Petrology of the Zinc Lode, New Broken Hill Consolidated Ltd., Broken Hill, New South Wales

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 26
- File Size:
- 2097 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1961
Abstract
Drill cores from Section 62, New Broken Hill Consolidated Ltd., were used to study the petrology of rocks associated with the zinc lode. The distribution of the rock types in relation to the lode structure was determined. The distribution of the gahnite-bearing rocks was shown to be only partly conformable with the structure.It was concluded that large scale metasomatism was not widespread, that the rocks associated with the lode (except, perhaps, the quartz-gahnite-garnet rocks) were formed by metamorphism of sediments, and that rocks and lode were contemporaneously metamorphosed.INTRODUCTIONThis investigation was undertaken in order to study the rock types associated with the zinc lode of the Broken Hill orebody, and their relationship to the structure of the ore horizons. The work was confined almost entirely to the laboratory, and is therefore limited in its scope. It is hoped, however, that the information gained may throw some new light on the genesis of the lode.Certain inferences which are drawn from this work are at variance with the ideas of a number of earlier workers.In particular, the idea of large scale metasomatism developing many of the rocks associated with the lode, especially those containing manganese, is questioned. On the contrary, the rocks associated with the lode are more simply explained as highly metamorphosed sediments, in some cases modified by water introduced from surrounding rocks into zones of strong folding and faulting. As a corollary, a metamorphicsedimentary origin for the lode material, either as a concentrated sulphide deposit, or somewhat disseminated...
Citation
APA: (1961) Petrology of the Zinc Lode, New Broken Hill Consolidated Ltd., Broken Hill, New South Wales
MLA: Petrology of the Zinc Lode, New Broken Hill Consolidated Ltd., Broken Hill, New South Wales. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1961.