The Application Of Modern Sea Floor Studies To A Precambrian Greenstone-Hosted Gold-Silver-Barite Deposit, Brazil

- Organization:
- International Marine Minerals Society
- Pages:
- 2
- File Size:
- 443 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1993
Abstract
The Zacarias gold-silver-barite deposit appears to be a Precambrian analogue of present-day exhalative deposits on the sea floor. Geochemical, stratigraphic and structural studies of the latter can be useful in elucidating the ore environment at Zacarias, thereby assisting exploration. The Zacarias mine is about 300 km north of Brasilia, within the Goiás Massif, Brazil. It is the southernmost of three auriferous quartzite occurrences along 1 km of a northeasterly striking amphibolite. Zacarias and its neighboring smaller deposit to the north, the Central Pit, contained a premining ore reserve of 650,000 tons at 4.4 g/t gold, 48 g/t silver, and about 20% barite. Gold mineralization is hosted by concordant quartzite strata also containing layered barite, pyrite, barium-mica, sphalerite, galena, chalcopyrite, magnetite, sulfosalts, free gold, and electrum. The host amphibolite is intercalated with barren mica-quartz-chlorite-pyrite schists that are more voluminous in the footwall and are associated with the ore horizons. Above the amphibolite in the hangingwall lies a thin graphitic shale, then a feldspathic arenite. The strata and regional foliation strike northeast and dip 42° northwest. Crenulation and small-scale folds plunge 30 to 40° to the west.
Citation
APA:
(1993) The Application Of Modern Sea Floor Studies To A Precambrian Greenstone-Hosted Gold-Silver-Barite Deposit, BrazilMLA: The Application Of Modern Sea Floor Studies To A Precambrian Greenstone-Hosted Gold-Silver-Barite Deposit, Brazil. International Marine Minerals Society, 1993.