Late Metamorphic Structural Zones in the Otago Schist: Prospective Hosts for Gold Mineralisation

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
D J. MacKenzie M Begbie R J. Norris
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
9
File Size:
2352 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2005

Abstract

The Otago Schist is crossed by numerous deformation zones that formed in the latter stages of metamorphism and uplift of the metamorphic belt. These deformation zones are long (tens of km) linear features at the regional scale, and are generally narrow (km scale or less). Many of these structural zones separate schist domains with different rock types and structural/metamorphic histories. The Hyde-Macraes Shear Zone is one such deformation zone, and this zone hosts the active Macraes gold mine. The Rise & Shine Shear Zone, 80 km NW of Macraes, is also enriched in gold and has been mined historically. Mineralisation in both these shear zones occurred during the transition from ductile to brittle deformation as the schist belt was uplifted from greenschist facies metamorphic conditions. Recrystallisation of quartz and micas in the early stages was overprinted by cataclasis, with sulfide and gold precipitation throughout. Many of the other late metamorphic deformation zones formed under similar greenschist to sub-greenschist facies conditions, with similar overprinting of recrystallisation textures and folds by more brittle textures such as breccias. Under these conditions, originally regionally pervasive deformation at the highest metamorphic grades was evolving towards more focussed high strain zones at lower temperatures and pressures. Shear zones initially focussed fluid flow along microshears and mineral grain boundaries, resulting in 1 to 100 m scale alteration and replacement in the host schist, with only local development of quartz veins. Fluid flow was not controlled by open fractures, and the rate of fluid movement was probably slow and pervasive. After uplift into the brittle regime, the schist belt underwent tectonic extension. Extension was accompanied by development of swarms of steeply dipping veins, with localised mineralised normal faults. Hydrothermal fluid flow throughout this uplift history was a normal consequence of late stage devolatilisation of the metamorphic belt. Hence, all late metamorphic deformation zones should be considered prospective for gold accumulation.
Citation

APA: D J. MacKenzie M Begbie R J. Norris  (2005)  Late Metamorphic Structural Zones in the Otago Schist: Prospective Hosts for Gold Mineralisation

MLA: D J. MacKenzie M Begbie R J. Norris Late Metamorphic Structural Zones in the Otago Schist: Prospective Hosts for Gold Mineralisation. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2005.

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