Exploration for Gold at Pine Creek and Tennant Creek, N.T. and at Halls Creek, W.A. Using the Fluid Inclusion Decrepitation Technique
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 3
 - File Size:
 - 194 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1984
 
Abstract
The decrepitation technique is a rapid  means of measuring abundances, temperatures  and to some extent the fluid compositions, of  fluid inclusions in transparent and opaque  minerals. The method has been used to  investigate the hydrothermal fluid systems  associated with gold mineralisation in the  Tennant Creek, Pine Creek and Halls Creek  Goldfields. At the Enterprise Mine, Pine  Creek, several different stages of quartz  veining are distinguished and within these,  gradational changes in fluid temperatures and  compositions help to define the centre and  nature of the thermal system responsible for  the mineralisation. In the surrounding Pine  Creek region and at Tennant Creek and Halls  Creek, the results were applied on a regional  scale to characterize outcrops and aid in the  discrimination between potentially mineral- ized and barren outcrops. The decrepitation method involves the  heating of a small (lgm) sample of crushed  and sized grains up to as high as 800 degrees  celsius. During the heating the fluid inclu- sions within the grains develop sufficient  internal pressure to physically burst, the  temperature of such bursting being dependent  on the type of fluid and the prevailing tem- perature at the time the inclusion was  originally trapped. The resulting tabulation  of the number of inclusion bursts per 10  degree temperature interval is plotted as a  histogram of decrepitations versus tempera- ture and called a decrepigram. The decrepi- grams frequently show several distinct peaks  at different temperatures which are caused by  different populations of inclusions in the  sample. The areas of the peaks indicate the  abundances of inclusions in each population  while the shape and mean temperature of the  peak provides a guide to the type of fluids involved. Of particular importance in this  study is the presence of decrepitation peaks  at fairly low temperatures (around 2000 C.  These are characteristic of C02 rich fluids  which build up internal pressure very quickly  when heated. The Enterprise Gold Mine at Pine Creek  comprises a number of overlapping quartz vein  systems hosted by Burrell Creek Formation  sediments. The geology of this mine has been  described at this conference by Dann and  Delaney, who have defined several distinct  stages of quartz veining based on structural,  mineralogical and physical features of the  veins. For this decrepitation study, 19  quartz samples from the mine and environs,  including some from each stage of veining  were collected. These results suggest that  there are 4 major vein types, within 3 of  which additional small variations can be  discerned which are due to gradational  changes in the temperatures and fluid  compositions in the mine area.
Citation
APA: (1984) Exploration for Gold at Pine Creek and Tennant Creek, N.T. and at Halls Creek, W.A. Using the Fluid Inclusion Decrepitation Technique
MLA: Exploration for Gold at Pine Creek and Tennant Creek, N.T. and at Halls Creek, W.A. Using the Fluid Inclusion Decrepitation Technique. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1984.