Suprasolidus and hydrothermal controls on tungsten mineralization in granite-greisen systems: insights from Degana and Balda deposits, northwest India
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Abstract
Peraluminous granitic rocks are widely recognized as sources of hydrothermal fluids
responsible for tungsten (W) mineralization, though the anatectic origin of these granites
remains underexplored. While the evolution of hydrothermal fluids and mechanisms of
mineralization have been extensively studied, the source of iron (Fe) for wolframite
precipitation, and the exact mechanism behind it, remain topics of debate. Some researchers
argue that fluid-rock interactions supply the necessary Fe for wolframite formation, while
others suggest that the fluid already contains sufficient Fe, with boiling and phase separation
acting as the primary drivers of wolframite precipitation.
To investigate the anatectic origin of granite associated with W(±Sn) deposits and the
mechanism of wolframite precipitation, this study focuses on two types of tungsten
mineralization in NW India. The first is linked to an endogreisen system at Degana, where
mineralization is primarily confined to veins and disseminated forms within greisen pervasive
in granite. The second involves an exogreisen system at Balda, where mineralization occurs as
vein-type deposits within greisenized schist rocks. This study examines the origins and
formation of these deposits by analyzing both supra-solidus and sub-solidus processes, using
an integrated approach that includes phase equilibria modeling, trace element analysis, mineral
chemistry (major and trace elements), whole-rock geochemistry, and fluid inclusion studies.
The study highlights the importance of supra-solidus processes, such as source rock
composition, melting models, and fractional crystallization, alongside sub-solidus processes,
including fluid chemistry and fluid-rock interaction, in shaping tungsten deposits in the region.
For the W-Sn ore localities in NW India, the metapelitic country rock composition serves as
the basis for open-system phase equilibria modeling, which evaluates batch melting,
accumulated fractional melting, and fractional crystallization to assess their impact on the W
Sn budget of the granitic melt. Partial melting (~30-35%) of the metapelitic source rock,
involving muscovite and biotite dehydration, plays a key role in determining the major element
composition and the W and Sn content of the resulting melt. Fractional crystallization
significantly enhances ore-metal concentrations, with accumulated fractional melting
producing a more metal-enriched granitic melt (W: 141 ppm, Sn: 455 ppm) compared to batch
melting (W: 92 ppm, Sn: 355 ppm). This underscores the potential of chemically mature
metasediments to generate metal-fertile granitic melts, highlighting the importance of recycled
sediments pre-enriched in W and Sn for peraluminous granite formation.
The study also examines B-poor and B-rich peraluminous intrusions (Degana and Balda
granites) in NW India, with a focus on their alteration patterns and the evolution of pre-ore and
ore-stage fluids to better understand the role of hydrothermal fluid chemistry and fluid-rock
interactions in tungsten precipitation. Greisenization, driven by moderate- to high-salinity
H2O-CO2 fluids, resulted in the formation of quartz veins, wolframite-bearing greisenized
granitic wall rocks, and stockwork greisen veins in Degana, along with mineralized quartz
veins and greisenized metapelites in the Sirohi region. Both tri- and dioctahedral micas played
essential roles in W enrichment by influencing fluid composition and tungsten solubility. The
study constrains the pressure-temperature conditions of W enrichment (380–450°C and 1.2
1.8 kbar) and highlights post-magmatic potassic alteration as a critical pre-conditioning process
for ore formation. The key mechanism for wolframite precipitation is boiling, which caused
phase separation within the fluid system, leading to wolframite deposition in veins.