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Journal of Geochemical Exploration 89 (2006) 124 128

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Hydrothermal alteration and fluid inclusion study of the Lower


Cretaceous porphyry CuAu deposit of Timaro,
Michoacn, Mexico
Carlos Garza-Gonzlez a,, Antoni Camprub b , Eduardo Gonzlez-Partida b ,
Germn Arriaga-Garca a , Fernando Rosique-Naranjo a
a
Facultad de Ingeniera, Universidad Nacional Autnoma de Mxico, Ciudad Universitaria, 04510 Mxico D.F., Mexico
b
Centro de Geociencias, Universidad Nacional Autnoma de Mxico, Campus Juriquilla, Carretera 57 km. 15.5,
76023 Santiago de Quertaro, Qro., Mexico
Received 11 August 2005; accepted 4 November 2005
Available online 23 March 2006

Abstract

The Timaro deposit in Michoacn state has been dated as Lower Cretaceous (Valanginian), though most of the porphyry deposits
in central Mexico were dated or have an attributed EoceneOligocene age. The host rocks belong to a volcanoplutonic complex
overlain by red conglomerates. These rocks were intruded by pre-Valanginian plutonic and hypabissal rocks. Propylitic, phyllic, and
argillic alteration assemblages developed, and their superimposition draws the evolution of the deposit. Stage I is represented by
propylitic assemblages, stage II contains the main ore forming stockworks and both phyllic and argillic assemblages, and stage III
contains late carbonatization assemblages. The obtained temperatures and salinities from inclusion fluids are low for a porphyry-type
deposit, but we interpret that the known part of the deposit represents the shallow portion of a bigger deposit. The evolution of
mineralizing fluids draws a dilution trend of brines from porphyry-like to epithermal-like stages. The richest ore zone is roughly
located between the 300 and 350 C isotherms, though unnoticed resources may occur at depth.
2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Keywords: Timaro; Mexico; Porphyry CuAu; Hydrothermal alteration; Fluid inclusions

1. Introduction Chiapas. The formation of porphyry type deposits in


northwestern Mexico is generally associated with
In south-central Mexico up to 16 porphyry type Laramide tectonomagmatic activity (7550 Ma; Clark
deposits have been identified. They can be generally et al., 1982; Damon et al., 1983), but in central Mexico
distributed into three ranges of age: (1) associated with the deposits that have been dated, or have an attributed
the Laramide orogeny, as La Sorpresa in Jalisco, (2) age, mostly formed during the EoceneOligocene
EoceneOligocene, as La Verde, Inguarn and Tumbis- (Valencia-Moreno et al., 2006). Two deposits, however,
cato in Michoacn, and (3) MiocenePliocene, as were recently reported to have formed between Upper
Ixtacamaxtitln in Puebla, Santa Fe and Tolimn in Jurassic and Lower Cretaceous: El Arco in Baja
California (164.1 0.4 Ma, ReOs; Valencia et al.,
Corresponding author. 2004), and Timaro in Michoacn (140 to 131 Ma, UPb
E-mail address: cgarza@correo.unam.mx (C. Garza-Gonzlez). and Ar/Ar; Garza-Gonzlez et al., 2004: A. Iriondo,
0375-6742/$ - see front matter 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
doi:10.1016/j.gexplo.2005.11.046
C. Garza-Gonzlez et al. / Journal of Geochemical Exploration 89 (2006) 124128 125

2005, pers. commun.). These ages will widen explora- SW of Mexico City, within the Sierra Madre del Sur
tion efforts to previously neglected areas, especially in (SMS) and close to the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt
southern Mexico. Estimated grades for the porphyry (TMVB). In this zone are found the northernmost out-
CuAu deposit of Timaro are 0.60% Cu and 0.1 g/t Au crops of intrusive Cretaceous rocks of the SMS (Fig. 1).
for 500 Mt (Garza-Gonzlez et al., 2004). Despite the The host rocks belong to a pre-Valanginian volcano-
economic importance of porphyry type deposits in plutonic complex (Garza-Gonzlez et al., 2004) that
Mexico, these deposits still lack systematic studies on includes porphyry andesites, subvolcanic breccias,
their mineralogy and fluid chemistry, and the metallo- aglomerates, and calcalkaline dacite flows on top, all
genic provinces that contain them also need further overlain by red conglomerates. These rocks were
regional characterization. intruded by dioritic and tonalitic plutonic and hypabissal
This paper is the first attempt to characterize the rocks. These rocks can be characterized as primitive
temperature and composition of the mineralizing fluids tholeiites formed in an island arc setting, from their trace
and their evolution in the Timaro porphyry copper element composition (Garza-Gonzlez et al., 2004). The
deposit, by means of fluid inclusion microthermometry. above complex was intruded by the Tuzantla batholith
(Fig. 1), whose composition varies from quartz
2. Regional geology monzonite to granodiorite with calcalkaline affinity,
close to the compositional field of adakites. These rocks
The Timaro porphyry copper deposit is located in have yielded UPb ages in zircon of 132.3 1.4 and
the northeastern part of the Michoacn state, 155 km 131.0 1.1 Ma, respectively (Garza-Gonzlez et al.,

