著者
竹内 常彦 舟山 裕士 山岡 一雄 阿部 宏
出版者
Japan Association of Mineralogical Sciences
雑誌
岩石鉱物鉱床学会誌 (ISSN:00214825)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.54, no.4, pp.113-126, 1965-10-05 (Released:2008-08-07)
参考文献数
29
被引用文献数
1 1

The Obanazawa mine is situated about 9.5km north-east of Obanazawa City, Yamagata Prefecture, northeastern Japan. The ore deposit is made up of copper-zinc quartz veins developed in dacite and dacitictuff of Miocene age. Ore minerals are chalcopyrite, sphalerite, pyrite, tetrahedrite and ferberite. The pyrite has either pentagonal dodecahedral form or colloform textures. This is the first occurrence of ferberite in the green tuff region of the inner zone of northeastern Japan. Hexagonal; platy crystals of pyrite are observed in the vein found in the Komatazawa valley. It seems that they were crystallized as pyrrhotite single crystals and altered to pyrite aggregates after the formation of the vein. Gangue mineral is quartz accompanied by a small amount of barite. Argillization (mainly sericitization) and silicification are distinguished. Ferberite was identified by means of X-ray and chemical analysis; the composition is (Fe0.90 Mn0.10)WO4. Occurrence of ferberite and pyrite after pyrrhotite means that the veins may have formed at high temperature but the properties of other vein minerals suggest that they crystallized at low temperature. They have been explained as a telescoping phenomena of xenothermal type deposits in the greentuff region. The Obanazawa mine is situated at the intersection of N-S and NWSE main structural lines of northeastern Japan ; the basement of this area seems to be uplifted. The mineral assemblages of this ore deposit may be explained by assuming that a subvolcanic magma chamber exists in this area.