Syn-peak metamorphic gold mineralization in the amphibolite-facies, gabbro-hosted Three Mile Hill deposit, Coolgardie goldfield, Western Australia: a high-temperature analogue of mesothermal gabbro-hosted gold deposits

The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
J. T. Knight J. R. Ridley C. McCall
Organization:
The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
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25
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13272 KB
Publication Date:
Jun 18, 1905

Abstract

Gold mineralisation in the gabbro sills is mainly stratabound to quartz- and Fe-rich, granophyric-textured units and is sited in undeformed, brittle quartz vein sets, which form pipe-like orebodies. Hydrothermal wallrock alteration consists of hornblende-plagioclase-calcite-quartz with minor biotite, garnet and chlorite and with arsenopyrite and pyrrhotite as the dominant sulphides. Geothermobarometric data suggest that gold was deposited at around 520 degrees C at 2.8-3.8 bar. Mineralisation is thought to have occurred during amphibolite-facies metamorphism. Fluid inclusion and isotope data indicate that gold mineralisation was the result of deposition from a low-salinity H2O-CO2-CH4 fluid of either metamorphic or magmatic origin. Although the Three Mile Hill deposit differs from others in the area in its wallrock-alteration assemblages, peak-metamorphic timing of gold deposition and distinct geochemical associations it forms a brittle stratabound ore body which suggests structural and gold-depositional mechanisms in common with those of the other gabbro-hosted gold deposits
Citation

APA: J. T. Knight J. R. Ridley C. McCall  (1905)  Syn-peak metamorphic gold mineralization in the amphibolite-facies, gabbro-hosted Three Mile Hill deposit, Coolgardie goldfield, Western Australia: a high-temperature analogue of mesothermal gabbro-hosted gold deposits

MLA: J. T. Knight J. R. Ridley C. McCall Syn-peak metamorphic gold mineralization in the amphibolite-facies, gabbro-hosted Three Mile Hill deposit, Coolgardie goldfield, Western Australia: a high-temperature analogue of mesothermal gabbro-hosted gold deposits. The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining, 1905.

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