Fig. 1. Geological map of the Timaro area, Michoacn. Key: SMO = Sierra Madre Occidental, SMS = Sierra Madre del Sur, TMVB = Trans-Mexican
Volcanic Belt.
126 C. Garza-Gonzlez et al. / Journal of Geochemical Exploration 89 (2006) 124128

2004). Another part of the porphyry deposit occurs bodies in the west (Fig. 1). About 70% of the ore bodies
within a tonalitic stock, and in adamellitic, tonalitic, and are hosted by the above rocks, and the rest are hosted by
granitic hypabissal bodies that intrude the volcanoplu- microdiorites of the volcanoplutonic complex.
tonic complex. This second set of intrusive rocks shows Propylitic, phyllic, and argillic alteration assemblages
geochemical and geochronological evidence for a were identified in the deposit, and potassic alteration was
genetic link with the Tuzantla batholith. There is a late identified in the northern part of the Tuzantla batholith.
generation of monzonitic intrusives, but they are barren. The evolution of the deposit can be characterized by
The above rocks are unconformably overlain by Tertiary three major hypogenic alteration stages. Stage I, or early
and Quaternary volcanic and sedimentary rocks. hypogenic alteration, basically consists of propylitic
alteration, found either as a selective alteration of mafic
3. Structure of the deposit minerals, or as a chloriteepidotecalcitesericite
association in veinlets within a microdiorite intruded
The CuAu mineralization, mostly found as stock- by tonalite in the central part of the deposit. Such
works, is associated with the tonalitic stock in the east, alteration, however, is commonly pervasive and repre-
and with adamellitic and granitictonalitic hypabissal sented by the association of chlorite, epidote, carbonates,

Fig. 2. Above: Geological section of the Timaro deposit, showing the distribution of isotherms after Th of fluid inclusions, the ranges of Tmi, the
general distribution of alteration assemblages,and the position of the tonalite stock. Below: Correlation of average Th and Tmi obtained in fluid
inclusions in different associations of the deposit, in order of formation in the legend. Key: Th = temperature of homogenization, Tmi = temperature of
ice melting.
C. Garza-Gonzlez et al. / Journal of Geochemical Exploration 89 (2006) 124128 127

pyrite, sericite, various clay minerals actinolite, found are two-phase at room temperature, liquid-rich inclu-
in the southern part of the deposit. It contains deep sions with no daughter minerals. The fluid inclusions are
mineralized zones as stockworks with early chalcopy- mostly 5 to 15 m in size, but range up to 50 m.
ritepyrite and late bornite where phyllic alteration is S(NaCl,KCl) + L + V fluid inclusions, typical for most
superimposed on propylitic alteration. porphyry type deposits, were not found at the Timaro
Stage II, or intermediate hypogenic alteration, deposit, probably because drilling has not yet reached
contains both phyllic and argillic alteration assemblages. either any zone with boiled-off paleofluids or the
Most of the copper ores are associated with phyllic deepest part of metal ores. This deposit also exhibits a
alteration, as pyritechalcopyrite bornite stockworks. prominent late epithermal event that might allow us to
In tonalites, microtonalites and microdiorites, phyllic trace a complete evolution for mineralizing fluids.
alteration is usually pervasive and consists of quartz, The results are shown in Fig. 2. In stockworks,
sericite and pyrite ( chlorite and clay minerals), and a homogenization temperatures (Th) range from 295 to
conspicuous subordinate carbonatization. Phyllic alter- 350 C, and ice melting temperatures (Tmi) from 7 to
ation also occurs as abundant sericite stringers and 16 C. These correspond to calculated salinities that
veinlets, as massive sericite associations replacing range from 10.5 to 19.5 wt.% NaCl eq. (using the
plagioclase fenocrysts and microcrystals, and abundant equation for the H2ONaCl system of Bodnar, 1993),
quartzchloritepyritechalcopyrite bornite veinlets. and an average pressure of 145 bars. In phyllic and
A sericite sample from phyllic alteration in the host argillic assemblages, Th ranges from 110 and 295 C, Tmi
microgranite at the El Rey mine (Timaro area) yielded from 5 to 11 C, and salinities from 7.8 to 15 wt.%
a 40Ar/39Ar age of 140 5 Ma (A. Iriondo, 2005, pers. NaCl eq. In late calcite veinlets (stage III), Th ranges
comm.). The similarity between this age and the UPb from 101 to 220 C, Tmi from 3 to 11 C, and
ages obtained in the Tuzantla batholith, and their salinities from 5 to 15 wt.% NaCl eq., for an average
closeness in space suggests that both sets of intrusive pressure of 1.3 bars. Thus, the evolution of mineralizing
rocks are part of the same event and that they may have fluids shows a dilution of brines from porphyry to
formed from the same magmas. The argillic alteration epithermal stages, more noticeable regarding mini-
assemblage is superimposed on the phyllic assemblage, mum or average values than the variation ranges.
and occurs at depth between the propylitic and phyllic Microthermometric data from stage II display a bimodal
assemblages, at the contact zone between tonalites and distribution, but only due to the distribution of
microdiorites and between microdiorites and microto- temperatures of homogenization, and there is no clear
nalites. It generally consists of illitesmectite and other evidence for mixing at any stage. The richest ore zone is
clay minerals, chlorite, calcite, and epidote. This as- located roughly between the 300 and 350 C isotherms
semblage contains a pyritechalcopyrite stockwork (Fig. 2), but that perspective is expected to change as
grading up to 2730 ppb Au. deeper zones of the deposit are drilled and studied.
Stage III, or late hypogenic alteration, consists of
quartz sphalerite veinlets and two carbonatization 5. Conclusions
stages, the first of them associated with the last oc-
currence of chalcopyrite in the evolution of the deposit, The porphyry CuAu deposits at Timaro, Michoa-
and the second carbonatization stage is barren and may cn, Southern Mexico, is hosted by a pre-Valanginian
represent the final waning stage of hydrothermal activity volcanoplutonic complex, and is due to the intrusion of
in the deposit. mainly tonalitic hypabissal rocks dated as 132131 Ma
(UPb) and 140 5 Ma (Ar/Ar) that have a geochemical
4. Fluid inclusions signature similar to that of adakites. As porphyry-type
deposits in south-central Mexico were dated or have
A microthermometric study of fluid inclusions was attibuted EoceneOligocene ages, the ages obtained in
carried out on 23 samples from ore zones (stockworks), Timaro may necessarily change the exploration strat-
25 samples from phyllic and argillic alteration zones egies for this type of deposits in the region.
(stage II), and 16 samples from late calcite (stage III), The evolution of the deposit can be defined by the
obtained from both surface exposures in mine workings superimposition of alteration assemblages: stage I
and drill cores. The analyzed minerals were quartz and corresponds to propylitic alteration, stage II to phyllic
calcite. We analyzed only inclusions hosted by minerals and argillic alteration, and contains the main ores in
lacking evidence for recrystallization. Primary, second- stockwork zones, and stage III corresponds to late
ary, and pseudosecondary inclusions were found, which carbonatization.
128 C. Garza-Gonzlez et al. / Journal of Geochemical Exploration 89 (2006) 124128

