Hydrothermal fluid flow along fault zones in the Harz Mountains led to widespread formation of economic vein-type Pb-Zn ore and Ba-F deposits during the Mesozoic. We reconstruct the fluid flow system responsible for the formation of these deposits using isotope ratios (δ 2 H and δ 18 O) and anion and cation contents of fluid inclusions in ore and gangue minerals. Building forward on extensive studies in the 1980s and 1990s, our new geochemical data reveal that seawater evaporation brines, which most likely originated from Zechstein evaporites, descended deeply into Paleozoic rocks to leach metals at depth. In Jurassic times, these metal-rich brines episodically recharged along fault zones and mixed with shallow crustal H 2 S-bearing brines. Primarily in the Upper Harz Mountains, this mixing system led to the formation of economic Pb-Zn-Cu mineralization, which locally shows banded textures with alternations of sulfide minerals and quartz or carbonate (mostly calcite). In the Middle and Lower Harz Mountains, Zechstein-derived brines interacted with K-and F-bearing basement rocks and/or magmatic rocks to deposit fluorite mineralization upon ascent in the Upper Cretaceous. The proposed model of mineralizing fluids originating as (evaporated) seawater has been shown to hold for numerous basin-hosted base-metal sulfide and fluoride deposits elsewhere in Europe.
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