|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||
| JOURNAL HOME | HELP | CONTACT PUBLISHER | SUBSCRIBE | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
,*BHP Minerals Discovery Group, BHP World Minerals, 3 Plain Street, East Perth, W.A. 6004, Australia
GEMOC, Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Macquarie University, NSW 2109, Australia
Centre for Teaching and Research in Strategic Mineral Deposits, Department of Geology and Geophysics, University of Western Australia, Nedlands, W.A. 6907, Australia
Corresponding author: e-mail, Knight.Joe.JT{at}bhp.com.au
The late Archean Coolgardie Goldfield at the western margin of the Norseman-Wiluna belt, Yilgarn craton, comprises an arcuate belt of deformed mafic, ultramafic, and sedimentary rocks which is bounded to the west by the syntectonic Calooli monzogranite. Greenstones at Coolgardie preserve a broad metamorphic gradient, with peak metamorphic temperature varying from 480° ± 50°C at the center of the gold field to 545° ± 50°C adjacent to the western granitoid-greenstone contact, at an approximate pressure of 3 to 4 kbar.
Gold field-scale variations in the gangue and ore mineralogy of zoned wall-rock alteration assemblages around lodes, the ore geochemistry, and the isotope chemistry of vein minerals at Coolgardie are correlated with plan-view distance from the Calooli monzogranite. Evidence supporting synpeak metamorphic gold mineralization in the Coolgardie Goldfield includes the equilibrium textural relationships between gold, sulfides, and high-temperature silicate gangue; the occurrence of undeformed auriferous quartz veins, enveloped by garnet-hornblende-plagioclase-calcite alteration, which crosscut peak-metamorphic fabrics; and the siting of variably deformed gold ores in synpeak-metamorphic structures. Conditions of gold mineralization at deposits less than 1 to 2 km from the Calooli monzogranite are determined from geothermometry and barometry to be 510° ± 50°C to 590° ± 25°C at 3 to 4 kbar, whereas those at greater distances from the monzogranite are 490° to 525° ± 50°C at 3 to 4 kbar.
Alteration assemblages in mafic host rocks can be divided into garnet-bearing (garnet-hornblende-plagioclase-calcite) and garnet-absent (biotite-amphibole-plagioclase-calcite). The presence or absence of garnet is mainly controlled by the Mg number of the host mafic rocks. Ore in deposits with garnet-bearing alteration is enriched in Ag, Na, Pb, S, and W, but only weakly enriched or depleted in K2O and other large ion lithophile elements, CO2, As, Mo, Sb, and Te, whereas deposits with biotite-amphibole-plagioclase-calcite alteration are strongly enriched in Ag, As, S, Sb, W, CO2, and large ion lithophile elements. Sulfide-oxide assemblages are regionally zoned from pyrite-ilmenite in deposits in granitoids and adjacent to the granitoid-greenstone contact, through pyrrhotite-ilmenite ± pyrite in garnet-bearing alteration 1 to 2 km from the contact, to arsenopyrite-pyrrhotite-ilmenite assemblages in biotite-bearing alteration >2 km from the greenstone-granitoid contact. This variation is potentially related to gradients in fluid fO2 away from the granitoids.
Isotopic compositions of oxygen in quartz (
18O
= 10.812.4
),
scheelite (
18O
= 4.04.1
),
and oxygen and carbon in calcite (
18O
= 8.913.2
,
13C
= 0.5 to 5.3
)
are generally more positive in deposits with garnet-bearing alteration than in
those with biotite-bearing alteration (
18Oquartz
= 6.611.8
,
18Oscheelite
= 2.34.6
,
18Ocalcite
= 8.711.4
,
13Ccalcite
= 4.3 to 8.4
),
whereas both alteration styles have dDbiotite
and dDamphibole
values in the range 65
to 86 per
mil. These differences are interpreted to reflect interaction of isotopically
heavy ore fluids with relatively depleted greenstone host rocks during fluid
migration through structurally controlled conduits.
The gold field-scale variations in alteration mineralogy and ore chemistry are considered to be related not to initial ore-fluid composition but to temperature, to host-rock composition, and to changes in fluid composition resulting from reaction with greenstone-belt rocks. The correlation between the calculated temperature of alteration and distance from the western granitoid-greenstone contact suggests that the Calooli monzogranite played some genetic role in determining the nature of hydrothermal alteration across Coolgardie.
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
K. A. Evans, G. N. Phillips, and R. Powell Rock-Buffering of Auriferous Fluids in Altered Rocks Associated with the Golden Mile-Style Mineralization, Kalgoorlie Gold Field, Western Australia Economic Geology, June 1, 2006; 101(4): 805 - 817. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
R. F. Weinberg, P. Van der Borgh, R. J. Bateman, and D. I. Groves Kinematic History of the Boulder-Lefroy Shear Zone System and Controls on Associated Gold Mineralization, Yilgarn Craton, Western Australia Economic Geology, October 1, 2005; 100(7): 1407 - 1426. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
R. SHERLOCK, S. PEHRSSON, A. V. LOGAN, R. B. HRABI, and W. J. DAVIS Geological Setting of the Meadowbank Gold Deposits, Woodburn Lake Group, Nunavut Exploration and Mining Geology, January 1, 2004; 13(1-4): 67 - 107. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
P. Eilu and D. I. Groves Primary alteration and geochemical dispersion haloes of Archaean orogenic gold deposits in the Yilgarn Craton: the pre-weathering scenario Geochemistry: Exploration, Environment, Analysis, August 1, 2001; 1(3): 183 - 200. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| JOURNAL HOME | HELP | CONTACT PUBLISHER | SUBSCRIBE | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |