26 resultados para Ambient zoning

em Université de Lausanne, Switzerland


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Excessive exposure to solar ultraviolet (UV) is the main cause of skin cancer. Specific prevention should be further developed to target overexposed or highly vulnerable populations. A better characterisation of anatomical UV exposure patterns is however needed for specific prevention. To develop a regression model for predicting the UV exposure ratio (ER, ratio between the anatomical dose and the corresponding ground level dose) for each body site without requiring individual measurements. A 3D numeric model (SimUVEx) was used to compute ER for various body sites and postures. A multiple fractional polynomial regression analysis was performed to identify predictors of ER. The regression model used simulation data and its performance was tested on an independent data set. Two input variables were sufficient to explain ER: the cosine of the maximal daily solar zenith angle and the fraction of the sky visible from the body site. The regression model was in good agreement with the simulated data ER (R(2)=0.988). Relative errors up to +20% and -10% were found in daily doses predictions, whereas an average relative error of only 2.4% (-0.03% to 5.4%) was found in yearly dose predictions. The regression model predicts accurately ER and UV doses on the basis of readily available data such as global UV erythemal irradiance measured at ground surface stations or inferred from satellite information. It renders the development of exposure data on a wide temporal and geographical scale possible and opens broad perspectives for epidemiological studies and skin cancer prevention.

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Several quartz crystals from three different Alpine vein localities and of known petrologic setting and evolution have been examined for possible elemental sector zoning in order to help to constrain the mechanisms of such trace element incorporation. Using different in situ techniques (EMPA, LA-ICPMS, SIMS, FTIR-spectroscopy), it was established that Al and Li concentrations can exceed several hundreds of ppma for distinct growth zones within crystals formed at temperatures of about 300 degrees C or less and that also display patterns of cyclic growth when examined with cathodoluminescence. In contrast, crystals formed at temperatures closer to 400 degrees C and without visible cyclic growth have low concentrations of Al and Li as well as other trace elements. Al and Li contents are correlated along profiles measured within the crystals and in general their proportion does not change along the profiles. No relationships were found between Al, Na, and K, and germanium has a qualitative relationship with Al. FTIR spectra also show OH(-) absorption bands within the quartz, with higher amplitudes in zones rich in Al and Li. Sector zoning is present. It is most pronounced between prismatic and rhombohedral faces of the same growth zone, but also between the rhombohedral faces of r and z, which contain different amounts of trace elements. The sector zoning is also expressed by changes in the Li/Al ratio, with higher ratios in 17 compared to r faces. It is concluded that the incorporation of trace elements into hydrothermal quartz from Alpine veins is influenced by growth mechanisms and surface-structures of the growing quartz crystals, the influence of which may change as a function of temperature, pH, as well as the chemical composition of the fluid.

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A tritium (H-3) profile was constructed in a long-screened well (LSW) of the Fontainebleau Sands Aquifer (France), and the data were combined with temperature logs to gain insight into the potential effects of the ambient vertical flow (AVF) of water through the well on the natural aquifer stratification. AVF is commonly taken into account in wells located in fracture aquifers or intercepting two different aquifers with distinct hydraulic heads. However, due to the vertical hydraulic gradient of the flow lines intercepted by wells, AVF of groundwater is a common process within any type of aquifer. The detection of 3H in the deeper parts of the studied well ( approximate depth 50m), where H-3-free groundwater is expected, indicates that shallow young water is being transported downwards through the well itself. The temperature logs show a nearly zero gradient with depth, far below the mean geothermal gradient in sedimentary basins. The results show that the age distribution of groundwater samples might be biased in relation to the age distribution in the surroundings of the well. The use of environmental tracers to investigate aquifer properties, particularly in LSWs, is then limited by the effects of the AVF of water that naturally occurs through the well.

