This document discusses diagenetic ore deposits that form from fluids expelled during sediment compaction and lithification. It provides examples of deposit types formed this way, including the European Copper Shale and Mississippi Valley Type lead-zinc deposits. The core concept is that sediments contain large volumes of connate/formation waters that are expelled during diagenesis, becoming enriched in metals. When these hot, high-pressure fluids pass through permeability traps in the basinal sediments, they can precipitate ore minerals and form economic deposits. Microbes and geochemical conditions also influence metal mobility and deposition during this process.