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Textural identification and interpretation for ore deposits and associated gangue minerals are tools necessary for understanding the processes involved in the genesis of these deposits, which in turn is very important for prospecting for other similar economic bodies.
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Importance of studying textures Textural identification and interpretation for ore deposits and associated gangue minerals are tools necessary for understanding the processes involved in the genesis of these deposits, which in turn is very important for prospecting for other similar economic bodies. Specifically, textural studies are useful for: 1- Understanding the timing of formation of the ore minerals relative to the host rocks and their structures 2- Determining the sequence of events or depositional history within an ore body 3- Determining the rates of cooling or of ore mineral accumulation (in some cases). 4- Identifying the equilibrium mineral assemblages, which in turn are necessary for understanding phase relations and the correct interpretation of geothermometric results.
Textures of economic ore deposits
I- Magmatic ores: 1- Cumulus textures : result from the settling of an ore deposit from a crystallizing magma. The most common example is chromite which occurs as a cumulus phase relative to pyroxenes. 2- Intergranular or intercumulus textures : where the ore mineral occurs as an intergranular anhedral phase relative to the other gangue minerals. In such cases, this ore mineral crystallizes late in the magmatic sequence (relative to the other gangue minerals) so takes up the shape of the intergranular spaces left behind. Examples include numerous sulfides, in many cases crystallizing from liquids immiscible with, and of lower melting point than the silicate magma. 3- Exsolution textures : Where one phase separates from another as a result of incomplete miscibility during cooling, and has a tendency to concentrate along certain crystallographic directions (e.g. cleavage planes). Examples include the occurrence of ferrian ilmenite in titanohematite or ilmenite in ulvospinel. Exsolution textures usually indicate a slow or intermediate cooling rate. In some cases, exsolution textures are difficult to tell apart from some textures that form by replacement.
II- Textures of hydrothermal ore deposits and skarns: A- Replacement textures :
Replacement is the process of almost simultaneous solution and deposition by which a new mineral of partly or totally different chemical composition may grow in the body of an old mineral or mineral aggregate. According to this definition, replacement is accompanied by very little or no change in the volume of the rock. However, in practice, this process is accompanied by expansion or contraction (and it has proven quite challenging to write balanced chemical reactions representing replacement textures in which the volume of the products and reactants is the same!). Replacement is more common at high T and P where open spaces are very limited or unavailable, and fluid flow is rather difficult. It also depends largely on the chemical composition and reactivity of both the host rock and the hydrothermal solution.
In general, it has been observed that certain minerals replace others preferentially. Accordingly, a set of "rules" has been proposed:
Geol 481: Earth Resources El-Shazly, A. K., 2004
a) Sulfides replace gangue or ore minerals b) Gangue minerals replace host rock, but not the ore minerals c) Oxides replace host rock and gangue, but rarely replace sulfides.
Criteria for identifying replacement textures:
Geol 481: Earth Resources El-Shazly, A. K., 2004
III- Textures characteristic of surfacial or near surface environments and processes: Under surfacial conditions, ore minerals may be deposited from colloidal solutions. A colloid is defined as a system consisting of two phases; one diffused in the other. Colloidal particles range in size between ions in a true solution and particles that are < 10 -3^ cm in a coarse suspension. The colloidal material may be solid, liquid or gas
dispersed in another solid, liquid or gas. Colloidal solutions believed to be responsible for the formation of ore deposits usually consist of solids dispersed in liquids and are called "sols". In such sols, colloidal particles commonly adsorb either cations or anions, and thus acquire similar charges which cause them to repel each other, preventing them from coagulation. If an electrolyte is added to such a sol, the colloidal particles are neutralized and flocculate giving rise to a variety of textures which include: a) Botryoidal or reniform aggregates b) Banding or very fine layering c) Leisegang rings These textures are broadly lumped as " colloform " textures (Figs. 14 & 15). Because some colloform textures were observed in some hydrothermal deposits, it was believed that some hydrothermal solutions were colloids. However, fluid inclusion analysis showed that hydrothermal solutions are too saline to have been in the colloidal state, and the term "colloform" should be considered descriptive and non-genetic. In the surfacial environment, colloidal solutions are common. Criteria used to identify a colloform texture as a product of deposition from a colloidal solution include:
Geol 481: Earth Resources El-Shazly, A. K., 2004