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The ability to withstand environmental temperature variation is essential for plant survival. Former studies in Arabidopsis revealed that light signalling pathways had a potentially unique role in shielding plant growth and development from seasonal and daily fluctuations in temperature. In this paper we describe the molecular circuitry through which the light receptors cry1 and phyB buffer the impact of warm ambient temperatures. We show that the light signalling component HFR1 acts to minimise the potentially devastating effects of elevated temperature on plant physiology. Light is known to stabilise levels of HFR1 protein by suppressing proteasome-mediated destruction of HFR1. We demonstrate that light-dependent accumulation and activity of HFR1 are highly temperature dependent. The increased potency of HFR1 at warmer temperatures provides an important restraint on PIF4 that drives elongation growth. We show that warm ambient temperatures promote the accumulation of phosphorylated PIF4. However, repression of PIF4 activity by phyB and cry1 (via HFR1) is critical for controlling growth and maintaining physiology as temperatures rise. Loss of this light-mediated restraint has severe consequences for adult plants which have greatly reduced biomass.

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Rockfall hazard zoning is usually achieved using a qualitative estimate of hazard, and not an absolute scale. In Switzerland, danger maps, which correspond to a hazard zoning depending on the intensity of the considered phenomenon (e.g. kinetic energy for rockfalls), are replacing hazard maps. Basically, the danger grows with the mean frequency and with the intensity of the rockfall. This principle based on intensity thresholds may also be applied to other intensity threshold values than those used in Switzerland for rockfall hazard zoning method, i.e. danger mapping. In this paper, we explore the effect of slope geometry and rockfall frequency on the rockfall hazard zoning. First, the transition from 2D zoning to 3D zoning based on rockfall trajectory simulation is examined; then, its dependency on slope geometry is emphasized. The spatial extent of hazard zones is examined, showing that limits may vary widely depending on the rockfall frequency. This approach is especially dedicated to highly populated regions, because the hazard zoning has to be very fine in order to delineate the greatest possible territory containing acceptable risks.

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We have modeled numerically the seismic response of a poroelastic inclusion with properties applicable to an oil reservoir that interacts with an ambient wavefield. The model includes wave-induced fluid flow caused by pressure differences between mesoscopic-scale (i.e., in the order of centimeters to meters) heterogeneities. We used a viscoelastic approximation on the macroscopic scale to implement the attenuation and dispersion resulting from this mesoscopic-scale theory in numerical simulations of wave propagation on the kilometer scale. This upscaling method includes finite-element modeling of wave-induced fluid flow to determine effective seismic properties of the poroelastic media, such as attenuation of P- and S-waves. The fitted, equivalent, viscoelastic behavior is implemented in finite-difference wave propagation simulations. With this two-stage process, we model numerically the quasi-poroelastic wave-propagation on the kilometer scale and study the impact of fluid properties and fluid saturation on the modeled seismic amplitudes. In particular, we addressed the question of whether poroelastic effects within an oil reservoir may be a plausible explanation for low-frequency ambient wavefield modifications observed at oil fields in recent years. Our results indicate that ambient wavefield modification is expected to occur for oil reservoirs exhibiting high attenuation. Whether or not such modifications can be detected in surface recordings, however, will depend on acquisition design and noise mitigation processing as well as site-specific conditions, such as the geologic complexity of the subsurface, the nature of the ambient wavefield, and the amount of surface noise.

