A Preliminary Investigation of Hydrothermal Alteration at the Rahu and Ascot Epithermal Au-Ag Prospects, Southern Hauraki Goldfield, New Zealand

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
J L. Mauk P Licence M Stevens P Atkinson
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
6
File Size:
245 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2007

Abstract

The Rahu and Ascot epithermal Au-Ag prospects are two km north of the Karangahake deposit in the Hauraki Goldfield, and all occur in an approximately 6 km2 north-south elongated magnetic æquietÆ zone. The prospects are hosted by andesitic flows, lithic-crystal tuffs and local sedimentary rocks; local silica sinter occurs at Ascot. These host rocks are intensely altered by quartz, adularia, albite, chlorite, pyrite, illite, interstratified illite-smectite and calcite. Several minerals show zoned distributions, such as widespread adularia that overlies more localised and deeper albite. Illite is the only dioctahedral phyllosilicate in several drill holes, but elsewhere it forms a shallow carapace underlain by interstratified illite-smectite with 50 to 90 percent illite. Veins are common with quartz dominating near the surface and calcite becoming more abundant at depth. Local laumontite-calcite veins also occur. Pseudosecondary and secondary fluid inclusions in quartz and calcite at Rahu and Ascot have homogenisation temperatures (Th) that range from 162¦ to 268¦C and 128¦ to 243¦C, respectively. Most inclusions have trapped dilute fluids with salinities of less than 1.9 weight percent NaCl equivalent, but 20 percent of the inclusions have salinities of 2.0 to 10.5 weight percent NaCl equivalent. Calculated paleowater table elevations suggest that the water table at Rahu occurred at 440 m above sea level (asl). At Ascot, silica sinter formed from discharging geothermal fluids (=100¦C) at the paleosurface at ~135 m asl. However the sinter also contains comb quartz with pseudosecondary inclusions that have a Th average of 229¦C, corresponding to a paleowater table at ~430 m asl during inclusion entrapment. Taken together, these results suggest that the Ascot sinter was buried by approximately 300 m of cover material during a major volcanic or tectonic event, and that subsequent hydrothermal fluids formed veins and alteration at Rahu and deposited comb quartz at Ascot.
Citation

APA: J L. Mauk P Licence M Stevens P Atkinson  (2007)  A Preliminary Investigation of Hydrothermal Alteration at the Rahu and Ascot Epithermal Au-Ag Prospects, Southern Hauraki Goldfield, New Zealand

MLA: J L. Mauk P Licence M Stevens P Atkinson A Preliminary Investigation of Hydrothermal Alteration at the Rahu and Ascot Epithermal Au-Ag Prospects, Southern Hauraki Goldfield, New Zealand. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2007.

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