Wall Rock Alteration At Butte, Montana

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Reno H. Sales Charles Meyer
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
25
File Size:
1640 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1947

Abstract

AT Butte, successive zones of sericitized and argillized quartz monzonite occur around every ore-bearing fracture regardless of its size, attitude, or relative age. The two types of alteration always occupy the same relative positions; sericite adjacent to the ore-bearing vein, clay minerals always between the sericitized rock and fresh quartz monzonite, except where overlap of alteration effects between adjacent fissures has eliminated the lower grade mineralogical products, as is the case in much of Butte's Central zone of pervasive sericitization. As long as active circulation continued in the channel, each zone migrated away from the fissure, that is, it grew at its outer edge and simultaneously receded at its veinward edge because of encroachment by the next innermost zone. The different mineralogical and chemical responses within the wall rocks to the attack by the ore fluid are dependent not on a drastic about-face change of composition of the fluid in the channel relative to its ability to alter the quartz monzonite but on continuously varying conditions of physico-chemical environment within the wall rock outwardly from the vein.
Citation

APA: Reno H. Sales Charles Meyer  (1947)  Wall Rock Alteration At Butte, Montana

MLA: Reno H. Sales Charles Meyer Wall Rock Alteration At Butte, Montana. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1947.

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