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Asbestos is an industrial term to describe some fibrous silicate minerals, which belong to the amphiboles or serpentines group. Six minerals are defined as asbestos including: chrysotile (white asbestos), amosite (grunerite, brown asbestos), crocidolite (riebeckite, blue asbestos), anthophyllite, tremolite and actonolite, but only in their fibrous form. In 1973, the IARC (International Agency for Research on Cancer) classified the asbestos minerals as carcinogenic substances (IARC,1973). The Swiss threshold limit (VME) is 0.01 fibre/ml (SUVA, 2007). Asbestos in Switzerland has been prohibited since 1990, but this doesn't mean we are over asbestos. Up to 20'000 tonnes/year of asbestos was imported between the end of WWII and 1990. Today, all this asbestos is still present in buildings renovated or built during that period of time. During restorations, asbestos fibres can be emitted into the air. The quantification of the emission has to be evaluated accurately. To define the exact risk on workers or on the population is quite hard, as many factors must be considered. The methods to detect asbestos in the air or in materials are still being discussed today. Even though the EPA 600 method (EPA, 1993) has proved itself for the analysis of bulk materials, the method for air analysis is more problematic. In Switzerland, the recommended method is VDI 3492 using a scanning electron microscopy (SEM), but we have encountered many identifications problems with this method. For instance, overloaded filters or long-term exposed filters cannot be analysed. This is why the Institute for Work and Health (IST) has adapted the ISO10312 method: ambient air - determination of asbestos fibres - direct-transfer transmission electron microscopy (TEM) method (ISO, 1995). Quality controls have already be done at a French institute (INRS), which validate our practical experiences. The direct-transfer from MEC's filters on TEM's supports (grids) is a delicate part of the preparation for analysis and requires a lot of trials in the laboratory. IST managed to do proper grid preparations after about two years of development. In addition to the preparation of samples, the micro-analysis (EDX), the micro-diffraction and the morphologic analysis (figure 1.a-c) are also to be mastered. Theses are the three elements, which prove the different features of asbestos identification. The SEM isn't able to associate those three analyses. The TEM is also able to make the difference between artificial and natural fibres that have very similar chemical compositions as well as differentiate types of asbestos. Finally the experiments concluded by IST show that TEM is the best method to quantify and identify asbestos in the air.

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Given that clay-rich landslides may become mobilized, leading to rapid mass movements (earthflows and debris flows), they pose critical problems in risk management worldwide. The most widely proposed mechanism leading to such flow-like movements is the increase in water pore pressure in the sliding mass, generating partial or complete liquefaction. This solid-to-liquid transition results in a dramatic reduction of mechanical rigidity in the liquefied zones, which could be detected by monitoring shear wave velocity variations. With this purpose in mind, the ambient seismic noise correlation technique has been applied to measure the variation in the seismic surface wave velocity in the Pont Bourquin landslide (Swiss Alps). This small but active composite earthslide-earthflow was equipped with continuously recording seismic sensors during spring and summer 2010. An earthslide of a few thousand cubic meters was triggered in mid-August 2010, after a rainy period. This article shows that the seismic velocity of the sliding material, measured from daily noise correlograms, decreased continuously and rapidly for several days prior to the catastrophic event. From a spectral analysis of the velocity decrease, it was possible to determine the location of the change at the base of the sliding layer. These results demonstrate that ambient seismic noise can be used to detect rigidity variations before failure and could potentially be used to predict landslides.

