Gold In Early Precambrian Plutonic Rocks: The Relation Between Geochemical Abundance And Concentration To Exploitable Levels

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
W. J. Wolfe
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
18
File Size:
484 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1975

Abstract

Using a combined fire assay-atomic absorption method, gold determinations with a minimum detection limit of 5 ppb were made on 345 samples of Early Precambrian felsic plutonic rocks collected 2 2 from intrusions ranging in size from 4 km to 88 km and in composition from syenite to granodiorite. Gold levels in unmineralized stocks are consistently below the 5 ppb detection limit of the analytical method used. In contrast, analyses of samples from stocks containing gold mines within their borders and in nearby metavolcanic-metasedimentary host rocks show a strongly skewed trace element gold population with a substantial percentage of gold values exceeding 5 ppb and ranging as high as 320 ppb. The data indicate that (1) ore-stage hydrothermal metasomatism has produced widespread Au enrichment in Precambrian intrusions that host epigenetic vein-type gold deposits, and (2) geochemical Au analysis of samples collected from 30 to 50 randomly distributed sites can be used to estimate the gold exploration potential of stock-sized bodies and to outline internal patterns of Au variation which may be useful in directing exploration to particular contacts or portions of a stock. The results do not conclusively indicate unusually high Au content in primary unaltered igneous rocks.
Citation

APA: W. J. Wolfe  (1975)  Gold In Early Precambrian Plutonic Rocks: The Relation Between Geochemical Abundance And Concentration To Exploitable Levels

MLA: W. J. Wolfe Gold In Early Precambrian Plutonic Rocks: The Relation Between Geochemical Abundance And Concentration To Exploitable Levels. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1975.

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