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Model ages of fracture fillings and mineralogical and geochemical evidence for water-rock interaction in fractures in granite: The Melechov Massif, Czech Republic

Publication at Faculty of Science |
2018

Abstract

The mineral, chemical and Pb-isotope composition were investigated in the host granite and low-temperature open-fracture fillings from the 100 m deep borehole PDM-1 located in the Melechov Massif of the Moldanubian Batholith. The fillings are dominated by limonite and clay-mineral (illite, kaolinite, montmorillonite, nontronite, chlorite) mixtures, accompanied by minor amounts of residual minerals from the parent rock (quartz, feldspars, zircon, monazite).

Chemically contrasting fracture assemblages occur mainly at lesser depths ( < 55 m), where a high content of Fe-oxides and hydroxides locally with Mn-oxides is common. High Fe is correlated with a very high content of U, P, and V, whereas Mn is accompanied by Li, Co, Ni, Zn and Ba.

Enrichment in mechanically transported primary accessory minerals and their gravity sorting in the flow of paleogroundwater is the most probable explanation for high REE, Y, Zr, Hf and Th in some samples. The fracture fillings mostly have higher U/Pb and Pb-206/Pb-207 ratios than the parent rock, which enables them to be dated by a one-stage model.

The model ages indicate major U-Pb redistribution event around 130 Ma which is assumed to represent the main episode of formation of clay-rich fillings, and minor events at 280 Ma and in the Tertiary, whereas the Quaternary processes were of minimal importance. Formation of fractures in the fresh granite, however, occurred shortly after its solidification (ca. 300-320 Ma).