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A Knudsen flow reactor has been used to quantify surface functional groups on aerosols collected in the field. This technique is based on a heterogeneous titration reaction between a probe gas and a specific functional group on the particle surface. In the first part of this work, the reactivity of different probe gases on laboratory-generated aerosols (limonene SOA, Pb(NO3)2, Cd(NO3)2) and diesel reference soot (SRM 2975) has been studied. Five probe gases have been selected for the quantitative determination of important functional groups: N(CH3)3 (for the titration of acidic sites), NH2OH (for carbonyl functions), CF3COOH and HCl (for basic sites of different strength), and O3 (for oxidizable groups). The second part describes a field campaign that has been undertaken in several bus depots in Switzerland, where ambient fine and ultrafine particles were collected on suitable filters and quantitatively investigated using the Knudsen flow reactor. Results point to important differences in the surface reactivity of ambient particles, depending on the sampling site and season. The particle surface appears to be multi-functional, with the simultaneous presence of antagonistic functional groups which do not undergo internal chemical reactions, such as acid-base neutralization. Results also indicate that the surface of ambient particles was characterized by a high density of carbonyl functions (reactivity towards NH2OH probe in the range 0.26-6 formal molecular monolayers) and a low density of acidic sites (reactivity towards N(CH3)3 probe in the range 0.01-0.20 formal molecular monolayer). Kinetic parameters point to fast redox reactions (uptake coefficient ?0>10-3 for O3 probe) and slow acid-base reactions (?0<10-4 for N(CH3)3 probe) on the particle surface. [Authors]

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THESIS ABSTRACT : Stable isotope geochemistry is used to help resolve a large number of geological questions. In order to do this, it is essential to understand the different mechanisms that govern isotopic fractionation processes between different phases and to identify the conditions required to reach equilibrium fractionation. However, at low temperatures, these processes are poorly constrained and many factors can induce differential partitioning of the isotopes between sectors of a mineral species and the fluid during mineral growth. This can result in so-called 'sector zoning' of a mineral species. The aim of this thesis is to evaluate the occurrence of sector zoning of the oxygen isotopes and trace elements in natural α-quartz crystals and to identify the reasons for such zoning. The implications for the fluid-mineral interactions are studied in the context of the Alpine metamorphism. The approach chosen has focused on examining the crystal structure, cathodoluminescence appearance (CL), and on relating elemental (e.g. Li, Na, Al, P, K, Ca, Ge, Ti, Fe) to stable oxygen isotope compositions between and along different growth sectors. Low temperature quartz samples were selected from Alpine veins in different localities, where growth conditions have already been well constrained. The mineralogy as well as the isotopic compositions of the host rocks were also investigated, in order to interpret the variations obtained between the different growth stages in the framework of fluid-rock interaction during Alpine metamorphism. Depending on the growth conditions, most of the studied quartz is strongly zoned in CL, and it reveals corresponding zonations in the trace element content (e.g. growth zoning). Aluminium, substituting for Si in the lattice, was found in concentrations up to 1000's ppma, and its distribution is strongly related to Li and H and to a lesser extent, to Ge. Elemental sector zoning is evident from the distribution of these three elements since they exhibit differences in their respective concentrations between faces for distinct growth zones, with prismatic faces having the lowest Al contents. Quartz from veins in magmatic rocks, for example, tend to have lower Al concentrations and similar concentrations of Li and Ti suggesting also a contribution of these elements from the host rock. The relationship between Al and Li is still correlated. Only Alpine crystals grown at higher temperatures (~400°C) without any CL zoning feature are free of these impurities and do not show such zoning characteristics. Differences in the δ18O values were measured between different faces principally in the AIenriched growth zones or stages. These results were confirmed by the means of two different methods (in situ/non in situ). However, it was determined that the Al concentrations do not affect significantly oxygen isotope fractionations at 300°C. The results