Physical and Chemical Evolution of Placer Gold Deposits During Rise of Antiformal Ranges, Central Otago, New Zealand.
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 6
 - File Size:
 - 777 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1995
 
Abstract
Quaternary warping and uplift of antiformal schist ranges in Central Otago, New Zealand, has resulted in recycling of  alluvial gold from widespread, generally weakly auriferous, Miocene fluvial gravels that unconformably overlie the schist,  into aprons of fan sediments along the range margins. Basement erosion during uplift has been limited and so gold input  from sparse gold-bearing quartz veins in the schist has been relatively minor. In an eluvial cycle on the slopes of the ranges, chemical remobilization of gold occurs during oxidation and erosion of the  Miocene sediments. The typically fine-grained (300-400¦m) gold undergoes chemical modification and grain size  enhancement of up to two orders of magnitude, and much of it is redeposited in a large number of relatively small alluvial  fans along the range margins. Groundwater mobility within the fans results in minor additional gold mobility and grain size  Enhancement.
Citation
APA: (1995) Physical and Chemical Evolution of Placer Gold Deposits During Rise of Antiformal Ranges, Central Otago, New Zealand.
MLA: Physical and Chemical Evolution of Placer Gold Deposits During Rise of Antiformal Ranges, Central Otago, New Zealand.. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1995.