Publication
The Journal of the Geological Society of Japan 124, 12, 995-1020 (2018)
Ore deposit formed on a paleo-seafloor in the Japanese accretionary complex
Author
Nozaki, T., Fujinaga, K. and Kato, Y.
Abstract
Basement rocks of the Japanese islands consist mainly of accretionary complexes younger than ca. 400 Ma. Various types of stratiform and/or massive ore deposits that formed on a paleo-seafloor are
hosted within the Japanese accretionary complexes. In the present
study, we review recent progress on metallogenetic research and outline unsolved problems related to these types of deposits, such as the
Besshi-type sulfide deposits, bedded ferromanganese deposits, and
bedded manganese deposits related/unrelated to greenstone. Besshi-type deposits within the Sanbagawa Belt formed by vigorous hydrothermal activity at a pelagic mid-ocean ridge during the Late Jurassic, and sulfide ore was preserved by the concomitant Late Jurassic
Ocean Anoxic Event. Besshi-type deposits, which are closely associated with in-situ greenstone in the Northern Shimanto Belt, formed
by ridge subduction during the Late Cretaceous. Certain aspects of
the genesis of other Besshi-type deposits in the m?lange zone of the
Northern Shimanto and Chichibu Belts remain unresolved, although
the Tsuchikura deposit occurs as an olistolith. Bedded ferromanganese deposits, so-called umber deposits, are derived from hydrothermal sediments at the periphery of the mid-ocean ridge, whereas bedded manganese deposits closely associated with greenstones were
originally produced as hydrothermal sediments around seamounts.
Bedded manganese deposits that occur within pelagic chert sequences without greenstone are considered to be formed by drastic changes in the redox state of deep water due to the influx of oxic and silicapoor surface seawater into anoxic and high-manganese stagnant
deep water. However, whether bedded manganese deposits without
greenstone are hydrothermal or hydrogenous in origin remains controversial. Although the problems are complex, future multi-disciplinary research should clarify many of the unsolved questions related to metallogenesis.