altogether suggest that the presence of sector zoning in quartz crystals is real, but not universal, and henceforth should be taken into consideration for any use of these systems. The occurrence of disequilibrium partitioning has been enhanced and is possibly related to kinetic processes as well as structural effects that do not affect similarly trace element incorporation and isotopic fractionation. In situ measurements also revealed fine scale δ18O zonations along growth paths that are useful to constrain fluid-rock interactions during Alpine metamorphism. Variations in the δ18O values present along growth vectors indicate changes in the fluid composition and origin. Association with oxygen isotope composition of the host rock allows for the deduction of interactions between rocks, veins and consequently fluids, as well as fluid regimes. RESUME DE LA THESE : A basses températures, (i.e. <400°C) les différents mécanismes qui régissent le fractionnement isotopique ainsi que les conditions nécessaires pour établir un état d'équilibre sont peu connus et nombre de paramètres peuvent entraîner un partitionnement chimique différentiel entre différents secteurs d'un minéral et le fluide en contact. Ainsi, ce travail de thèse a pour but d'évaluer la possible présence de zonages sectoriels en isotopes de l'oxygène mais aussi en éléments traces dans des cristaux naturels de quartz-α de basses températures, ainsi que les raisons d'un tel phénomène et enfin ses implications sur les interactions fluide-roche, principalement dans le cadre du métamorphisme Alpin. La structure et l'apparence en cathodoluminescence (CL) des échantillons ont été caractérisées avant de retracer en détail les compositions en élément traces (Li, Na, Al, P, K, Ca, Ge, Ti, Fe) et en isotopes de l'oxygène, le long et entre différents secteurs. Les échantillons de quartz sélectionnés proviennent majoritairement de veines Alpine de différentes localités, où les conditions de croissance ont été déjà bien caractérisées. Les compositions minéralogiques et isotopiques de la roche encaissante ont aussi été examinées, pour contraindre les variations obtenues dans un contexte Alpin. Selon leurs conditions de croissance, la plupart des cristaux étudiés sont fortement zonés, ce qui est souligné par un zonage des concentrations en éléments traces (e.g. zonage de croissance). L'Aluminium, qui peut se substituer à la Silice dans le réseau cristallin, a été retrouvé jusqu'en très grandes concentrations dans certaines zones (plusieurs milliers de ppma). De plus, la distribution en Al est fortement liée à celles de Li et H, ainsi que dans une moindre mesure à Ge. La présence de zonage sectoriel est évidente au niveau de ces éléments qui montrent de larges différences de concentrations entre différentes faces pour une même zone de croissance, avec les concentrations les plus basses retrouvées dans les faces prismatiques. Les quartz de veines situées dans des roches magmatiques par exemple possèdent des concentrations en Li et Ti de même ordre de grandeur, confirmant le rôle de la composition de la roche encaissante. La relation Li/Al est toujours fortement présente, mais ce rapport est fonction de la face mesurée. Seuls les cristaux Alpins de plus hautes températures (400°C) ne possédant pas de zones en CL ne présentent aucune de ces caractéristiques. Des différences dans les valeurs de δ18O de zones identiques enrichies en Al ont clairement été mesurées entre les différentes faces r, z, et m, mais aussi au sein d'une même seule zone, indiquant que le fractionnement a probablement eu lieu en déséquilibre. Il a été déterminé que la présence d'Al dans ces teneurs n'avait qu'un faible effet sur le fractionnement isotopique de l'oxygène. L'utilisation de deux méthodes différentes a permis d'obtenir des résultats in situ et non in situ concordants. La comparaison des résultats obtenus permet de démontrer que le zonage sectoriel est bien présent dans certains cristaux de quartz, et dépend des conditions de formation. La présence d'un partitionnement différentiel des éléments traces peut être due à des effets cinétiques aussi bien que structuraux, alors que le zonage sectoriel des isotopes de l'oxygène aurait d'autres origines. Il est alors évident que la possibilité de zonage sectoriel doit être désormais pris en considération avant toute interprétations de données isotopiques de cristaux zonés. Les mesures in situ ont de plus permis de distinguer de fines variations des valeurs δ18O au cours de la croissance, qui peuvent aider à retracer la circulations des fluides dans les Alpes durant cette période. En association avec les compositions des roches encaissantes, ii est possible de déduire les interactions entre roches, veines, et par conséquent fluides, au cours de différentes étapes. RESUME