Geology and host-rock alteration of the Henty and Mount Julia gold deposits, western Tasmania

被引:28
|
作者
Callaghan, T [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Tasmania, Ctr Ore Deposit Res, Hobart, Tas 7001, Australia
关键词
D O I
10.2113/96.5.1073
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
The Mount Julia-Henty gold deposits are a series of small tonnage (< 500,000 t) high-grade (10-30 g/t Au) sheet-like lenses hosted in an extensive package (> 20 Mt) of quartz-sericite altered volcanics. The alteration system is hosted in Cambrian submarine volcaniclastic and hyaloclastic dacites associated with interbedded carbonates and calcareous volcaniclastic samdstones located at the Mount Read Volcanics Tyndall Group-Central Volcanic Complex boundary. The alteration zone forms a subvertically dipping tabular sheet over 3 km in length and between 10 and 100 m in width. Although this zone is broadly strata bound in the north, it crosscuts stratigraphy and is hosted 50 to 300 in deeper to the south, well below the Central Volcanic Complex-Tyndall Group contact. The alteration zone is bound updip by the South Henty fault and downdip by abruptly decreasing alteration intensity. Mineralization is confined to lenses within the subvertically dipping alteration zone. The alteration zone is strongly, deformed due to reactivation of the South Henty fault. The sericitic alteration assemblage is strongly foliated and mylonitized and the orebody is now located on the steeply west dipping, overturned limb of a broad, shallowly south plunging syncline. Alteration is distinctly asymmetric and can be subdivided into three categories: (1) footwall alteration, (2) alteration associated with mineralization (A zone), and (3) hanging-wall alteration. Alteration in the southern area (Mt, Julia) is similar to the north (Zone 96) but has a much lower sulfide content. Footwall alteration consists of intensely sericite +/- pyrite +/- carbonate altered schistose rhyolitic and dacitic volcanics. The main mineralized zone (A zone) is also zoned from intensely leached, massive quartz alteration, to quartz-sericite alteration, to an outer quartz-sericite-pyrite-chlorite alteration. Minor massive pyrite and massive sulfide lenses are located at the top of the A zone. Hanging-wall alteration consists of chlorite-albite-quartz alteration in andesitic volcaniclastic rocks and albite-quartz alteration of rhyolitic volcaniclastic rocks and lavas. Bedded carbonates and calcareous volcaniclastic rocks are mainly associated with the upper parts of the A zone alteration zone but are also found toward the foot-wall and well up into the overlying sequences. The foot-wall and A zone alteration zones are intensely Na2O depleted and K2O enriched due to feldspar destruction and sericitization. The hanging-wall alteration is strongly Na2O enriched due to intense albitization. Aluminum and K2O have been strongly depleted from the massive quartz alteration within the A zone, suggesting leaching by highly acidic fluids. Mineralization consists of pyrite and chalcopyrite with lesser galena and sphalerite and with minor gold, electrum, galenobismuth, and native bismuth. Gold, copper, and bismuth are mainly confined to the massive quartz and quartz-sericite alteration zones, whereas the outer quartz-sericite-chlorite alteration halo is dominated by pyrite. Metal zonation extends from a gold-silver-rich core associated with copper, lead, and bismuth, to a proximal halo of copper, lead, and bismuth, and then to a distal halo of zinc. Modeling of oxygen and carbon stable isotopes suggests that the carbonates formed from an early phase of basin-wide magmatic CO2 devolatilization that commenced early in the hydrothermal event and continued for a long time period. The carbonates precipitated due to mixing of small amounts of magmatic CO3-rich fluid with seawater at and below the seawater interface. An alternative model suggests that the observed carbon and oxygen stable isotope signature results from fluid-rock interaction between a preexisting carbonate and a later hydrothermal fluid. The Au-Cu-Bi-Ag association and alteration zonation suggests that the Henty-Mount Julia system formed from an evolving submarine Cambrian hydrothermal system, with some low-sulfidation epithermal characteristics. Phase separation of magmatic volatiles from metalliferous magmatic brines formed the alteration halo first, followed by the mineralizing event. Deposition occurred through mixing of the magmatic fluid with bicarbonate/H2S-rich seawater circulating through the unconsolidated Lynchford Member and Central Volcanic Complex volcanics. Mineral deposition was less efficient at Mount Julia where the magmatic volatile phase was dominant and the late, reduced seawater influx: less focused, resulting in discontinuous, lower grade mineralization and extensive areas of barren massive quartz and quartz-sericite alteration. The metal zonation is a result of both sulfur availability and decreasing temperature. The Henty-Mount Julia alteration system possibly represents a gold-rich end member of a large, regional, submarine magmatic copper-gold hydrothermal event. This mineralizing event is probably responsible for most of the deposits found on the southeastern side of the Henty fault, including the Mount Lyell deposits.
