Brecciation, Mineralisation and Alteration of the Kidston Gold Deposit
 
    
    - Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 5
- File Size:
- 537 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1987
Abstract
The Kidston breccia pipe is situated  approximately 280 km west northwest of  Townsville, north Queensland. It is currently  Australia's largest gold producer with  production varying between 8,000 and 16,000  tonnes of ore per day. Current reserves are  estimated at 36.2 million tonnes averaging 1.74  C/t Au and 2.21 g/t Ag. Alluvial gold in the  gullies surrounding the deposit was first  discovered in the 1880's and between 1907 and  1948 small scale open cut and underground mining  was undertaken. Advances in extractive  metallurgy and an increase in the gold price  were major factors influencing the recent  exploration and development of large scale  mining of the deposit by Placer Pacific and  Kidston Gold Mines. The breccia pipe is trapezoid in shape with  surface dimensions of 1100 m by 900 m. Clasts  show only limited evidence of mixing during  brecciation, with the pre-breccia stratigraphy  still discernible on the basis of clast types.  This lack of mixing together with the intimate  association with intrusive activity, suggests  that the brecia formed by collapse, probably  associated with the escape of a large volume of irothermal fluid from a crystallising  hatholith. Mineralisation and alteration are also  sratially and temporally associated with  rhyolite emplacement and brecciation.  Pre-breccia mineralisation consists of laminated  stockwork quartz veins associated with  muscovite, quartz and orthoclase-epidote  alteration. Stockwork veins contain either  anomalous molybdenite or gold. Uneconomic early  stage post-breccia mineralisation and alteration  consists of cavity infill quartz-epidote and  calcite associated with potassic and propylitic  alteration respectively. Economic late stage  post-breccia cavity infill and sheeted veining  consists of quartz-carbonate-sulphide infill  associated with phyllic alteration. The grade  of gold mineralisation generally decreases  downwards in the system with an increase in the  amount of pyrrhotite relative to pyrite. Pre-breccia stockwork quartz veins  mineralisation is genetically related to the
Citation
APA: (1987) Brecciation, Mineralisation and Alteration of the Kidston Gold Deposit
MLA: Brecciation, Mineralisation and Alteration of the Kidston Gold Deposit. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1987.
