Transient non-soluble noble metal transport in hydrothermal ore systems
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Cano, Néstor; González Jiménez, José María; Camprubí, Antoni; Morales-Casique, Eric; González-Partida, EduardoEditorial
Springer Nature
Fecha
2025-03-13Referencia bibliográfica
Cano, N., González-Jiménez, J.M., Camprubí, A. et al. Transient non-soluble noble metal transport in hydrothermal ore systems. Nat Commun 16, 2521 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-57740-7
Patrocinador
MCIN/AEI/10.13039/50110001133 and “ERDF" (PID2022-138768OB-I00); PAPIIT-DGAPA-UNAM (grant IN102123); CONAHCyT - Posgrado en Ciencias de La Tierra-UNAM - Geological Society of America (grant 14012-24)Resumen
The transport of noble metals (Au, Ag) by metal-rich melts in hydrothermal ore
systems is now acknowledged as a complementary mechanism to complexing
ligands in solution. However, it is unclear where/when both mechanisms
coexist and whether metal-rich melts can be physically transported by
hydrothermal fluids. Here we show evidence for a suspension-like transport of
nano-to-micron-sized metal-rich sulfide-sulfosalt melts within epithermal
fluids at <400 °C, forming irregular and bleb-like polymineral inclusions of AgAu-Cu-Pb(-Fe-Zn)-As-Sb-S-Se upon cooling. These polymineral inclusions, 5 nm
to 40 µm in size, are cogenetic with fluid inclusions in quartz. Numerical
modeling based on particle fluidization and settling theory shows hydrothermal fluids can mechanically transport metal-rich sulfide-sulfosalt nanomicromelts at fluid flow rates <10–1 m/s. The chemical similarity between nanoand micron-scale polymineral inclusions suggests the coalescence of nanomelt
precursors during transient transport from their source(s) to deposition sites,
playing a key role in noble metal mineralization.