引用
收藏
页码:1073 / 1088
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Geology and mineralisation of the Henty Gold Mine, Tasmania
    De Mark, P
    Callaghan, T
    [J]. THIRD INTERNATIONAL MINING GEOLOGY CONFERENCE, 1997, 97 (06): : 25 - 29
  • [2] DISTRICT-SCALE ALTERATION ASSOCIATED WITH MASSIVE SULFIDE DEPOSITS IN THE MOUNT READ VOLCANICS, WESTERN TASMANIA
    EASTOE, CJ
    SOLOMON, M
    WALSHE, JL
    [J]. ECONOMIC GEOLOGY, 1987, 82 (05) : 1239 - 1258
  • [3] HOST-ROCK GEOLOGY OF THE METAMORPHOSED MASSIVE SULFIDE DEPOSITS AT GOROB IN THE PAN-AFRICAN DAMARA OROGEN, NAMIBIA
    PREUSSINGER, H
    [J]. JOURNAL OF AFRICAN EARTH SCIENCES, 1990, 10 (04): : 717 - 732
  • [4] Zonation of alteration facies at Western Tharsis: Implications for the genesis of Cu-Au deposits, Mount Lyell field, western Tasmania
    Huston, DL
    Kamprad, J
    [J]. ECONOMIC GEOLOGY AND THE BULLETIN OF THE SOCIETY OF ECONOMIC GEOLOGISTS, 2001, 96 (05): : 1123 - 1132
  • [6] Henty: A shallow-water gold-rich volcanogenic massive sulfide deposit in western Tasmania
    Halley, SW
    Roberts, RH
    [J]. ECONOMIC GEOLOGY AND THE BULLETIN OF THE SOCIETY OF ECONOMIC GEOLOGISTS, 1997, 92 (04): : 438 - 447
  • [7] The Nevenrekan Gold–Silver Volcanogenic–Plutonogenic Deposits, Magadan Region, Russia: Host Rocks, Host-Rock Metasomatites, Age, and Material Composition of the Ores
    V. V. Priymenko
    A. N. Glukhov
    V. V. Akinin
    M. I. Fomina
    T. I. Mikhalitsyna
    A. V. Ponomarchuk
    G. O. Polzunenkov
    [J]. Journal of Volcanology and Seismology, 2022, 16 : 49 - 66
  • [8] The Nevenrekan Gold-Silver Volcanogenic-Plutonogenic Deposits, Magadan Region, Russia: Host Rocks, Host-Rock Metasomatites, Age, and Material Composition of the Ores
    Priymenko, V. V.
    Glukhov, A. N.
    Akinin, V. V.
    Fomina, M., I
    Mikhalitsyna, T., I
    Ponomarchuk, A., V
    Polzunenkov, G. O.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF VOLCANOLOGY AND SEISMOLOGY, 2022, 16 (01) : 49 - 66
  • [9] The influence of faulting on host-rock permeability, fluid flow and ore genesis of gold deposits: a theoretical 2D numerical model
    Zhang, Y
    Hobbs, BE
    Ord, A
    Barnicoat, A
    Zhao, C
    Walshe, JL
    Lin, G
    [J]. JOURNAL OF GEOCHEMICAL EXPLORATION, 2003, 78-9 : 279 - 284
  • [10] The Archaean Mount Gibson gold deposits, Yilgarn Craton, Western Australia: Products of combined synvolcanic and syntectonic alteration and mineralisation
    Yeats, CJ
    Groves, DI
    [J]. ORE GEOLOGY REVIEWS, 1998, 13 (1-5) : 103 - 129