Many sedimentary-exhalative (SEDEX) sulfide deposits have been subject to regional metamorphism and, if the metamorphic grade was high enough, this could have resulted in sulfide anatexis. Although experiments and textures indeed showed that some deposits were partially molten, there is an ongoing debate as to the extent to which metamorphosed ore deposits were molten. Since some SEDEX deposits underwent amphibolite to granulite facies metamorphism, not only sulfides but also the host silicate rocks should have reached anatectic conditions. Due to the two immiscible silicate and sulfide melts, the formation of typical mingling and emulsion textures, as already known from magmatic sulfide deposits, should form. To test this hypothesis, we investigate sulfide-silicate textures from the granulite-facies Bodenmais SEDEX deposit (Germany). Textures from Bodenmais are similar to magmatic sulfide deposits including sulfide-matrix breccia, emulsion textures, pegmatitic leucosomes, and massive sulfides overlain by net-textured intergrowths of refractory quartz, which is interpreted to be a relic of silicate anatexis. Minerals crystallized during the interaction of both immiscible melts differ in their chemistry compared to the same minerals found in the adjacent migmatitic host rocks: for example, garnet in sulfides is Mn-rich (spessartine), but Fe-rich (almandine) in the migmatites and sulfide-enclosed cordierite is more enriched in Mg (Mg/(Mg + Fe): 0.84) than migmatitic cordierite (Mg/(Mg + Fe): 0.54). The textures themselves, their spatial arrangement within the deposit, the differences in mineral chemistry, and the observed crystallization sequence provide unequivocal evidence that the sulfides at Bodenmais were molten to a large extent under granulite facies conditions.
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