Comparison Of The Tag Mound And Stockwork Complex With Cyprus-Type Massive Sulfide Deposits: Results From Leg 158 Drilling

International Marine Minerals Society
Mark D. Hannington
Organization:
International Marine Minerals Society
Pages:
3
File Size:
116 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1998

Abstract

Drilling of the active Trans-Atlantic Geotraverse (TAG) deposit during ODP Leg 158 indicated that the size of the mound-stockwork complex is approximately 3.9 million tonnes, including 2.7 million tonnes of massive and semi-massive sulfide (ca. 2% Cu) at the seafloor and 1.2 million tonnes of mineralized breccias (ca. 1% Cu) in a subseafloor stockwork. Quartz-pyrite veining in the stockwork zone extends from about 40 meters below seafloor (mbsf) to a depth of 95 mbsf. Siliceous wallrock breccias in the lower part of the stockwork grade abruptly into chloritized basalt breccias at the margins of the mineralized zone, and massive sulfides at the flanks of the deposit onlap relatively unaltered, partially hematized basalts. The pipe-like dimensions of the stockwork zone do not exceed the diameter of the sulfide mound. Comparisons with samples collected during earlier dive series confirm that the vent complexes at the surface of the mound are not representative of the bulk composition of the deposit. Dramatic vertical zonation of metals within the mound suggests that a long history of hydrothermal reworking has effectively stripped the constituents that are soluble at lower temperatures from the massive sulfides and concentrated them at the top of the deposit through a process of zone refining.
Citation

APA: Mark D. Hannington  (1998)  Comparison Of The Tag Mound And Stockwork Complex With Cyprus-Type Massive Sulfide Deposits: Results From Leg 158 Drilling

MLA: Mark D. Hannington Comparison Of The Tag Mound And Stockwork Complex With Cyprus-Type Massive Sulfide Deposits: Results From Leg 158 Drilling. International Marine Minerals Society, 1998.

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