Geology, mineralogy and genesis of gold mineralization at Calliachet-Urlar Burn, Scotland

- Organization:
- The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
- Pages:
- 10
- File Size:
- 5881 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jun 19, 1905
Abstract
Paper presented at Mineralisation in the Caledonides, the Mike Gallagher memorial meeting held in Edinburgh, 27-28 June 1996. At Calliachar Burn, 14 steeply dipping quartz-sulphide veins, with and without gold, infill master joints that crosscut gently dipping metasediments and metabasics of the Pitlochry Schist Formation. The wallrock is extremely bleached and enriched in sericite, chlorite and carbonate. Gold grades vary from high with quartz-galena-pyrite to low with galena-chalcopyrite; the gold forms electrum inclusions smaller than 20 micrometres in pyrite or, rarely, arsenopyrite. At Urlar Burn, gold is present in small amounts in 4 quartz-galena-chalcopyrite veins. Although much of the mineralogy is similar to that at Calliachar, there are significant differences in Sb-, Te-, Bi- and Hg-bearing phases. Fluid inclusion data suggest mineralisation occurred over the range 320-140 degrees C, from fluids with significant CO2 and 2-13 wt% equiv. NaCl. Mantle-derived fluids appear to have been generated during the late Caledonian and focused by the Urlar Burn fault
Citation
APA:
(1905) Geology, mineralogy and genesis of gold mineralization at Calliachet-Urlar Burn, ScotlandMLA: Geology, mineralogy and genesis of gold mineralization at Calliachet-Urlar Burn, Scotland. The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining, 1905.