San Carlos Lead Deposit, Northeast Chihuahua, Mexico

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 9
- File Size:
- 300 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1970
Abstract
The San Carlos lead deposit in northeast Chihuahua yielded approximately one million tons of galena ore from a blanket-like deposit. Countryrock, composed of Cretaceous limestones and calcareous shales as old as late Albian-early Aptian, and an underlying undated quartzite series, has been warped into a northwest trending anticline and has been invaded by a light-colored holocrystalline igneous rock. Magnetite and contact metamorphic minerals heterogeneously mixed with variable amounts of pyrite, sphalerite and galena, are concentrated along the anticlinal axis where they replaced magnesia-rich argillaceous sediments above the quartzite contact. Magnetite and associated silicates were deposited under near-contact conditions. Following a period of post-magnetite shattering, pyrite, sphalerite and galena were introduced at lower temperatures. Galena and associated dolomite or magnesite, the final phase of mineralization, are concentrated at the top of the deposit near the anticlinal crest and extend upward into isoclinally folded dolomitic argillites. INTRODUCTION AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The stoped outlines of the San Carlos Mine are a pattern for a stratiform blanket-like deposit. But the close association of mineralization with an anticlinal axis, an observed relation between high grade galena mineralization and the apices of isoclinal folds, and the petrographic story of mineralization introduced into shattered areas make the deposit an example of structural control of ore de-
Citation
APA:
(1970) San Carlos Lead Deposit, Northeast Chihuahua, MexicoMLA: San Carlos Lead Deposit, Northeast Chihuahua, Mexico. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1970.