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Featured researches published by Fan Hongrui.


Acta Geologica Sinica-english Edition | 2015

Fluid Inclusion and Carbon-Oxygen Isotope Studies of the Hujiayu Cu Deposit, Zhongtiao Mountains, China: Implications for Syn-metamorphic Copper Remobilization

Qiu Zhengjie; Fan Hongrui; Liu Xuan; Wen Bojie; Hu Fangfang; Yang Kuifeng; Guo Shuanglong; Zhao Fengchun

The Hujiayu Cu deposit, representative of the “HuBi-type” Cu deposits in the Zhongtiao Mountains district in the southern edge of the North China Craton, is primarily hosted in graphite-bearing schists and carbonate rocks. The ore minerals comprise mainly chalcopyrite, with minor sphalerite, siegenite [(Co, Ni)3S4], and clausthalite [Pb(S,Se)]. The gangue minerals are mainly quartz and dolomite, with minor albite. Four fluid inclusion types were recognized in the chalcopyrite-pyrite-dolomite-quartz veins, including CO2-rich inclusions (type I), low-salinity, liquid-dominated, biphase aqueous inclusions (type II), solid-bearing aqueous inclusions (type III), and solid-bearing aqueous-carbonic inclusions (type IV). Type I inclusion can be further divided into two sub-types, i.e., monophase CO2 inclusions (type Ia) and biphase CO2-rich inclusions (with a visible aqueous phase), and type III inclusion is divided into a subtype with a halite daughter mineral (type IIIa) and a subtype with multiple solids (type IIIb). Various fluid inclusion assemblages (FIAs) were identified through petrographic observations, and were classified into four groups. The group-1 FIA, consisting of monophase CO2 inclusions (type Ia), homogenized into the liquid phase in a large range of temperatures from −1 to 28°C, suggesting post-entrapment modification. The group-2 FIA consists of type Ib, IIIb and IV inclusions, and is interpreted to reflect fluid immiscibility. The group-3 FIA comprises type II and IIIa inclusions, and the group-4 FIA consists of type II inclusions with consistent phase ratios. The group-1 and group-2 FIAs are interpreted to be entrapped during mineralization, whereas group-3 and group-4 FIAs probably represent the post-mineralization fluids. The solid CO2 melting temperatures range from −60.6 to 56.6° C and from −66.0 to −63.4° C for type Ia and type IV inclusions, respectively. The homogenization temperatures for type II inclusions range from 132 to 170°C for group-3 FIAs and 115 to 219°C for group-4 FIAs. The halite melting temperatures range from 530 to 562°C for type IIIb and IV inclusions, whereas those for type IIIa inclusions range from 198 to 398°C. Laser Raman and SEM-EDS results show that the gas species in fluid inclusions are mainly CO2 with minor CH4, and the solids are dominated by calcite and halite. The calcite in the hosting marble and dolomite in the hydrothermal veins have δ13CV-PDB values of −1.2 to 1.2‰ and −1.2 to −6.3‰, and δ18OV-SMOW values of 14.0 to 20.8 ‰ and 13.2 to 14.3 ‰, respectively. The fluid inclusion and carbon-oxygen isotope data suggest that the ore-forming fluids were probably derived from metamorphic fluids, which had reacted with organic matter in sedimentary rocks or graphite and undergone phase separation at 1.4–1.8 kbar and 230–240°C, after peak metamorphism. It is proposed that the Hujiayu Cu deposit consists of two mineralization stages. The early stage mineralization, characterized by disseminated and veinlet copper sulfides, probably took place in an environment similar to sediment-hosted stratiform copper mineralization. Ore minerals formed in this precursor mineralization stage were remobilized and enriched in the late metamorphic hydrothermal stage, leading to the formation of thick quartz–dolomite–sulfides veins.


Archive | 2010

Zircon geochronology of basement rocks from the Bayan Obo area, Inner Mongolia, and tectonic implications

Fan Hongrui; Yang Kuifeng; Hu Fangfang; Wang Kaiyi; Zhai MingGuo


Acta Geologica Sinica-english Edition | 2010

Bayan Obo Carbonatites: Texture Evidence from Polyphase Intrusive and Extrusive Carbonatites

Wang Kaiyi; Fan Hongrui; Yang Kuifeng; Hu Fangfang; Ma Yuguang


Archive | 2010

Characteristics of ore-forming fluids and ore genesis in the Shicheng gold deposit, Jiaodong Peninsula of eastern China

Lan Tingguang; Fan Hongrui; Hu Fangfang; Yang Kuifeng; Liu Xuan; Liu ZhenHao; Song YuBo; Yu Hu


Yanshi Xuebao | 2016

Mesozoic gold mineralization in the Jiaodong and Korean peninsulas

Fan Hongrui; Feng Kai; Li Xinghui; Hu Fangfang; Yang Kuifeng


Archive | 2010

Intrusion sequence of carbonatite dykes and REE accumulation mechanism in Bayan Obo district

Yang Kuifeng; Fan Hongrui; Hu Fangfang; Wang Kaiyi


Yanshi Xuebao | 2016

膠-朝鮮半島における中生代の鉱化作用【JST・京大機械翻訳】

Fan Hongrui; Feng Kai; Li Xinghui; Hu Fangfang; Yang Kuifeng


Dixue Qianyuan(Yingwenban) | 2016

巨大Bayan Obo REE Nb Fe鉱床,中国:論争と鉱床成因【Powered by NICT】

Fan Hongrui; Yang Kuifeng; Hu Fangfang; Liu Shang; Wang Kaiyi


Journal of Jilin University | 2015

jiao dong guo jia ling xing hua gang yan lei duo qi mai chong shi yan jiang hun he zuo yong : lai zi zuo shi wei qu u-pb nian dai xue he di qiu hua xue zhi yue

Jiang Peng; Fan Hongrui; Yang Kuifeng; Liu Xuan


Kuangchuang Dizhi | 2011

Ore-forming fluid and stable isotope studies of Dazhuangzi gold deposit in Jiaodong Peninsula

Liu Xuan; Fan Hongrui; Hu Fangfang; Zheng Xiaoli; Lan Tingguang; Yang Kuifeng

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Yang Kuifeng

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Hu Fangfang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Liu Xuan

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Wang Kaiyi

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Ma Yuguang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Qiu Zhengjie

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Wen Bojie

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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