The Roles of Transcrustal Magma- and Fluid-Conducting Faults in the Formation of Mineral Deposits
Issatayeva F. Abetov A. Umirova G. Abdullina A. Mustafin Z. Karpenko O.
June 2025Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)
Geosciences (Switzerland)
2025#15Issue 6
In this article, we consider the roles of transcrustal magma- and fluid-conducting faults (TCMFCFs) in the formation of mineral deposits, showing the importance of deep sources of heat and hydrothermal solutions in the genesis and history of deposit formation. As a result of the impact on the lithosphere of mantle plumes rising along TCMFCFs, intense block deformations and tectonic movements are generated; rift systems, and volcanic–plutonic belts spatially combined with them, are formed; and intrusive bodies are introduced. These processes cause epithermal ore formation as a consequence of the impact of mantle plumes rising along TCMFCF to the lithosphere. At hydrocarbon fields, they play extremely important roles in conductive and convective heat, as well as in mass transfer to the area of hydrocarbon generation, determining the relationship between the processes of lithogenesis and tectogenesis, and activating the generation of hydrocarbons from oil and gas source rock. Detection of TCMFCFs was carried out using MMSS (the method of microseismic sounding) and MTSM (the magnetotelluric sounding method), in combination with other geological and geophysical data. Practical examples are provided for mineral deposits where subvertical transcrustal columns of increased permeability, traced to considerable depths, have been found; the nature of these unique structures is related to faults of pre-Paleozoic emplacement, which determined the fragmentation of the sub-crystalline structure of the Earth and later, while developing, inherited the conditions of volumetric fluid dynamics, where the residual forms of functioning of fluid-conducting thermohydrocolumns are granitoid batholiths and other magmatic bodies. Experimental modeling of deep processes allowed us to identify the quantum character of crystal structure interactions of minerals with “inert” gases under elevated thermobaric conditions. The roles of helium, nitrogen, and hydrogen in changing the physical properties of rocks, in accordance with their intrastructural diffusion, has been clarified; as a result of low-energy impact, stress fields are formed in the solid rock skeleton, the structures and textures of rocks are rearranged, and general porosity develops. As the pressure increases, energetic interactions intensify, leading to deformations, phase transitions, and the formation of chemical bonds under the conditions of an unstable geological environment, instability which grows with increasing gas saturation, pressure, and temperature. The processes of heat and mass transfer through TCMFCFs to the Earth’s surface occur in stages, accompanied by a release of energy that can manifest as explosions on the surface, in coal and ore mines, and during earthquakes and volcanic eruptions.
hydrocarbon deposits , microseismic and magnetoteluric sounding , oregenesis , transcrustal magma- and fluid-conducting faults
Text of the article Перейти на текст статьи
Department of Geology and Exploration of Mineral Deposits, Karaganda Technical University, Karaganda, 100000, Kazakhstan
Department of Geophysics and Seismology, Kazakh National Research Technical University, Almaty, 050013, Kazakhstan
Department of Development of Mineral Deposits, Karaganda Technical University, Karaganda, 100000, Kazakhstan
Department of Petroleum Geology, Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, Kyiv, 01033, Ukraine
Department of Geology and Exploration of Mineral Deposits
Department of Geophysics and Seismology
Department of Development of Mineral Deposits
Department of Petroleum Geology
10 лет помогаем публиковать статьи Международный издатель
Книга Публикация научной статьи Волощук 2026 Book Publication of a scientific article 2026