the stratigraphy of the northeastern part of the Longshoushan belt, as exposed along the Tamazigou Valley, and the approximate locations of the Jinchuan intrusion and Tamazigou peridotite lenses. The Jinchuan intrusion is oriented approximately parallel
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Geological map of the Jinchuan sulfide deposit Ore body1 as a longitudinal section through the Jinchuan intrusion.
Published: 29 May 2018
Figure 7.  Geological map of the Jinchuan sulfide deposit Ore body1 as a longitudinal section through the Jinchuan intrusion.
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Plot of initial 87Sr/86Sr isotope ratios vs. εNdt values for the Jinchuan intrusion and country rocks. The parameters used in the mixing calculation: uncontaminated mantle-derived magma: εNdt = –2.72, (87Sr/86Sr)i = 0.7050, 9 ppm Nd, 115 ppm Sr (Sun and McDonough, 1989; Xu et al., 2008); Sr-Nd elemental and isotope data for the Jinchuan intrusion and country rocks are from this study, Duan et al. (2016), and Ding et al. (2021). The mantle array is from DePaolo and Wasserburg (1979). Equations for isotopic mixing calculation are from Allègre (2008). The detailed end-member compositions are listed in Appendix Table A6. Note: Pl = plagioclase.
Published: 01 December 2023
Fig. 8. Plot of initial 87 Sr/ 86 Sr isotope ratios vs. ε N d t values for the Jinchuan intrusion and country rocks. The parameters used in the mixing calculation: uncontaminated mantle-derived magma: ε N d t = –2.72, ( 87 Sr/ 86 Sr) i = 0.7050, 9 ppm