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Geology of Ore Deposits | 2012

The Suzdal gold-sulfide deposit in the black shale of Eastern Kazakhstan

K.R. Kovalev; Yu. A. Kalinin; V. I. Polynov; E. L. Kydyrbekov; A. S. Borisenko; E.A. Naumov; M. I. Netesov; A. G. Klimenko; M.K. Kolesnikova

The Suzdal gold-sulfide deposit is situated in the northwestern part of the West Kalba gold belt in Eastern Kazakhstan and belongs to the genetic type of stringer-disseminated mineralized zones hosted in the Lower Carboniferous black-shale volcanic-carbonate-terrigenous sequences. Mineralization is controlled by the NE-trending Suzdal Fault. In the north, the deposit borders on the Early Triassic Semeytau volcanic-plutonic structure. Mineralization is superposed on the Late Paleozoic complex of metadolerite and quartz porphyry dikes. Ore deposition was a long-term process comprising four stages. The first stage was related to deposition of slightly auriferous pyrite syngenetic to host rocks. The second stage is characterized by formation of the first productive (with invisible gold) fine-acicular arsenopyrite mineralization accompanied by sericitization and localized in the tectonic zone. The stockwork ore with pocket-disseminated base-metal mineralization and free microscopic gold of the third stage is hosted in silicified rocks. The ore formation has been completed by quartz-stibnite veins superposed on all preceding types of mineralization. According to Ar/Ar dating of sericite, a chronological gap between the second and the third stages is estimated at 33 Ma. The deposit is an example of polygenetic and multistage mineralization.


Geology of Ore Deposits | 2015

Spatial-temporal and genetic relationships between gold and antimony mineralization at gold-sulfide deposits of the Ob-Zaisan folded zone

Yu. A. Kalinin; E.A. Naumov; Alexander S. Borisenko; K.R. Kovalev; A. I. Antropova

The Ob-Zaisan folded zone is a fragment of a single structure composed of Paleozoic sedimentary and volcanogenic rocks (mainly black shale), which was formed at the margin of the Siberian continent and features a common set of magmatic complexes and mineral systems. However, there are some differences that determine the specific geological and metallogenic features of the Irtysh-Zaisan and Kolyvan-Tomsk fragments of the Ob-Zaisan folded zone. In the gold deposits of the West Kalba and Kolyvan-Tomsk auriferous belt, the main gold-sulfide mineralization is controlled by zones of shearing and dynamic metamorphism in carbonaceous carbonate-terrigenous rocks. This type of mineralization was formed in tectonic blocks in a compressional setting. Antimony mineralization is characterized by brecciated textures and the vein-like morphology of ore bodies, reflecting extensional tectonics. At some deposits (Zherek, Mirazh, Dalny), Sb mineralization is spatially separated from the main gold-sulfide ores and shows cross-cutting relations to the principal ore-controlling structures. In other gold deposits, stibnite is spatially associated with disseminated gold-sulfide ores and forms mineral assemblages with Ni, Co, Au, Pb, and Fe (Alimbet, Zhanan, Legostaevskoe, Semiluzhenskoe, and Kamenskoe deposits).This study reveals no direct correlation between Au and Sb in gold-sulfide ores of these deposits. SEM analysis indicated the absence of free gold in stibnite veins. However, atomic absorption and electron microprobe analysis indicated the presence of “invisible gold” from a few ppm to several tens of ppm in the stibnite. High gold contents in the gold-sulfide ores overprinted by antimony mineralization (Suzdalskoe, Zhanan, and Legostaevskoe deposits) can be explained by the processes of regeneration and redeposition.The results of microstructural observations, isotope geochronology, studies of mineral assemblages and fluid inclusions in the ores from gold deposits of the Ob-Zaisan folded zone suggest that antimony mineralization was formed at gold-polysulfide stage, which was separated from the early ore pyrite-arsenopyrite stage by a 30 Ma time gap. It can be assumed that the essentially stibnite mineralization was formed at a separate stage and was separated from the gold-polysulfide mineralization by a 7 Ma interval of tectonic activity. Our Ar-Ar data on sericite from ore samples, combined with U-Pb data on zircons from igneous rocks and previous data from the literature show that there were two major stages of ore formation: the Early Permian (282-270 Ma) and the Early Triassic (250-240 Ma). Most researchers suggest that these stages of mineralization can be related to the epochs of intraplate magmatism that led to the formation of the Tarim (280 Ma) and Siberian (250 Ma) large igneous provinces. These global geological events are generally connected with the influence of Tarim and Siberian mantle plumes.


