Drill Core Logging of Plagioclase Feldspar Composition and Other Minerals Associated with Archean Gold Mineralization at Kambalda, Western Australia, Using a Bidirectional Thermal Infrared Reflectance System

2009 ◽  
pp. 223-235 ◽  
Geophysics ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 71 (3) ◽  
pp. M1-M9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jilu Feng ◽  
Benoit Rivard ◽  
E. Ann Gallie ◽  
Arturo Sanchez

In this study, core samples of sulfide-rich zones were delineated from their host rock and a quantitative estimation of sulfide content on cut-rock faces was made using thermal infrared reflectance (TIR; [Formula: see text] region) spectroscopy. Core sections and rocks were collected from mines in the Sudbury basin, Ontario, Canada. The TSC% (areal percentage of total sulfide content) of each sample was then estimated by summing the modal abundance of all sulfide minerals (chalcopyrite, pyrrhotite, and pentlandite). TIR at [Formula: see text] [Formula: see text] is linearly related to TSC%. The average of the spectral ratios [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text] [Formula: see text] is related exponentially to TSC%. The coefficients of determination [Formula: see text] based on a calibration data set are 0.90 and 0.87, respectively. Two models were tested, the [Formula: see text] model and the [Formula: see text] model; the latter combines [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text]. The value for [Formula: see text] for predicted TSC% versus observed TSC% (from thin sections) is 0.98 and 0.97, respectively, with little or no bias. The standard deviation of the residuals is 3.1 and 3.5 TSC%, respectively. The [Formula: see text] model is preferred over the [Formula: see text] model because it is linear and therefore does not have the problem with insensitivity at low TSC% that the exponential [Formula: see text] model has. In addition, from the viewpoint of developing an instrument for automated core logging, the [Formula: see text] model requires measurements at only one wavelength rather than three and hence requires a less expensive instrument.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jordan A. McDivitt ◽  
Steffen G. Hagemann ◽  
Anthony I.S. Kemp ◽  
Nicolas Thébaud ◽  
Christopher M. Fisher ◽  
...  

Abstract Different genetic and timing models for gold mineralization in the Kalgoorlie gold camp (Yilgarn craton, Western Australia) suggest either broadly synchronous, late-stage mineralization related to metamorphic fluids at ca. 2640 Ma or a punctuated mineralization history from ca. 2675 to 2640 Ma with the involvement of early magmatic-hydrothermal systems (represented by the Fimiston, Hidden Secret, and Oroya gold-telluride lodes) and late metamorphic fluids (represented by the Mt. Charlotte gold stockwork veins). The results of U-Pb and Sm-Nd geochronological studies of zircon, apatite, and titanite from pre-ore dikes and syn-ore dikes constrain the absolute timing of mineralization and provide new evidence to this timing controversy. Emplacement ages constrained by U-Pb sensitive high-resolution ion microprobe (SHRIMP) zircon data are interpreted to be similar for both the pre-ore dikes (n = 10) and syn-ore dikes (n = 7) at ca. 2675 Ma. An inferred emplacement age of ca. 2675 Ma for the syn-ore dikes is supported by a Sm-Nd isochron age from apatite (laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry; LA-ICP-MS) of 2678 ± 15 Ma and by a U-Pb titanite age (LA-ICP-MS) of 2679 ± 6 Ma. The results of chemical abrasion-isotope dilution-thermal ionization mass spectrometry U-Pb zircon analysis from the pre- and syn-ore dikes are complicated by multistage Pb loss, reverse discordance, and potential inheritance. However, the data are compatible with the emplacement of Fimiston/Hidden Secret gold mineralization at ca. 2675 Ma and suggest a younger age for Oroya mineralization at ca. 2665 Ma. These results contrast with models for orogenic gold deposits that invoke broadly synchronous, late-stage mineralization related to metamorphic fluids at ca. 2640 Ma. The bulk of the Kalgoorlie gold camp’s estimated 2,300 t Au endowment was emplaced at ca. 2675 Ma as Fimiston/Hidden Secret Au mineralization. This early Au mineralization was deformed and overprinted twice by subordinate Au mineralization at ca. 2665 (Oroya mineralization) and ca. 2640 Ma (Mt. Charlotte mineralization). Gold mineralization in the Kalgoorlie gold camp was protracted in nature from ca. 2675 to 2640 Ma and reflects the interplay of early magmatic (Fimiston, Hidden Secret, Oroya) and late metamorphic (Mt. Charlotte) hydrothermal fluid systems in the formation of hybrid intrusion-related and metamorphic orebodies.


