Journal of

GEOsciences

  (Formerly Journal of the Czech Geological Society)

Original paper

Martin Števko, Jiří Sejkora

Bismuth, lead-bismuth and lead-antimony sulfosalts from the granite-hosted hydrothermal quartz veins at the Elisabeth mine, Gemerská Poloma, Spišsko-gemerské rudohorie Mts., Slovakia

Journal of Geosciences, volume 66 (2021), issue 3, 157 - 173

DOI: http://doi.org/10.3190/jgeosci.328



An interesting assemblage of bismuth and complex lead-bismuth and lead-antimony sulfosalts have been identified in samples from hydrothermal quartz veins hosted in S-type granitic rocks at the Elisabeth mine near Gemerská Poloma, Slovakia. We provide the first detailed study of the chemical composition of sulfosalts from the hydrothermal veins directly related to the specialized (Sn-W-F enriched) Gemeric granites. Bismuthinite derivates (bismuthinite and phases with naik ranging from 21.3 to 23.7 and 30.3), minerals of the kobellite-tintinaite series (with Sb/(Sb+Bi) atomic ratio ranging considerably between 0.13 and 0.71), giessenite-izoklakeite series (with Sb/(Sb+Bi) from 0.26 to 0.33) as well as Pb-Sb sulfosalts (mainly jamesonite, boulangerite, robinsonite and their Bi-rich varieties) are common. Rare Bi-enriched rouxelite, bournonite and minerals of the tetrahedrite group were also observed. The two distinct types of sulfosalts associations were distinguished, each related to the different type of host rock and with variable Bi/Sb ratio. The first is represented predominantly by Bi-rich sulfosalts (bismuthinite derivates, kobellite, giessenite-izoklakeite) and occurs in the quartz veins hosted in P-enriched leucogranite. The second association is developed only in hydrothermal quartz veins hosted in porphyric granites and except of Bi (bismuthinite derivates) also significant amounts of Sb-rich sulfosalts (tintinaite, boulangerite, robinsonite, jamesonite, rouxelite, bournonite and tetrahedrite-(Zn) to tetrahedrite-(Fe)) are present.

Journal of Geosciences, Published by © Czech Geological Society, with support from the Czech Geological Survey.
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ISSN: 1803-1943 (online), 1802-6222 (print)
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Policy: Open Access

ISSN: 1802-6222

E-ISSN: 1803-1943