Zonations, Mineralisation Paragenesis and Rock Types of the Nena High Sulphidation Copper-Gold Deposit, Papua New Guinea
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 10
 - File Size:
 - 1026 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1997
 
Abstract
The Nena high sulphidation deposit, located in the Sandaun  Province, PNG, contains a measured and indicated resource of  51 Mt of copper ore grading 0.5% Cu and 0.6 g/t Au at a 0.5% Cu  cut-off. The copper orebody is overlain by an 18Mt oxide gold  resource grading 0.1 % Cu and 1.4 g/t Au at a 0.6 g/t Au cut-off.  The deposit is hosted in advanced argillic altered pyroclastics  interstratified with lavas, volcanoclastics, epiclastics and  sediments of the Debom Volcanics within the Frieda River  Intrusive Complex. Foraminiferal sediments indicate the Debom  Volcanics to be Early-Middle Miocene in age. Alteration is elongated along, and concentric about a northwest  trending structure (Nena Structural Corridor) which is about 7km  in length. The inner two alteration types, residual and massive  silica-alunite are strongly brecciated and host the bulk of later  hypogene Cu-Au mineralisation. Weakly mineralised weak silica- alunite and barren peripherally zoned clay alteration surround  the inner mineralised alterations. The hypogene sulphide deposition was polyphasal, episodic and  is zoned from north to south from covellite-enargite ¦ chalcocite  (5600N to 5200N) to a mixed enargite-luzonite (5200N to 4700N)  to luzonite-stibioluzonite (4700N to 4400N) in the south within a  1200m long by 300m diameter sub horizontal pipe like body.  Paragenesis studies indicate that pyrite ¦ marcasite were  introduced early with barite and black native sulphur before  deposition of banded pyrite (melnicovite) with barite during a  period of brecciation. Continued brecciation allowed bladed  covellite ¦ chalcocite followed by enargite-luzonite-stibioluzonite  ¦ pyrite (brassy) and minor acicular covellite deposition. Yellow  native sulphur and trace amounts of galena were deposited in  remaining pores. Pre-acid alteration intrusives domed the mainly volcanic  stratigraphy in the southwest and post-mineralisation porphyries  in the northeast truncate mineralisation. Supergene processes and erosion have modified the top of the  deposit, creating a 45m thick goethitic-scoroditic-haematitic gold  cap above a 40m thick (on average) chalcocite rich supergene  blanket. Lesser amounts of digenite, covellite native copper and  rarely seen malachite occur in the supergene copper zone.
Citation
APA: (1997) Zonations, Mineralisation Paragenesis and Rock Types of the Nena High Sulphidation Copper-Gold Deposit, Papua New Guinea
MLA: Zonations, Mineralisation Paragenesis and Rock Types of the Nena High Sulphidation Copper-Gold Deposit, Papua New Guinea. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1997.