2020 ◽  
pp. 251-274
Author(s):  
Jordan A. McDivitt ◽  
Steffen G. Hagemann ◽  
Matthew S. Baggott ◽  
Stuart Perazzo

Abstract The Kalgoorlie gold camp in the Yilgarn craton of Western Australia comprises the supergiant Golden Mile and the smaller Mt. Charlotte, Mt. Percy, and Hidden Secret deposits. Since the camp’s discovery in 1893, ~1,950 metric tons (t) of Au have been produced from a total estimated endowment of ~2,300 t. The camp is located within Neoarchean rocks of the Kalgoorlie terrane, within the Eastern Goldfields superterrane of the eastern Yilgarn craton. Gold mineralization is distributed along an 8- × 2-km, NNW-trending corridor, which corresponds to the Boulder Lefroy-Golden Mile fault system. The host stratigraphic sequence, dated at ca. 2710 to 2660 Ma, comprises lower ultramafic and mafic lava flow rocks, and upper felsic to intermediate volcaniclastic, epiclastic, and lava flow rocks intruded by highly differentiated dolerite sills such as the ca. 2685 Ma Golden Mile Dolerite. Multiple sets of NNW-trending, steeply dipping porphyry dikes intruded this sequence from ca. 2675 to 2640 Ma. From ca. 2685 to 2640 Ma, rocks of the Kalgoorlie gold camp were subjected to multiple deformation increments and metamorphism. Early D1 deformation from ca. 2685 to 2675 Ma generated the Golden Mile fault and F1 folds. Prolonged sinistral transpression from ca. 2675 to 2655 Ma produced overprinting, NNW-trending sets of D2-D3 folds and faults. The last deformation stage (D4; < ca. 2650 Ma) is recorded by N- to NNE-trending, dextral faults which offset earlier structures. The main mineralization type in the Golden Mile comprises Fimiston lodes: steeply dipping, WNW- to NNW-striking, gold- and telluride-bearing carbonate-quartz veins with banded, colloform, and crustiform textures surrounded by sericite-carbonate-quartz-pyrite-telluride alteration zones. These lodes were emplaced during the earlier stages of regional sinistral transpression (D2) as Riedel shear-type structures. During a later stage of regional sinistral transpression (D3), exceptionally high grade Oroya-type mineralization developed as shallowly plunging ore shoots with “Green Leader” quartz-sericite-carbonate-pyrite-telluride alteration typified by vanadium-bearing muscovite. In the Hidden Secret orebody, ~3 km north-northwest of the Golden Mile, lode mineralization is a silver-rich variety characterized by increased abundance of hessite and petzite and decreased abundance of calaverite. At the adjacent Mt. Charlotte deposit, the gold-, silver-, and telluride-bearing lodes become subordinate to the Mt. Charlotte-type stockwork veins. The stockwork veins occur as planar, 2- to 50-cm thick, auriferous quartz-carbonate-sulfide veins that define steeply NW- to SE-dipping and shallowly N-dipping sets broadly coeval with D4 deformation. Despite extensive research, there is no consensus on critical features of ore formation in the camp. Models suggest either (1) distinct periods of mineralization over a protracted, ca. 2.68 to 2.64 Ga orogenic history; or (2) broadly synchronous formation of the different types of mineralization at ca. 2.64 Ga. The nature of fluids, metal sources, and mineralizing processes remain debated, with both metamorphic and magmatic models proposed. There is strong evidence for multiple gold mineralization events over the course of the ca. 2.68 to 2.64 orogenic window, differing in genesis and contributions from either magmatic or metamorphic ore-forming processes. However, reconciling these models with field relationships and available geochemical and geochronological constraints remains difficult and is the subject of ongoing research.


2020 ◽  
Vol 125 ◽  
pp. 103471 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adam B. Bath ◽  
John L. Walshe ◽  
Jonathan Cloutier ◽  
Jackie Rotherham ◽  
Rob Hutchison ◽  
...  

Minerals ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 122 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura Tusa ◽  
Louis Andreani ◽  
Mahdi Khodadadzadeh ◽  
Cecilia Contreras ◽  
Paul Ivascanu ◽  
...  

The rapid mapping and characterization of specific porphyry vein types in geological samples represent a challenge for the mineral exploration and mining industry. In this paper, a methodology to integrate mineralogical and structural data extracted from hyperspectral drill-core scans is proposed. The workflow allows for the identification of vein types based on minerals having significant absorption features in the short-wave infrared. The method not only targets alteration halos of known compositions but also allows for the identification of any vein-like structure. The results consist of vein distribution maps, quantified vein abundances, and their azimuths. Three drill-cores from the Bolcana porphyry system hosting veins of variable density, composition, orientation, and thickness are analysed for this purpose. The results are validated using high-resolution scanning electron microscopy-based mineral mapping techniques. We demonstrate that the use of hyperspectral scanning allows for faster, non-invasive and more efficient drill-core mapping, providing a useful tool for complementing core-logging performed by on-site geologists.


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