Light Stable Isotope Evidence for a Metamorphogenic Origin for Bedding-Parallel, Gold-bearing Veins in Cambrian F1ysch, Meguma Group, Nova Scotia

- Organization:
- Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
- Pages:
- 11
- File Size:
- 7241 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1992
Abstract
Abstract -Auriferous, bedding-parallel veins occur in zones of carbonaceous, argillaceous and sulfidic turbidites in the Lower to Middle Cambrian sandy flysch of the Goldenville Formation. The ?34S values for vein and wall-rock arsenopyrite and pyrrhotite, and for regional pyrite and pyrrhotite, are highly positive. The values are similar to those from Cambro-Ordovician sediment-hosted deposits of other types, and display trends that increase upward in the stratigraphic sequence. The similarity in composition of vein and wallrock sulfides indicates a seawater-sulfate source for sulfur, derived from the enclosing rocks at the time of vein formation. The upward increase in ?34S values is consistent with closed system sulfate reduction in the anoxic portion of a stratified water-column. Published ?18C and ?18O values for Meguma Group vein carbonates are unlike those of other gold-vein carbonates, but are similar to those of diagenetic-metamorphic carbonates from the Meguma Group and elsewhere. These data indicate that the source for the vein-related sulfides and carbonates may be the host strata; possibly the arsenic and gold were derived from the same source.
Citation
APA:
(1992) Light Stable Isotope Evidence for a Metamorphogenic Origin for Bedding-Parallel, Gold-bearing Veins in Cambrian F1ysch, Meguma Group, Nova ScotiaMLA: Light Stable Isotope Evidence for a Metamorphogenic Origin for Bedding-Parallel, Gold-bearing Veins in Cambrian F1ysch, Meguma Group, Nova Scotia. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1992.