Stable isotope analyses were carried out on sulfides from three mesothermal gold deposits of the Rio Itapicuru greenstone belt (Fazenda Brasileiro, Maria Preta, and Ambrosio mines) to constrain the source of the hydrothermal solutions. The ores are hosted in a volcanic-sedimentary sequence that evolved in an Archean cratonic area reworked during the Transamazonic event (ca. 2.1 Ga). The ore bodies were deposited by hydrothermal solutions in polycyclic shear zones generated by Paleoproterozoic dynamothermal metamorphism. In the Fazenda Brasileiro deposit, δ 34 S values for arsenopyrite from mineralized quartz veins range from 5.5‰ to +1.0‰; pyrites from Au-rich mineralized veins from the Maria Preta deposit yielded δ 34 S values ranging from +8.9‰ to +6.9‰, in agreement with published δ 34 S data (+0.1‰ to +6.6‰). A narrow spread in the δ 34 S values for Au-rich sulfides from both deposits indicates that gold deposition occurred under conditions involving a small range of fO 2 and fH 2 O. A barren, galena-rich vein from the Ambrosio deposit yielded δ 34 S values in the -7.6‰ to -9.9‰ range, probably reflecting mixing of different sources. These results, compared to stable sulfur isotope modeling of lode gold deposits, indicate that the studied deposits formed from hydrothermal solutions of metamorphic origin followed by duluite solutions of magmatic origin.
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