A NEW APPROACH TO UNDERSTANDING ORE FORMATION PROCESSES: MULTIPLE SULFUR ISOTOPE ANALYSIS OF SULFIDE MINERALS OF THE BUSHVELD COMPLEX
When a mafic magma intrudes into wall rocks that
record
mass-independent fractionation of sulfur isotopes (older than ≈2.0 Ga),
then
multiple sulfur isotope analysis can be used to trace magma-wall rock
interactions. This technique can trace
whether
sulfur in the ore deposit is derived from surrounding wall rock. The technique can also determine whether
individual sulfide phases within a single hand sample have the same
source of
sulfur and whether they are equilibrium phases.
We demonstrate the applicability of this technique to the
Platreef ore
horizon of the Bushveld Complex,
Solid-earth fractionation processes of 33S/32S, 34S/32S, and 36S/32S are mass-dependent, characterized by: D33S ≈ 0.515 x d34S and D36S ≈ 1.92 x d34S. Deviation from mass-dependent isotopic fractionation is quantified as D33S (≈ d33S - 0.515 x d34S) and D36S (≈ d36S - 1.92 x d34S). Proxies for ‘primary’ igneous sulfur (meteorites, peridotite xenoliths) possess D33S and D36S values near 0 ‰. Similarly, relatively pristine Bushveld igneous rocks have D33S and D36S values near 0 ‰ (D33S values ≤ 0.2‰ and D36S between -1 ‰ and 1 ‰). On the other hand, sedimentary wall rocks surrounding the Platreef exhibit substantial non-zero D33S and D36S values (up to ≈ 5.0 ‰ and down to ≈ -3.6 ‰ respectively). As D33S and D36S are chemically-conservative tracers, non-zero D33S and D36S values in Platreef sulfide ore minerals would indicate material transfer of S from the surrounding wall rock. Values of D33S within the Platreef range up to 0.55 ‰ showing evidence for some interaction between the magma and the wall rock.
Sulfide minerals were separated to determine whether different phases had the same S source and whether they were in equilibrium. Most samples contained chalcopyrite, pyrrhotite and pentlandite. The pyrrhotite and pentlandite were inseparable. For the analyses, chalcopyrite was separated from a pentlandite/pyrrhotite mixture. Each pair of coexisting sulfide separates is consistent with single D33S and D36S values, suggesting that the phases within each sample share the same source of S. In some samples d34Sccp > d34Spent/pyrr and in others the relationship is the reverse. This suggests that at least some of the samples are not consistent with equilibrium fractionation of 34S/32S.