Regional distribution of As, Sb and Bi in Grampian Highlands of Scotland and English Lake District: implications for gold metallogeny

- Organization:
- The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
- Pages:
- 13
- File Size:
- 8486 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jul 1, 1991
Abstract
Paper presented at the 28th International Geological Congress held in Washington DC, July 1989 (International geochemical mapping sessions). The Grampian Highlands and English Lake District evolved as part of the American and European continental plates, respectively, and were separated by the Iapetus Ocean until they were tectonically juxtaposed during the late stages of the Caledonian orogeny. The similarity in the controls of the distribution of gold pathfinder elements and gold mineralisation in the two regions thus provides important information for understanding the genesis of gold deposits in comparable tectonic settings elsewhere. The data presented are inconsistent with models that invoke a juvenile source of gold or its pathfinder elements. Instead, they support a model whereby gold and its pathfinders were initially concentrated in volcano-sedimentary sequences in rapidly subsiding, tectonically controlled basins and in associated volcanic rocks. Remobilisation and mineralisation occurred subsequently, probably as a result of an increase in oxygen fugacity associated with the influx of granite magmas into the crust and the establishment of hydrothermal convective circulation systems
Citation
APA:
(1991) Regional distribution of As, Sb and Bi in Grampian Highlands of Scotland and English Lake District: implications for gold metallogenyMLA: Regional distribution of As, Sb and Bi in Grampian Highlands of Scotland and English Lake District: implications for gold metallogeny. The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining, 1991.