The Early Carboniferous palaeogeography of the northern Tamworth Belt, New South Wales

1982 ◽  
Vol 29 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 357-366 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arthur J. Mory
1977 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 42 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. R. Evans

The only area of Western New South Wales considered to have petroleum potential is the intracratonic, fault-bounded Darling Basin, which evolved during Late Silurian to Early Carboniferous time and which contains up to 7000 m of sediments. Initially deposition was controlled by a shallow marine transgression from the east. Regression during the Middle Devonian was followed by basin-wide extension of alluvial sedimentation, which prevailed until the Early Carboniferous. Strike slip movements during Late Devonian time along old basement trends fragmented the basin into distinct troughs. Movements along the same trends during the Carboniferous modified the troughs' configuration. Permian, Mesozoic and Cenozoic sag-like downwarps in various parts of the region had negligible effect on bedding attitudes.The only play of the Basin thought to have a chance for significant petroleum generation and entrapment lies in the Lower and (?) Middle Devonian, where marginal marine deposits flank highs created by strike slip movements. This play is regarded as one of high risk for modest returns, but its continued exploration seems warranted in view of proximity to markets and to the Moomba-Sydney pipeline.


2009 ◽  
Vol 79 (2) ◽  
pp. 56-82 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. P. Birgenheier ◽  
C. R. Fielding ◽  
M. C. Rygel ◽  
T. D. Frank ◽  
J. Roberts

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Colin Wilkins ◽  
Mike Quayle

Abstract The Reward mine at Hill End hosts structurally controlled orogenic gold mineralization in moderately S plunging, high-grade gold shoots located at the intersection between a late, steeply W dipping reverse fault zone and E-dipping, bedding-parallel, laminated quartz veins (the Paxton’s vein system). The mineralized bedding-parallel veins are contained within the middle Silurian to Middle Devonian age, turbidite-dominated Hill End trough forming part of the Lachlan orogen in New South Wales. The Hill End trough was deformed in the Middle Devonian (Tabberabberan orogeny), forming tight, N-S–trending, macroscopic D2 folds (Hill End anticline) with S2 slaty cleavage and associated bedding-parallel veins. Structural analysis indicates that the D2 flexural-slip folding mechanism formed bedding-parallel movement zones that contained flexural-slip duplexes, bedding-parallel veins, and saddle reefs in the fold hinges. Bedding-parallel veins are concentrated in weak, narrow shale beds between competent sandstones with dip angles up to 70° indicating that the flexural slip along bedding occurred on unfavorably oriented planes until fold lockup. Gold was precipitated during folding, with fluid-flow concentrated along bedding, as fold limbs rotated, and hosted by bedding-parallel veins and associated structures. However, the gold is sporadically developed, often with subeconomic grades, and is associated with quartz, muscovite, chlorite, carbonates, pyrrhotite, and pyrite. East-west shortening of the Hill End trough resumed during the Late Devonian to early Carboniferous (Kanimblan orogeny), producing a series of steeply W dipping reverse faults that crosscut the eastern limb of the Hill End anticline. Where W-dipping reverse faults intersected major E-dipping bedding-parallel veins, gold (now associated with galena and sphalerite) was precipitated in a network of brittle fractures contained within the veins, forming moderately S plunging, high-grade gold shoots. Only where major bedding-parallel veins were intersected, displaced, and fractured by late W-dipping reverse faults is there a potential for localization of high-grade gold shoots (>10 g/t). A revised structural history for the Hill End area not only explains the location of gold shoots in the Reward mine but allows previous geochemical, dating, and isotope studies to be better understood, with the discordant W-dipping reverse faults likely acting as feeder structures introducing gold-bearing fluids sourced within deeply buried Ordovician volcanic units below the Hill End trough. A comparison is made between gold mineralization, structural style, and timing at Hill End in the eastern Lachlan orogen with the gold deposits of Victoria, in the western Lachlan orogen. Structural styles are similar where gold mineralization is formed during folding and reverse faulting during periods of regional east-west shortening. However, at Hill End, flexural-slip folding-related weakly mineralized bedding-parallel veins are reactivated to a lesser degree once folds lock up (cf. the Bendigo zone deposits in Victoria) due to the earlier effects of fold-related flattening and boudinage. The second stage of gold mineralization was formed by an array of crosscutting, steeply W dipping reverse faults fracturing preexisting bedding-parallel veins that developed high-grade gold shoots. Deformation and gold mineralization in the western Lachlan orogen started in the Late Ordovician to middle Silurian Benambran orogeny and continued with more deposits forming in the Bindian (Early Devonian) and Tabberabberan (late Early-Middle Devonian) orogenies. This differs from the Hill End trough in the eastern Lachlan orogen, where deformation and mineralization started in the Tabberabberan orogeny and culminated with the formation of high-grade gold shoots at Hill End during renewed compression in the early Carboniferous Kanimblan orogeny.


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