The silver deposits at Cobalt and Gowganda, Ontario. I: Geology, petrography, and whole-rock geochemistry

1986 ◽  
Vol 23 (10) ◽  
pp. 1480-1506 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. J. Andrews ◽  
L. Owsiacki ◽  
R. Kerrich ◽  
D. F. Strong

The Ag–sulpharsenide vein deposits of northeastern Ontario occur along the north and northeastern margins of the Cobalt Embayment, a large irregular domain of Huronian-age clastic sediments intruded by Nipissing diabase sills and crosscut by regional-scale fault systems. The vein systems are mostly fault controlled, with mineralization always occurring adjacent to or within the diabase sills. Many of the mineralized structures crosscut the sills. All the economically productive deposits occur in close proximity to the Huronian–Archean unconformity where diabase sills and steeply dipping Archean volcanic sequences coincide.The vein systems show remarkable consistencies in their mineralogy, textures, and paragenesis. Their formation involved the precipitation of silicates (mainly quartz, chlorite, actinolite ± K-feldspar) during initial, limited dilation; this was followed by the introduction of significant quantities of carbonate (mainly calcite ± dolomite) during subsequent dilatant episodes. Most of the ore was precipitated during the silicate to carbonate transition. Wall-rock alteration haloes exhibit a silicate to carbonate paragenesis similar to that evident in the veins. Feldspathization is an important consequence of the alteration process, manifesting in the ubiquitous occurrence of albite in Nipissing diabase wall rocks and sporadic occurrences of K-feldspar in Archean basalt wall rocks.The mineralogy and chemistry of the veins and altered wall rocks indicate that CO2, Ca, Na, K, Ag, As, Co, Pb, rare earth elements, and in some cases Hg and Au were among the components introduced with the hydrothermal fluids. This was accompanied by significant net loss of Si, Fe, Mg, Zn, B, Li, and Sc from the wall rocks. The nature of the wall-rock alteration suggests that the mineralizing fluids were of high alkalinity and relatively low [Formula: see text]. They were not derived through lateral secretion but were introduced from a source remote from the immediate environment of ore deposition.Wall-rock alteration postdates the establishment of a low-temperature, regional alteration of the diabases and a chlorite spotting alteration in the Huronian sediments; the latter is a contact metamorphic effect accompanying diabase intrusion. These data indicate that Ag–sulpharsenide vein formation postdated intrusion of the diabases and much (possibly all) of their cooling histories.Collectively, our data discourage the theory that the Nipissing diabase sills acted purely as a heat and (or) fluid source in vein formation. A structural model is proposed in which the diabase sills acted as mechanically favourable sites for fracture generation during regional fault activity. This factor, together with the advent of boiling and (or) degassing of the mineralizing fluids at these specific sites are viewed as possible critical parameters mediating the localization and deposition of Ag–sulpharsenide ore. This model provides a reasonable explanation for the local and regional distribution of the deposits and appears to best satisfy all the geological, petrographic, and geochemical criteria.

1981 ◽  
Vol 44 (336) ◽  
pp. 417-423 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Cathelineau ◽  
J. Leroy

AbstractHydrothermal uranium veins, associated with the Hercynian leucogranites show important variations in their mineralogical, chemical and structural features in relation to the host rock lithology. These are described with particular reference to the Chardon deposit, Vendée where the veins cut granite, basic lithologies, and shales. The following features are described: 1Changes in the thickness of veins near to contact zones, particularly those between granites and basic lithologies, lamprophyres, and shales.2Changes in the gangue mineral assemblage with the preferential development of carbonate in veins cutting basic lithologies, and of silica in veins which cut granite.3Paragenetic zoning in the veins in passing from granites to their metamorphic aureoles.Comparisons between deposits of Vendée, Limousin, and Erzgebirge allow the following generalizations to be made: 1Open faults and subsequent mineralization are concentrated at boundaries between competent and more plastic lithologies.2Mineralizing fluids cause wall-rock alteration characterized by the removal of Si from granite and of Ca, Mg, Fe from metamorphic and basic rocks.3The chemical and structural characteristics of wallrocks are important controls on the mineralization but in acid lithologies the main controls on the pitchblende vein formation are the structural characteristics of the wallrock.


2003 ◽  
Vol 40 (3) ◽  
pp. 447-466 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frank P Bierlein ◽  
Paul K Smith

The Touquoy Zone deposit is host to disseminated gold mineralisation in metasiltstones of lower Palaeozoic age. From the close correlation between ore grades and the intersection of favourable stratigraphy and bounding faults, it is apparent that mineralisation is controlled by both structural and lithological influences. Within the ore zone, disseminated gold, arsenopyrite, pyrite, and rare base-metal sulphides are associated with a network of widely spaced, millimetre-scale, quartz–carbonate veinlets. Quasi-pervasive fluid flow and prolonged interaction with the host rocks resulted in a diffuse, but pronounced halo of wall-rock alteration that is characterized by the breakdown of detrital feldspar and metamorphic chlorite and the development of hydrothermal carbonate phases, K-mica, and disseminated sulphides. These mineralogical changes are accompanied by enrichment in CO2, K, Au, As, and S and depletion in Na across the ore zone. Vein formation occurred at between 250° and 350°C and pressures of less than 1–2 kbar (1 kbar = 100 MPa), corresponding to an estimated depth of between <2.8 and 6 km. Mineralisation resulted from the unmixing of an overpressured (low-salinity, CO2-rich) fluid in response to decreasing pressure during its ascent and penetration into permeable host rocks. Geological and geochemical features of mineralisation in the Touquoy Zone deposit are seen as convincing evidence for a close genetic association between disseminated-style and lode gold mineralisation in orogenic terrains, with the resulting style of mineralisation largely controlled by the overall structural geometry of the mineralising site, rheological properties, permeability and chemical receptiveness of the host rock, and structural level of emplacement.


1957 ◽  
Vol 65 (2) ◽  
pp. 167-177 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles J. Vitaliano

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