Neoproterozoic iron formations (NIFs), deposited during Cryogenian glaciation events, are critical for understanding early Earth oxidation events and the evolution of glacial–interglacial environments. Apatite, a common accessory mineral in iron formations, holds significant implications for sedimentary environments and diagenetic processes, but these aspects remain underexplored. This study focuses on the Hengyang NIF in the Nanhua Basin, South China. Using whole-rock geochemistry and major and trace element analysis of apatite, we investigate the environmental significance of apatite and associated diagenetic processes. Our results show that the Hengyang NIF are formed through the mixing of low-temperature hydrothermal fluids, seawater, and terrigenous detrital materials, with hydrothermal contributions increasing progressively from the bottom to the top of the iron formation layers. Whole-rock geochemical proxies indicate that the depositional water column evolved from relatively oxidizing to weakly oxidizing conditions. The study further demonstrates that the rare earth element patterns in apatite, characterized by middle rare earth element enrichment, are primarily controlled by porewater chemistry during diagenesis. In contrast, Ce anomalies and the V/Cr and V/(V + Ni) ratios in apatite, which are strongly influenced by fluid–rock interactions and magnetite recrystallization, no longer reliably reflect the primary depositional environment. The Th/U ratio in apatite, due to its geochemical stability, aligns with whole-rock trends and serves as a more reliable redox proxy. Based on these findings, we propose a three-stage depositional-diagenetic model: the early and late stages are characterized by high-energy, rapid sedimentation with minimal diagenetic modification, while the middle stage is dominated by low-energy, stagnant conditions with slow sedimentation rates, leading to prolonged diagenesis and significant decoupling of mineral geochemical signatures. This study emphasizes the need to distinguish between sedimentary and diagenetic signals when using mineral geochemical proxies to reconstruct paleoenvironments and provides new insights into the genesis of Neoproterozoic iron formations.
Zhang et al. (Fri,) studied this question.