Heavy Mineral Provenance Studies in the Iditarod and Innoko Districts, Western Alaska

- Organization:
- The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
- Pages:
- 25
- File Size:
- 901 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1987
Abstract
Placer gold in the Iditarod and Innoko mining camps of western Alaska is derived from a suite of comagmatic, Late Cretaceous to Early Tertiary, alkali-calcic, meta-aluminous. volcanic-plutonic complexes and peralumi-nous rhyolite sills that intrude Mesozoic flysch. Heavy-mineral concentrates from 42 mining operations and streams draining known mineralized areas in the igneous complexes contain placer gold and a variety of ore minerals derived from epithermal to hypothermal conditions of formation. The minerals include cassiterite, ilmenorutile, samarskite, cinnabar, scheelite, chromite, stibnite, silver sulfosalts, monazite, and zircon. Results of the study show that 1) cinnabar. stibnite, and quartz formed with the bulk of the placer gold in an epithermal lode environment, 2) chromite appears to have originated in mafic phases of monzonite plutons and alkalic basalts, and 3) niobium-tin-tungsten-uranium-silver values may have been derived from stockwork accumulations in cupolas of monzonite plutons.
Citation
APA:
(1987) Heavy Mineral Provenance Studies in the Iditarod and Innoko Districts, Western AlaskaMLA: Heavy Mineral Provenance Studies in the Iditarod and Innoko Districts, Western Alaska. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 1987.