Metallogenesis in the Japanese island arc system
- 1 July 1978
- journal article
- Published by Geological Society of London in Journal of the Geological Society
- Vol. 135 (4) , 389-406
- https://doi.org/10.1144/gsjgs.135.4.0389
Abstract
Ore deposits in the Mesozoic and Cenozoic orogenic belts of the Japanese island arc system consist essentially of stratabound, vein and skarn types. The stratabound base-metal deposits, which are the main source of copper, are divided into the lead-free, chalcopyrite-pyrite, Besshi-type, which occur mainly in glaucophane schists (metamorphosed basaltic pyro-clastic rocks) of the Sanbagawa belt, and the lead-bearing, polymetallic, massive sulphide, Kuroko-type, associated with rhyolite extrusion. Both types are regarded as having been formed syngenetically in a submarine environment. Vein-type deposits are widely distributed and economically the most important for metals, containing more than 50 per cent of the available tin, tungsten, molybdenum, gold, silver and manganese. The ore deposits are genetically related to either 'geosynclinal basalt' or an andesite-dacite-rhyolite and plutonic association of island arc magmatism. Special attention is given to deposits of plutonic affinity. Most Japanese plutons are granitoids. Ore deposits associated with Cretaceous-Palaeogene granitoids in southwest Japan constitute two metallogenic provinces, characterised by W-Sn-Cu and Mo-Pb-Zn veins and skarns. Northeast Japan shows a similar, but reversed, zoning, with no tin. Miocene granitoids in southwest Japan are accompanied by tin and some copper mineralization. The Japanese granitoids consist of approximately equal proportions of magnetite-series and ilmenite-series rocks. The magnetite-series is thought to be derived from a parental magma generated from mafic igneous rocks of the upper mantle—lower crust and related to major subduction. The ilmenite-series, with which tin deposits may be associated, is ascribed to magma originating in the lower crust from sedimentary, metamorphic and granitoid rocks. These magma types appear to be the most important factors in producing the various metallogenic provinces in Japan.This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Late Paleozoic geosynclinal basalt and tectonism in the Japanese IslandsPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- Magma types of volcanic rocks and crustal history in the Japanese pre-Cenozoic geosynclinesPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- Relationship between chemical composition of Japanese Island-Arc volcanic rocks and gravimetric dataTectonophysics, 1978
- Significance of cyclic seawater as a possible determinant of rock alteration facies in the earth's crustGEOCHEMICAL JOURNAL, 1973
- A simulation of the Kuroko type mineralization in JapanGEOCHEMICAL JOURNAL, 1973
- COEXISTING BIOTITES AND HORNBLENDES FROM SOME GRANITIC ROCKS IN SOUTHERN KITAKAMI MOUNTAINS, JAPANThe Journal of the Japanese Association of Mineralogists, Petrologists and Economic Geologists, 1972
- Sulfur isotope study of the Kuroko-ores of the Shakanai No. 1 deposits, Akita Prefecture, JapanGEOCHEMICAL JOURNAL, 1971
- Sulfur isotope study of Kuroko-type and Kieslager-type strata-bound massive sulfide deposits in JapanGEOCHEMICAL JOURNAL, 1971
- K-Ar dating on the host rocks of the Taro mine, Iwate PrefectureThe Journal of the Japanese Association of Mineralogists, Petrologists and Economic Geologists, 1970
- On the igneous activities and the ore deposit at Hamanaka area, HokkaidoThe Journal of the Japanese Association of Mineralogists, Petrologists and Economic Geologists, 1959