Mesothermal Gold Deposits of Westland, New Zealand and Southern Alaska: Products of Similar Tectonic Processes?

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 6
- File Size:
- 1146 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1995
Abstract
Mesothermal gold deposits of southernAlaska and Westland, New Zealand have both formed at the seaward edge of major collisional zones in the Pacific basin. In Alaska, production of large fluid volumes correlates in time with the addition of heat into the lower parts of the accreted terranes in the late stages of collisional orogeny. This heat was critical for driving both the metamorphic reactions that released the large volumes of fluid that carried the gold, and the contemporaneous widespread anatexis and magmatism. In Alaska's Chugach terrane, this heat as produced by subduction of a spreading ridge beneath the North America continental margin in the Eocene. The resulting products were the S-type granites and gold-bearing veins. The similar widespread S-type plutonism and gold veining in Westland's Buller terrane suggest that a similar tectonic event could have triggered ore formation along the southeastern edge of Gondwanaland. Based on the Alaskan model, a Devonian or Early Carboniferous age is favoured for high volume metamorphogenic fluid generation and gold vein formation in Westland.
Citation
APA:
(1995) Mesothermal Gold Deposits of Westland, New Zealand and Southern Alaska: Products of Similar Tectonic Processes?MLA: Mesothermal Gold Deposits of Westland, New Zealand and Southern Alaska: Products of Similar Tectonic Processes?. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1995.