Tectonics and Mineralization of the Western and Central New Guinea Mobile Belt

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
13
File Size:
946 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1990

Abstract

The New Guinea Mobile Belt is the northern zone of the Melanesian Orogeny (Dow and Sukamto, 1984), which consists of a complex zone ofupthrusted and accreted, regionally metamorphosed geosynclinal sediments and volcanics of Mesozoic to Eocene age and the overlying sediments. On the northern margin of this accreted terrane, formed an Eocene to Middle Miocene island arc. The North New Guinea Basin formed during the Upper Oligocene on the accreted margin. The depositional history of this basin is complicated by major crustal movements during the Upper Miocene to Holocene. During the Middle to Upper Miocene two magmatic arcs were emplaced. The northern magmatic arc is in part, spatically and genetically related to the Eocene to Middle Miocene island arc. The Maramuni-Utawa Magmatic Arc (southern) is a result of the Oligocene accretion and regional metamorphism. Coincident witt these magmatic arcs are belts of mineralization containing porphyry Cu-Au, epithermal/hydrothermal Au, Ag + Cu-Pb-Zn, exhalative Cu-Pb-Zn + Ag-Au, lateritic Ni-Cr-Co + PGE and alluvial Au, PGE, Cr occurrences and deposits. An intergrated tectonic model is presented for these and other data for the northern zone of the Melanesian Orogeny.
Citation

APA:  (1990)  Tectonics and Mineralization of the Western and Central New Guinea Mobile Belt

MLA: Tectonics and Mineralization of the Western and Central New Guinea Mobile Belt. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1990.

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