GRAND PUBLIC : La géochimie des isotopes stables a pris beaucoup d'importance depuis ces dernières années pour aider à résoudre nombre de questions géologiques, en se basant sur les caractéristiques du fractionnement isotopiques pour différents systèmes. Il est donc nécessaire d'avoir une connaissance approfondie des mécanismes qui s'appliquent au fractionnement isotopique entre les minéraux et les fluides à partir desquels ils se forment. Ces mécanismes ont été bien approchés par différents types de calibrations pour des systèmes à hautes températures, cependant cela n'est pas aussi évident pour les systèmes à des températures inférieures à 400-500°C. Ce travail de thèse a pour but d'aider à la description et la compréhension des phénomènes qui peuvent affecter le fractionnement isotopique à basses températures, ainsi que leurs implications, à partir de l'étude de cristaux de quartz. Le choix des échantillons s'est porté sur des cristaux naturels formés à des températures inférieures ou égales à 400°C, provenant majoritairement de fissures hydrothermales Alpines dont les conditions de formation ont déjà été déterminées. L'étude des cristaux Alpin permet de plus de replacer les résultats obtenus dans le contexte du métamorphisme Alpin au cours du Miocène (21-13 Ma). Après examen de la structure et de la morphologie des cristaux, et leur caractérisation par cathodoluminescence (CL), des analyses chimiques détaillées sur les éléments en traces pouvant entrer dans le réseau cristallin du quartz comme impuretés (i.e. Li, Na, Al, P, K, Ca, Ge, Ti), et des isotopes stables de l'oxygène, ont été menées. En fonction des conditions de croissance, la plupart des cristaux présentent des zonations, qui peuvent être facilement reliées à la distribution des éléments traces analysés par microsonde électronique, sonde ionique (SIMS) et LA-ICPMS. De fortes concentrations d'Aluminium (plusieurs milliers de parties par million atomique) ont pu être observées dans les zones les plus externes des cristaux. De plus, les concentrations en Al et en Li sont toujours corrélées; la présence d'Hydrogène déduite à partir d'analyses par FTIR suit cette même tendance. Les différentes faces des cristaux présentent des concentrations distinctes d'Al, Li et H pour des mêmes zones de croissance, avec par exemple les concentrations les plus faibles dans les zones des faces prismatiques. Cela implique la présence d'un zonage sectoriel, qui a déjà été observé principalement dans des carbonates mais jamais décrit auparavant pour des quartz. Seuls les cristaux alpins homogènes en CL dont la croissance s'est faite à plus haute température (400°C) ne présentent aucune de ces caractéristiques. Par analogie avec le zonage sectoriel en Al, élément qui se substitue au Si dans le réseau cristallin du quartz, il est possible de penser qu'un zonage sectoriel pourrait aussi s'appliquer aux isotopes de l'oxygène. Des précédentes études avaient en effet émis cette hypothèse. Nos résultats ont été obtenus à partir d'analyses à la fois in- situ par SIMS, et par extraction assistée par laser-CO2 sur des parties de quartz soigneusement séparées, et sont en accord entre les deux méthodes. Un zonage sectoriel est en effet bien présent pour les cristaux alpins, mais principalement au niveau des zones très riches en Aluminium. Cependant, il a été déterminé que la présence d'Al dans ces teneurs avait un effet plus que minimal sur le fractionnement isotopique de l'oxygène. Des différences importantes ont été observées entre les faces r & z mais aussi au sein d'une même et seule zone, indiquant que le fractionnement a pu avoir lieu en déséquilibre, ce qui est aussi visible au niveau des valeurs totalement opposées entre faces pour la dernière phase de croissance de certains cristaux. Ainsi l'association de ces résultats laisse suggérer que la présence d'un zonage sectoriel peut être liée à différents paramètres tels que le taux de croissance ou la structure de surface du cristal, mais qui n'affectent pas de la même façon l'incorporation des éléments traces et le fractionnement isotopique. La possibilité d'un zonage sectoriel est importante à prendre en compte lors de toute interprétation de données isotopiques. Les analyses des isotopes de l'oxygène effectuées par SIMS ont aussi permis de distinguer des variations importantes à petite échelle au cours de la croissance. Des mesures faites par laser CO2 sur certaines roches encaissantes, ont permis distinguer plusieurs étapes dans la croissance des minéraux et de déduire le rôle de l'encaissant et le type de fluide. En association avec de précédentes études, il a été ainsi possible de mieux contraindre la formation de ces cristaux dans le contexte alpin et la circulation de fluide au cours du métamorphisme alpin durant le Miocène.

