Geological and Mineralogical Characteristics of the Sheep Creek Copper- Cobalt Sediment-hosted Stratabound Sulfide Deposit, Meagher County, Montana

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Marshall D. Himes Erich U. Petersen
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
18
File Size:
1968 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1990

Abstract

The Sheep Creek deposit near White Sulfur Springs, Montana, is a middle Proterozoic stratabound and strataform sediment- hosted massive sulfide containing 4.5 million tonnes (5.0 million tons) averaging 2.5% copper, and 0.1% cobalt in the upper sulfide zone (USZ) and 1.8 million tonnes (2.0 million tons) averaging 6% copper in the lower sulfide zone (LSZ). Mineralization is hosted in lower Newland shales and debris flow conglomerates in the graben controlled Helena Embayment of the Belt Basin. USZ mineralization is characteristically high in Cu, Co, Ni, Ba, As, Pb, and Ag. Mineralogically it consists of barite, pyrite, chalcopyrite, and tennantite with minor amounts of marcasite and various cobalt minerals. By contrast, the LSZ is higher in Cu, Ni, and Au and lower in Co, As, Pb, and Ag. Mineralogy of the LSZ consists of dolomite, pyrite, and chalcopyrite. In both zones significant amounts of cobalt, nickel, arsenic and copper are incorporated in pyrite rims. Tennantite controls the abundance of numerous trace elements in the ores. Fluid incluison data from hydrothermal USZ barite suggests that mineralization took place at temperatures in excess of 250°C, under relatively oxidizing conditions (f02 = 10-32+1) from moderately saline (1.1-3.5m), metal rich brines. The absence of barite in the LSZ suggests mineralization under more reduced conditions (f02 = 10.38+2). Mineralization was initiated following basin subsidence in excess of 400m. Contemporaneous with movement along a growth fault(s) was upward migration of hot metal-bearing fluids which permeated the loosely consolidated sediments and may have vented on the sea floor. The differences in the two zones may be explained by the effects of variations in local basin morphology and solution chemistry.
Citation

APA: Marshall D. Himes Erich U. Petersen  (1990)  Geological and Mineralogical Characteristics of the Sheep Creek Copper- Cobalt Sediment-hosted Stratabound Sulfide Deposit, Meagher County, Montana

MLA: Marshall D. Himes Erich U. Petersen Geological and Mineralogical Characteristics of the Sheep Creek Copper- Cobalt Sediment-hosted Stratabound Sulfide Deposit, Meagher County, Montana. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1990.

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