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Evidence for a high-level porphyritic intrusion below the Sunnyside epithermal vein deposit, Colorado

November 1, 2023

High-temperature quartz veins were identified in drill core at ~600 m below the Sunnyside epithermal base and pre-cious metal deposit in southwestern Colorado. The veins consist of early anhedral quartz that shows a bluish ca-thodoluminescence emission and hosts heterogenous silicate melt inclusions. The early quartz is overgrown by a later generation of quartz that exhibits euhedral termina-tions with oscillatory growth zones showing a bright pink to purple cathodoluminescence emission. Both types of quartz are crosscut by ubiquitous planes of vapor-rich inclusions and some hypersaline liquid inclusions. In addi-tion, secondary planes of intermediate-density inclusions occur. The petrographic characteristics of the two quartz types are similar to those in ‘A’ and ‘B’ veins encountered in shallow- and intermediate-depth porphyry deposits. The relationships at Sunnyside imply that these high-temperature veins formed from magmatic-hydrothermal fluids derived from an intrusion located not far below the lowest level of drilling. Sunnyside appears to be a rare example of an epithermal deposit that is directly connected to a high-level porphyritic intrusion.

Publication Year 2023
Title Evidence for a high-level porphyritic intrusion below the Sunnyside epithermal vein deposit, Colorado
Authors Mario A Guzman, Thomas Monecke, T. James Reynolds, Thomas J. Casadevall
Publication Type Conference Paper
Publication Subtype Conference Paper
Index ID 70243903
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Geology, Geophysics, and Geochemistry Science Center