The controls on the formation of gold-bearing hydrothermal quartz veins at the Bleka Concession, Telemark, Norway

2020 ◽  
Vol 129 (2) ◽  
pp. 85-86
Author(s):  
C. S. Bishop ◽  
G. R. T. Jenkin ◽  
D. Duckworth
1979 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 440-458 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Kerrich ◽  
B. J. Fryer

The Porcupine District, Abitibi Greenstone Belt, is one of the most extensive areas of Archaean auriferous mineralisation. At least two stages of lode-gold emplacement are recognised: the first stage involves gold-bearing carbonate–chert chemical sediments within the lower mafic volcanic sequence; the second stage is represented by auriferous hydrothermal quartz veins which postdate deformation of the greenstone assemblage and transect diverse host rocks.Rare-earth element (REE) concentrations in the stratiform carbonates are typical of the distinctive patterns recorded for Archaean chemical sediments. Chert in these rocks has a δ18O value averaging 17.1‰, implying exchange from heavier 18/16 ratios during diagenesis and metamorphism. Metabasic volcanic rocks and quartz–feldspar porphyry stocks with background gold abundances have mean whole-rock δ18O values of 9.1‰ and 10.7‰ respectively. This enrichment in 18O relative to primary igneous rocks is attributed to oxygen isotope exchange with seawater at low temperatures during fluid transport through the oceanic crust.Quartz in all of the five hydrothermal vein systems present has a δ18O of 14‰ to 15‰, and quartz-muscovite fractionations are 3.4‰ to 3.8‰. Ambient temperatures of mineralisation are estimated to have been 400 °C to 450 °C, from oxygen isotope thermometers, fluid inclusion filling temperatures, and metamorphic mineral assemblages. The calculated δ18O of the mineralising solutions is~10‰, implying fluids of metamorphic origin. REE patterns in hydrothermal quartz veins suggest that they have been derived from high-temperature solutions in equilibrium with source rocks having relatively flat (chondrite normalised) REE distributions, such as tholeiitic and komatiitic volcanics. Adjacent to hydrothermal veins, quartz in igneous rocks approaches isotopic equilibrium with vein quartz, at 15‰, and whole-rock δ18O values for metabasalts shift to ~11‰, implying extensive water-rock interaction. Strong depletions in heavy REE of metabasic schists adjacent to veins provides further evidence for pervasive hydrothermal alteration. The Eu enrichment of all lode gold deposits analysed at Dome Mine is consistent with the reduced state of the solutions involved in their deposition, as recorded by the predominance of Fe2+. The gold-bearing veins are believed to have formed by focussed flow of fluids outgassed at the greenschist–amphibolite transition. Source volumes for Au in the Porcupine District exceed 600 km3, the carrier fluid volume for mineralisation was 60–90 km3, the Au solute concentration in the low nanogram mL−1 range, and transport distances were of the order of 10 km. Such veins may be the precursors of precious-metal-bearing chemical sediments if fluids debouche into the hydrosphere.


2021 ◽  
Vol 131 ◽  
pp. 104002
Author(s):  
Zhiyuan Sun ◽  
Jingbin Wang ◽  
Yang Wang ◽  
Yan Zhang ◽  
Lutong Zhao

2012 ◽  
Vol 31 (4) ◽  
pp. 441-448
Author(s):  
Jiwei Liang ◽  
Rongxi Li ◽  
Shaoni Zhang ◽  
Baoyun Chen ◽  
Lizhi Duan ◽  
...  

2001 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 1139
Author(s):  
O. A. KAMEL ◽  
M. M. EL MAHALLAWI ◽  
H. M. HELMY

Gold-bearing quartz veins of the Umm Rus area occur at the south-eastern contact of a Precambrian granodiorite cupola within younger gabbros of 573-615 Ma belonging to the Pan African orogenic belt. The rocks are intruded within low-grade metasediments. At such contact, a hybrid zone is developed characterized by the occurrence of quartz diorite which grades into diorite and meta-ferrogabro. A limited number of mineralized quartz veins cut the granodiorite-gabbro complex. Different alteration zones are developed in the vicinity of the quartz veins. The quartz veins have two main trends; NS and N30 E, the latter one is usaually gold-bearing. The mineralized parts of the veins commonly consist of highly sheared and banded smoky quartz, and the gold content depends on the relation with the dykes. The element is strongly correlated with As and Ag, but moderately with Cu. Near to intermediate and basic dykes, the contents of Au, Ag and As are noticably increased


Author(s):  
A. French

The alluvium over an area of about 50 square miles around Lead-hills in Lanarkshire, is auriferous. In many places the precious metal may be rendered visible after fifteen or twenty minutes washing with the primitive wooden trough employed by the local gold-seekers. Frequently nuggets have been found weighing from one to four or five pennyweights, and these are often either contained in pieces of loose quartz, or have quartz fragments attached to them; there are therefore good reasons to believe that the gold found in the red stratum of clay lying immediately above the rock has been derived from the numerous quartz veins which traverse the district. The author was one day searching, along with some friends, for gold quartz in situ, and while examining a vein which crosses a gulch in the hills, called the “Gold Scars,” found cavities in the quartz filled with a peculiar pasty substance, which appeared at first sight like minute scales of silver, which had been precipitated from a solution. Our first impression was that it was silver, but its behaviour in water soon cleared away the delusion; it rendered the water exceedingly turbid and white, and the suspended matter was a long time in settling.


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