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Oxygen isotope measurements using SIMS and laser-fluorination methods confirm the presence of concentric and sector zoning in low-temperature (200 degrees C to < 400 degrees C) hydrothermal quartz from Alpine veins. While concentric zoning is most readily explained by changes in the chemical composition of the fluid or temperature of crystallization, the reasons for sector zoning are more difficult to explain. Relative enrichment in (18)O for crystallographically different sectors of quartz corresponds to m > r > z. Sector zoning is, however, largely limited to the exterior zones of crystals and/or to crystals with large Al (> 1000 ppm) and trace element contents, probably formed at temperatures < 250 degrees C. Differences in delta(18)O between the prismatic (m) relative to the rhombohedral (r and z) growth sectors of up to 2 parts per thousand can be explained by a combination of a face-related crystallographic and/or a growth rate control. In contrast, isotopic sector zoning of up to about 1.5 parts per thousand amongst the different rhombohedral faces increases in parallel with the trace element content and is likely to represent disequilibrium growth. This is indicated by non-systematic, up to 2 parts per thousand, differences within single growth zones and the irregular, larger or smaller, delta(18)O values (of several permil) of the exterior compared to the inner zones of the same crystals. Disequilibrium growth may be related to the large trace element content incorporated into the growing quartz at lower temperatures (< 250 degrees C) and/or be related to fluid-vapour separation, allowing crystal growth from both a vapour as well as a liquid phase.

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The large Cerro de Pasco Cordilleran base metal deposit in central Peru is located on the eastern margin of a middle Miocene diatreme-dome complex and comprises two mineralization stages. The first stage consists of a large pyrite-quartz body replacing Lower Mesozoic Pucara carbonate rocks and, to a lesser extent, diatreme breccia. This body is composed of pyrite with pyrrhotite inclusions, quartz, and black and red chalcedony (containing hypogene hematite). At the contact with the pyrite-quartz body, the diatreme breccia is altered to pyrite-quartz-sericite-pyrite. This body was, in part, replaced by pipelike pyrrhotite bodies zoned outward to carbonate-replacement Zn-Pb ores hearing Fe-rich sphalerite (up to 24 mol % Fes). The second mineralization stage is partly superimposed on the first and consists of zoned east-west-trending Cu-Ag-(Au-Zn-Pb) enargite-pyrite veins hosted in the diatreme breccia in the western part of the deposit and well-zoned Zn-Pb-(Bi-Ag-Cu) carbonate-replacement orebodies; in both cases, sphalerite is Fe poor and the inner parts of the orebodies show typically advanced argillic alteration assemblages, including aluminum phosphate Sulfate (APS) minerals. The zoned enargite-pyrite veins display mineral zoning, from a core of enargite-pyrite +/- alunite with traces of Au, through an intermediate zone of tennantite, chalcopyrite, and Bi minerals to a poorly developed Outer zone hearing sphalerite-galena +/- kaolinite. The carbonate-hosted replacement ores are controlled along N 35 degrees E, N 90 degrees E, N 120 degrees E, and N 170 degrees E faults. They form well-zoned upward-flaring pipelike orebodies with a core of famatinite-pyrite and alunite, an intermediate zone with tetrahedrite-pyrite, chalcopyrite, matildite, cuprobismutite, emplectite, and other Bi minerals accompanied by APS minerals, kaolinite, and dickite, and an outer zone composed of Fe-poor sphalerite (in the range of 0.05-3.5 mol % Fes) and galena. The outermost zone consists of hematite, magnetite, and Fe-Mn-Zn-Ca-Mg carbonates. Most of the second-stage carbonate-replacement orebodies plunge between 25 degrees and 60 degrees to the west, suggesting that the hydrothermal fluids ascended from deeper