An Oxygen and Carbon Isotopic Study of Some Gold Deposits of Eastern Australia

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Wilson A. F
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
9
File Size:
1217 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1981

Abstract

The use of stable isotopic measurements as a technique for elucidating the origin and history of the water in hydrothermal fluids is relatively new. Recept studies have emphasized the importance of meteoric water in the formation of many hydrothermal ore deposits including many epithermal gold-base metal deposits which occur in faulted volcanic terrane. Other vein-type gold ores are believed to have formed from fluids of magmatic or metamorphic origin and exhibit characteristic d18O values. Preliminary oxygen and carbon isotopic data for some important gold deposits of eastern Australia have emphasized the diverse origins of their ore fluids.The Mount Morgan gold-copper orebody is shown to be of the volcanogenic massive sulphide type with ore fluids predominantly of sea water origin. The Charters Towers fissure veins formed during hydrothermal activity associated with intrusion of Lolworth Igneous Complex equivalents. Oxygen isotopic studies of the quartz reefs at Stawell and Gympie have been inconclusive. The ore fluids have a d18O value of about 7 per mil and may be of magmatic or metamorphic derivation.
Citation

APA: Wilson A. F  (1981)  An Oxygen and Carbon Isotopic Study of Some Gold Deposits of Eastern Australia

MLA: Wilson A. F An Oxygen and Carbon Isotopic Study of Some Gold Deposits of Eastern Australia. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1981.

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