In stockworks, homogenization temperatures (Th) References


range from 295 to 350 C, ice melting temperatures (Tmi)
from 7 to 16 C, and salinities from 10.5 to 19.5 wt.% Bodnar, R.J., 1993. Revised equation and table for determining the
NaCl eq. In phyllic and argillic assemblages Th ranges freezing point depression of H2ONaCl solutions. Geochimica et
Cosmochimica Acta 57, 683684.
from 110 and 295 C, Tmi from 5 to 11 C, and Clark, K.F., Foster, C.T., Damon, P.E., 1982. Cenozoic mineral
salinities from 7.8 to 15 wt.% NaCl eq. In late calcite deposits and subduction-related magmatic arcs in Mexico. Geo-
veinlets (stage III), Th ranges from 101 to 220 C, Tmi logical Society of America Bulletin 93, 533544.
from 3 to 11 C, and salinities from 5 to 15 wt.% Damon, P.E., Shafiqullah, M., Clark, K.F., 1983. Geochronology of
NaCl eq. These data suggest that the known part of the porphyry copper deposits and related mineralization of Mexico.
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 20 (6), 10521071.
deposit may only be its upper portion, and more Garza-Gonzlez, C., Gonzlez-Partida, E., Tritlla, J., Levresse, G.,
resources may be found at depth, that are related to Arriaga-Garca, G., Rosique-Naranjo, F., Medina-vila, J.J.,
more saline and hotter fluids, indicating more typical Iriondo, A., Aguilar-Lovera, A., Ziga-Hernndez, N., 2004.
temperatures for the environment of formation of a Evolucin magmtica en el prfido de cobre de Timaro,
porphyry-type deposit. Michoacn: evidencias del potencial CuAu en el sur de Mxico.
Libro de Resmenes, IV Reunin Nacional de Ciencias de la
Tierra, Juriquilla, Quertaro, Unin Geofsica Mexicana, p. 191.
Acknowledgements Valencia, V.A., Weber, B., Ruiz, J., Barra, F., Gehrels, G., Lpez-
Martnez, M., 2004. Geocronologa por ReOs y UPb del
This work was funded through the research project depsito tipo prfido CuAu de El Arco, Baja California, Mxico.
IN103703 granted by DGAPA-PAPIIT-UNAM. We also Libro de Resmenes, IV Reunin Nacional de Ciencias de la
Tierra, Juriquilla, Quertaro, Unin Geofsica Mexicana, p. 189.
thank the staff at the Timaro mine for their kind Valencia-Moreno, M., Ochoa-Landn, L., Noguez-Alcntara, B.,
assistance, and Juan Toms Vzquez, from the Centro de Ruiz, J., Prez-Segura, E., 2006. Metallogenic characteristics of
Geociencias for the elaboration of thin sections. We also porphyry copper deposits in Mexico and their position in a global
gratefully acknowledge the critical reviews of Steven context. Geologic Society of America Special Paper. (accepted).
Kesler and an anonymous referee.

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