levels and that no lateral feeding from the veins to the carbonate-replacement orebodies took place. In the Venencocha and Santa Rosa areas, located 2.5 km northwest of the Cerro de Pasco open pit and in the southern part of the deposit, respectively, advanced argillic altered dacitic domes and oxidized veins with advanced argillic alteration halos occur. The latter veins are possibly the oxidized equivalent of the second-stage enargite-pyrite veins located in the western part of the deposit. The alteration assemblage quartz-muscovite-pyrite associated with the pyrite-quartz body suggests that the first stage precipitated at slightly, acidic fin. The sulfide mineral assemblages define an evolutionary path close to the pyrite-pyrrhotite boundary and are characteristic of low-sulfidation states; they suggest that the oxidizing slightly acidic hydrothermal fluid was buffered by phyllite, shale, and carbonate host rock. However, the presence in the pyrite-quartz body of hematite within quartz suggests that, locally, the fluids were less buffered by the host rock. The mineral assemblages of the second mineralization stage are characteristic of high- to intermediate-sulfidation states. High-sulfidation states and oxidizing conditions were achieved and maintained in the cores of the second-stage orebodies, even in those replacing carbonate rocks. The observation that, in places, second-stage mineral assemblages are found in the inner and outer zones is explained in terms of the hydrothermal fluid advancing and waning. Microthermometric data from fluid inclusions in quartz indicate that the different ores of the first mineralization stage formed at similar temperatures and moderate salinities (200 degrees-275 degrees C and 0.2-6.8 wt % NaCl equiv in the pyrite-quartz body; 192 degrees-250 degrees C and 1.1-4.3 wt % NaCl equiv in the pyrrhotite bodies; and 183 degrees-212 degrees C and 3.2-4.0 wt % NaCl equiv in the Zn-Pb ores). These values are similar to those obtained for fluid inclusions in quartz and sphalerite from the second-stage ores (187 degrees-293 degrees C and 0.2-5.2 wt % NaCl equiv in the enargite-pyrite veins: 178 degrees-265 degrees C and 0.2-7.5 wt % NaCl equiv in quartz of carbonate-replacement orebodies; 168 degrees-999 degrees C and 3-11.8 wt % NaCl equiv in sphalerite of carbonate-replacement orebodies; and 245 degrees-261 degrees C and 3.2-7.7 wt % NaCl equiv in quartz from Venencocha). Oxygen and hydrogen isotope compositions oil kaolinite from carbonate-replacement orebodies (delta(18)O = 5.3-11.5%o, delta D = -82 to -114%o) and on alunite from the Venencocha and Santa Rosa areas (delta(18)O = 1.9-6.9%o, delta D = -56 to -73%o). Oxygen isotope compositions of quartz from the first and second stages have 6180 values from 9.1 to 1.7.8 per mil. Calculated fluids in equilibrium with kaolinite have delta(18)O values of 2.0 to 8.2 and delta D values of -69 to -97 per mil; values in equilibrium with alunite are -1.4 to -6.4 and -62 to -79 per mil. Sulfur isotope compositions of sulfides from both stages have a narrow range of delta(34)S values, between -3.7 and +4.2 per mil; values for sulfates from the second stage are between 4.2 and 31.2 per mil. These results define two mixing trends for the ore-forming fluids. The first trend reflects mixing between a moderately saline (similar to 10 wt % NaCl equiv) magmatic end member that had degassed (as indicated by the low delta D values) and meteoric water. The second mixing indicates condensation of magmatic vapor with HCl and SO(2) into meteoric water, which formed alunite. The hydrothermal system at Cerro de Pasco was emplaced at a shallow depth (similar to 500 m) in the epithermal and upper part of a porphyry environment. The similar temperatures and salinities obtained for the first stage and second stages, together with the stable isotope data, indicate that both stages are linked and represent successive stages of epithermal polymetallic mineralization in the upper part of a porphyry system.