Geology of Ore Deposits | 2016

Disseminated gold–sulfide mineralization at the Zhaima deposit, eastern Kazakhstan

K.R. Kovalev; O. N. Kuzmina; B. A. Dyachkov; A. G. Vladimirov; Yu. A. Kalinin; E.A. Naumov; M.V. Kirillov; I. Yu. Annikova

The Zhaima gold–sulfide deposit is located in the northwestern part of the West Kalba gold belt in eastern Kazakhstan. The mineralization is hosted in Lower Carboniferous volcanic and carbonate rocks formed under conditions of marginal-sea and island-arc volcanic activity. The paper considers the mineralogy and geochemistry of primary gold–sulfide ore and Au-bearing weathering crusts. Au-bearing arsenopyrite–pyrite mineralization formed during only one productive stage. Disseminated, stringer–disseminated, and massive rocks are enriched in Ti, Cr, V, Cu, and Ni, which correspond to the mafic profile of basement. The main ores minerals are represented by finely acicular arsenopyrite containing Au (up to few tens of ppm) and cubic and pentagonal dodecahedral pyrite with sporadic submicroscopic inclusions of native gold. The sulfur isotopic composition of sulfides is close to that of the meteoritic standard (δ34S =–0.2 to +0.2). The 40Ar/39Ar age of three sericite samples from ore veinlets corresponds to the Early Permian: 279 ± 3.3, 275.6 ± 2.9, and 272.2 ± 2.9 Ma. The mantle source of sulfur, ore geochemistry, and spatial compatibility of mineralization with basic dikes allow us to speak about the existence of deep fluid–magmatic systems apparently conjugate with the Tarim plume.


Acta Geologica Sinica-english Edition | 2014

Antimony Mineralization at the Gold Deposits of the Ob‐Zaysan Folded Zone (Southern Siberia and Western Kazakhstan).

E.A. Naumov; Yu. A. Kalinin; K.R. Kovalev; A.I. Antropova

The Ob-Zaysan folded zone is a fragment of a single marginal-continental structure of the Siberian continent, made up of Paleozoic sedimentary and volcanogenic rocks (mainly black shale) and characterized by a common set of magmatic complexes and mineral systems. However, there are some differences which determine the geological and metallogenic specific features of the Irtysh-Zaysan and Kolyvan-Tomsk areas of the Ob-Zaysan folded zone. In the gold fields of these areas the main gold-sulfide mineralization (orogenic gold style) is controlled by sheared zones and is formed under tectonic compression in long-developing block structures.


Russian Geology and Geophysics | 2011

Gold-bearing arsenopyrite in eastern Kazakhstan gold-sulfide deposits

K.R. Kovalev; Yu. A. Kalinin; E.A. Naumov; M.K. Kolesnikova; V.N. Korolyuk


Russian Geology and Geophysics | 2009

Gold in the weathering crust at the Suzdal' deposit (Kazakhstan)

Yu. A. Kalinin; K.R. Kovalev; E.A. Naumov; M.V. Kirillov


Russian Geology and Geophysics | 2010

The stages and duration of formation of gold mineralization at copper-skarn deposits (Altai–Sayan folded area)

I.V. Gaskov; Alexander S. Borisenko; V.V. Babich; E.A. Naumov


Russian Geology and Geophysics | 2014

Relationship of antimony with gold mineralization in the ore districts of Eastern Kazakhstan

K.R. Kovalev; Yu. A. Kalinin; E.A. Naumov; M.K. Myagkaya


Acta Geologica Sinica-english Edition | 2014

Gold Deposits of the Yenisei Ridge (Russia) and Age of Its Formation

A.S. Borisenko; A. M. Sazonov; P.A. Nevolko; E.A. Naumov; S. Tessalina; K.R. Kovalev; V.P. Sukhorukov


Doklady Earth Sciences | 2018

Age of the Raygorodok Au-bearing Gabbro—Monzodiorite Massif (Northern Kazakhstan)

Fedor Zhimulev; Yu. A. Kalinin; V. P. Sukhorukov; E. De Pelsmaeker; Marc Poujol; K.R. Kovalev; Stijn Glorie; E.A. Naumov; R. Seltmann; J. De Grave

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K.R. Kovalev

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Yu. A. Kalinin

Russian Academy of Sciences

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M.K. Kolesnikova

Russian Academy of Sciences

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M.V. Kirillov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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A. G. Vladimirov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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A. I. Antropova

Russian Academy of Sciences

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A. M. Sazonov

Siberian Federal University

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A. S. Borisenko

Russian Academy of Sciences

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A.I. Antropova

Novosibirsk State University

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