Petrology of the Zinc Lode, New Broken Hill Consolidated Ltd., Broken Hill, New South Wales (1b1fdba3-cb7d-447a-a5a8-98ac9ed727eb)

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
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7
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84 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1962

Abstract

Dr. F. L. Stillwell. Segnit's article puts forward the views that the rocks associated with the Broken Hill lode are simply highly metamorphosed sediments, tbat metasomatism on a large scale was not an important factor at Broken Hill and that the rocks and lode were contemporaneously metamorphosed.In particular, the garnet quartzite, the most abundant rock in the limited section of the mine examined by Segnit, is described by him as a simple, metamorphosed manganiferous sediment.These views, while consonant with those of H. F. King (1958), are drastically opposed to those of myself and others e.g. Gustafson et al. (1950, p. 1383) who state that the most extensive hydrothermal alteration in the district is in and close to the zinc lodes in the Zinc Corporation and New Broken Hill Consolidated Ltd. mines. Segnit's conclusions conflict with 1. the absence of any manganiferous sediment in the Broken Hill district except in close proximity to the lode,2. the clear cut metasomatism of the dolerite dykes which indicates that the ore is younger than the dykes and therefore post-metamorphism, and 3. the petrofabric study of den Tex (1958) which provided independent evidence that the ore in its present form post-dates all events of a diastrophic nature in the area.The original sediments of the district were mudstones and calcareous sandstones with 2 to 5 per cent CaO. These have been converted by high grade metamorphism into sillimanite gneisses and quartzites characterized by the presence ...
Citation

APA:  (1962)  Petrology of the Zinc Lode, New Broken Hill Consolidated Ltd., Broken Hill, New South Wales (1b1fdba3-cb7d-447a-a5a8-98ac9ed727eb)

MLA: Petrology of the Zinc Lode, New Broken Hill Consolidated Ltd., Broken Hill, New South Wales (1b1fdba3-cb7d-447a-a5a8-98ac9ed727eb). The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1962.

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