Epithermal Vein Mineralisation and Alteration, Waiotahi Valley, Thames

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
D S. Clarke K B. Sporli
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
13
File Size:
2236 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1991

Abstract

The Thames Goldfi.eld has been a major gold resource in the west of the Coromandel Peninsula, New Zealand, with the Waiotahi quartz vein system forming a large part of the field. Mineralisation is hosted by hydrothermally altered Miocene andesitic volcanic rocks. Both massive columnar-jointed and fragmental volcanic rocks are present. The vein system is dominated by the steeply dipping NE striking Waiotahi-Cambria vein, and associated splays. Hydrothermal alteration increases in intensity from isolated blocks of propylitic altered andesitic material, into the intensely clay altered equivalent. Low rank propylitic alteration is typified by chlorite, calcite and pyrite, with local illite or epidote. Clay alteration is characterised by illite, quartz, kaolinite and pyrite. While broadly forming halos around veining, intense clay alteration also occurs in strongly jointed portions of the hostrock.   Vein textures and the intense illitic clay alteration at Thames are similar to those in some of the other epithermal gold deposits of the Coromandel Volcanic zone, and in deposits of the Philippines, all related to andesitic terranes. Possible causes for textures and alteration being different in these deposits from the more classic Quartz-Adularia-Illite type epithermal systems may be that cooling/mixing rather than boiling dominates fluid evolution. Kaolinite may be also be a product of either of these different fluid types, or has resulted from overprinting of an illitic assemblage by downward percolation of acidic fluid.
Citation

APA: D S. Clarke K B. Sporli  (1991)  Epithermal Vein Mineralisation and Alteration, Waiotahi Valley, Thames

MLA: D S. Clarke K B. Sporli Epithermal Vein Mineralisation and Alteration, Waiotahi Valley, Thames. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1991.

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