65. Ore Deposits at Butte, Montana

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Charles Meyer George J. Burns Edward P. Shea Charles C. Goddard Lester G. Zeihen John M. Guilbert Richard N. Miller Joseph F. Mcaleer Gordon B. Brox Robert G. Ingersoll
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
44
File Size:
4656 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1968

Abstract

The Boulder batholith is a composite intrusive in which the Butte quartz monzonite is the dominant rock type. Quartz porphyry dikes intruded the quartz monzonite in directions which were subsequently followed by the eastwest- striking Anaconda system of veins, the earliest major veins in the district. Anaconda veins are faulted by northwest-striking veins of the Blue system, which are most prominent in the central third of the district. Anaconda veins are the major producers in the western third of the district and also in the eastern third, where the "horsetail" zones break off from them. Individual oreshoots are thousands of feet long as well as deep on both systems of veins, but they are generally more persistent and thicker on the Anaconda veins. Viewed broadly, the mineralization in the big veins is arranged in crudely concentric zones of zinc and manganese around a central zone of copper. Only slightly offset from these zones, but earlier structurally, is a zone in which quartz-molybdenite veinlets are prominent. This zone tops at about the 2800 level and widens downward. The pattern of distribution of Cu-Fe-S series minerals in the large veins of the copper zone is not symmetrical with respect to the metal zones. There is a fringe of chalcopyrite-bornite all around the copper front. However, within the copper zone, pyrite-chalcocite-enargitecovellite- digenite assemblages are prevalent near its eastern edge from the 3800 level to the surface, whereas deep on the large Anaconda veins in the western part of the copper zone, chalcopyrite is dominant. Here the chalcopyrite grades upward into bornite-chalcocite ores and eastward into the high-sulfur assemblages of the Leonard mine. Sericite-biotite-K-feldspar alteration envelopes, containing up to about 2 per cent copper as chalcopyrite, are present on some of the quartz-molybdenite veinlets at deep mine levels in the molybdenite zone. These envelopes contrast sharply mineralogically and chemically with the later sericitic and argillic alteration envelopes around Main Stage veins. K'0-Ar'0 ratios indicate that they may be older by about 4 m.y. Secondarily enriched copper ores are mined in the Berkeley pit in the southeastern part of the district. At the present time they account for about half of Butte's production of copper.
Citation

APA: Charles Meyer George J. Burns Edward P. Shea Charles C. Goddard Lester G. Zeihen John M. Guilbert Richard N. Miller Joseph F. Mcaleer Gordon B. Brox Robert G. Ingersoll  (1968)  65. Ore Deposits at Butte, Montana

MLA: Charles Meyer George J. Burns Edward P. Shea Charles C. Goddard Lester G. Zeihen John M. Guilbert Richard N. Miller Joseph F. Mcaleer Gordon B. Brox Robert G. Ingersoll 65. Ore Deposits at Butte, Montana. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1968.

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