Hydrothermal alteration associated with sediment-hosted Rooiberg tin deposits, South Africa

- Organization:
- The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
- Pages:
- 15
- File Size:
- 8743 KB
- Publication Date:
- Aug 1, 1995
Abstract
Paper presented at Geofluids '93, held in Torquay, UK, 4-7 May 1993. The tin field consists of a fragment of Lower Proterozoic volcanosedimentary rocks surrounded by granitoids. Almost all the significant deposits are hosted by arkoses and are classified as replacement and space-filling types, with particular styles of mineralisation dominating at different mines. Petrological and geochemical investigation of borehole cores from four centres indicated the presence of a stratified zone 500-600 m thick and continuous over at least 20 km along strike, consisting of pervasively altered clastic arenitic sediments. The alteration is zoned into a grey-green sodic albitised footwall, an 80 m thick sericitised-tourmalinised sulphidic tin zone and a red haematitic potassic hanging-wall. The zoning and the localisation of three cassiterite phases are consistent with the tectonic history and with multiple pulses of stanniferous hydrothermal fluids derived from late differentiates of the granites over a prolonged period. Areas of high fracture density acted as conduits for the fluids, whose initially rapid ascent was retarded by decreasing pressure contrast, limited development of fracturing and/or impermeable shaly arkose to cause lateral spreading and pervasive alteration over a broad, stratified front. Lateral overlapping of local fronts at the various centres suggests a continuous zone, while the many petrological and geochemical similarities point to a shared fluid composition
Citation
APA:
(1995) Hydrothermal alteration associated with sediment-hosted Rooiberg tin deposits, South AfricaMLA: Hydrothermal alteration associated with sediment-hosted Rooiberg tin deposits, South Africa. The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining, 1995.