Characteristics of Gold Bearing Quartz Veins at the Historic Morning Star Mine, Preservation Inlet, Sw Fiordland, New Zealand

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 8
- File Size:
- 5216 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2005
Abstract
The Morning Star mine is one of numerous historically mined gold-quartz lodes in the Preservation Inlet goldfield of southwest Fiordland. The mine is hosted in Early Ordovician metasedimentary rocks that are composed predominantly of psammitic and pelitic lithologies. These rocks still contain their primary depositional features and are characterised by upper greenschist facies metamorphic grade. The Morning Star mine lies on the eastern limb of a gently south plunging anticline. A bedding parallel fault-vein and an associated network of minor quartz veins hosts mineralisation. The main fault-vein structure strikes N-NW, dips steeply (~60¦) W, has a strike length of ~350 m, a vertical extent of ~170 m and is up to 2 m in thickness. The internal structure of the fault-vein consists of laminated quartz, massive and fibrous quartz, and silicified breccias/cataclasites. Gold is typically coarse grained (~1 - 2 mm) and associated with pyrite, arsenopyrite, chalcopyrite, tetrahedrite and galena. The geometry of the Morning Star mine is similar in form to that of a saddle reef. Gold-quartz lodes in the Preservation Inlet goldfield are comparable in geometry and host rock to their offset equivalents in the Golden Blocks field of NW Nelson.
Citation
APA:
(2005) Characteristics of Gold Bearing Quartz Veins at the Historic Morning Star Mine, Preservation Inlet, Sw Fiordland, New ZealandMLA: Characteristics of Gold Bearing Quartz Veins at the Historic Morning Star Mine, Preservation Inlet, Sw Fiordland, New Zealand. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2005.