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Economic Geology; May 2005; v. 100; no. 3; p. 567-576; DOI: 10.2113/100.3.567
© 2005 Society of Economic Geologists
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Scientific Communications

RELATIVE AND ABSOLUTE TIMING OF GOLD MINERALIZATION ALONG THE MELIADINE TREND, NUNAVUT, CANADA: EVIDENCE FOR PALEOPROTEROZOIC GOLD HOSTED IN AN ARCHEAN GREENSTONE BELT

Robert L. Carpenter{dagger},*

Department of Earth Sciences, University of Western Ontario, London, Canada N6A 5B7

Norman A. Duke

Department of Earth Sciences, University of Western Ontario, London, Canada N6A 5B7

Hamish A. Sandeman**

Canada-Nunavut Geoscience Office, Iqaluit, Nunavut, Canada X0A 0H0

Richard Stern***

Geological Survey of Canada, 601 Booth Street, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1A 0E8

{dagger} Corresponding author: e-mail, Rob_Carpenter{at}telus.net

The Meliadine area of the Neoarchean Rankin Inlet greenstone belt is located on the western shore of Hudson Bay, Canada, and is host to several important orogenic or mesothermal gold deposits. Supracrustal rocks comprise alternating southeast-striking panels of mafic volcanic and clastic sedimentary rocks, both of which are host to banded iron formation. The dominant structural element is the Pyke "Break," a several-kilometer-wide, high-strain zone characterized by multiple foliations and regionally important shear zones. Gold mineralization is spatially associated with these shear zones. The maximum age of mineralization is constrained by the observation that auriferous veins crosscut ca. 2450 Ma mafic dikes, and a minimum age is constrained by undeformed, postore lamprophyre dikes emplaced at ca. 1830 Ma. Highly concordant SHRIMP-determined ages on hydrothermal monazite indicate auriferous veining occurred at ca. 1850 Ma. These relative and absolute timing constraints suggest gold was concentrated in Neoarchean supracrustal rocks during Paleoproterozoic tectonothermal activity that was widespread in the western Churchill province at ca. 1850 Ma. These observations do not preclude the presence of Archean gold occurrences in the Rankin Inlet greenstone belt, but no "early" deformed ores can be linked to auriferous veins introduced at ca. 1850 Ma, suggesting remobilization from earlier formed deposits was not a factor in concentrating gold at Meliadine.




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R.G. Berman, W.J. Davis, and S. Pehrsson
Collisional Snowbird tectonic zone resurrected: Growth of Laurentia during the 1.9 Ga accretionary phase of the Hudsonian orogeny
Geology, October 1, 2007; 35(10): 911 - 914.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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