Petroleum Migration, Fluid Mixing, and Halokinesis as the Main Ore-Forming Processes at the Peridiapiric Jbel Tirremi Fluorite-Barite Hydrothermal Deposit, Northeastern Morocco
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2014
abstract:
The Jbel Tirremi fluorite-barite ± sulfide deposit in northeastern Morocco is hosted in a Jurassic-aged structurally
high carbonate platform known as the Jbel Tirremi dome. The host rocks consist of unmetamorphosed,
flat-lying early Jurassic dolomitized limestones, locally intruded by Eocene lamprophyre dikes. The orebodies
consist mostly of fluorite and barite, and occur as open-space fillings and partial to massive replacement of the
enclosing medium- to coarse-grained dolomitized limestones. The ore mineralogy is dominated by fluorite of
different colors and habits, barite, and, to a lesser extent, sulfides. Rare earth element compositions along with
fluid inclusion, halogen and isotopic data suggest that the fluorite barite mineralization and the spatially associated
Eocene alkaline magmatism are petrogenetically unrelated, pointing instead to the regional circulation of
hydrothermal basinal brines mixed to various degrees with meteoric water in a dominantly closed rock-buffered
system at progressively higher temperatures and fluid/rock ratios.
In this respect, fluid inclusion microthermometric measurements show that the ore-bearing hydrothermal
system developed in two separate stages of fluorite-barite mineralization, as also revealed by isotopic data. Both
stages precipitated from saline fluids at shallow crustal levels (i.e., <5 km), and were related, in varying degrees,
to different stages of basin evolution and salt dome growth (salt mobilization and mineralization). During the first
stage, the ore fluid was a highly saline aqueous brine with a total salinity up to 44.2 wt % NaCl + KCl equiv, at
temperatures >=82°C and possibly up to 218°C, whereas in the second stage the mineralizing fluid had a similar
temperature range, but lower salinities (~20-10 wt % NaCl equiv). The recorded high salinities are interpreted
to represent the involvement of a mixture of halite dissolution water and evaporated seawater component.
Oxygen (d18O = 21.7 to 29.6? V-SMOW) and carbon (d13C = -7.9 to 0.2? V-PDB) isotope data along with
strontium (87Sr/86Sr = 0.70300-070789) and lead (206Pb/204Pb = 17.961-20.96, 207Pb/204Pb = 15.511-15.697,
208Pb/204Pb = 37.784-39.993) isotope ratios suggest the involvement of a mixture of oil-bearing fluids, basinal
brines, and meteoric fluids that interacted extensively with the early Jurassic host carbonates, the underlying
Triassic salt-bearing diapir, associated siliciclastic rocks, and the highly fractionated and greisenized Hercynian
granitic crystalline basement, resulting in the release of fluoride, metals, and other constituents to form the Jbel
Tirremi deposit.
Petroleum-bearing fluid, released from overpressured portions of the Guercif Basin at lithostatic pressures,
and bittern brines dominated the first stage of mineralization. Mixing of saline, oxidized, CaCl2- and sulfate-rich
bittern brine with oil-bearing fluid resulted in fluorite precipitation of stage I. Conversely, during the second
stage of mineralization, the hydrothermal system was open to the influx of oxidized meteoric water as a consequence
of the upward migration of the Triassic salt-bearing diapir and associated pressure decrease.
The shift from stage I to stage II is associated with the evolution of the system from lithostatic to mostly
hydrostatic pressure conditions. Stage I mineralization is thought to have occurred during the Late Miocene in
response to rapid sedimentation and high subsidence rates and subsequent hydrocarbon migration associated
with the outward migration of the Rif thrust front. Conversely, stage II mineralization occurred coevally with
the uplift phase during Tortonian time.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Petroleum Migration; Fluid Mixing; Halokinesis
List of contributors:
Castorina, Francesca
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