Papers - Theory and Interpretation - The Alleged Mineral Zoning at Mount Isa (Mining Tech., Nov. 1943, T.P. 1652)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Roland Blanchard
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
27
File Size:
2439 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1949

Abstract

Recent discovery at Mount Isa of copper mineralization in commercial amount at a depth of 1000 ft., coinciding with downward termination of ore at about the same depth within the larger silver-lead-zinc lenses that have been the standby of Mount Isa's production to date, has been cited as an example in support of mineral zoning. A previous paper by the author and Graham Hall1 furnished a detailed description of the geology of the ore at Mount Isa as exposed up to that time, but necessarily dealt mainly with the silver-lead-zinc mineralization. Most of the geologic facts that constitute the first half of the present paper were set forth in the previous one in much greater detail, with full supporting evidence for the facts cited. The large amount of underground development (approximately 20 miles) and the extensive exploration carried out by diamond drilling (100,000 ft.) at Mount Isa, added to extensive microscope work conducted over a period of years, both by the company's staff and by others, had made possible the calculation within fairly close limits of mineralogical composition of the principal mineralized block of ground down to 1000-ft. depth, and had established closely the mineral succession, with reasons for deposition of the various minerals in the patterns now occupied by them. The geologic facts as outlined in the previous paper remain as stated; but because substantial development within the new copper ore body and further exploratory diamond drilling within the new silver-lead-zinc area (Racecourse) have taken place since that paper was written, statements and figures relating to those two areas in the present paper supersede those furnished in the previous one. The recent work likewise has established more clearly the paragenetic relationship between the chalco-pyrite and galena. Evidence confirming the relationship is furnished in the present paper. The facts of ore occurrence at Mount Isa show Accepted Zonal Succession Silver sulphantimonides Galena Sphalerite Tetrahedrite Arsenical sulphides Chalcopyrite Pyrrhotite Mount Isa Succession I In the main but prob- Silver sulphantimonides ably not wholly Tetrahedrite I contemporaneous Galena Pyrrhotite Sphalerite Arsenical sulphides They show further: (I) that instead of the silver-lead minerals yielding to increased zinc in depth, the zinc yields to increased silver-lead; (2) no dovetailing of the silver-lead-zinc sulphides into chalcopyrite takes place; (3) despite the large amount of pyrrhotite deposited in the district (estimated at upward of 100,000,000 tons), its deposition took place under moderately low temperature conditions; (4) no evidence has been found for increase in temperature of deposition, with depth, to deepest exploration in ore (1475 ft.). The anomalous condition at Mount Jsa, both as to the unorthodox mineral succession and the largely unorthodox patteru of mineral distribution, is explained in the present paper,
Citation

APA: Roland Blanchard  (1949)  Papers - Theory and Interpretation - The Alleged Mineral Zoning at Mount Isa (Mining Tech., Nov. 1943, T.P. 1652)

MLA: Roland Blanchard Papers - Theory and Interpretation - The Alleged Mineral Zoning at Mount Isa (Mining Tech., Nov. 1943, T.P. 1652). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1949.

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