Tectonic Evolution and Metallogenesis of the New England Fold Belt, Eastern Australia
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 6
 - File Size:
 - 901 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1987
 
Abstract
The New England Fold Belt forms the  easternmost and youngest section of the Tasman Fold  Belt System of eastern Australia. From middle  Palaeozoic to Early Cretaceous time it was the site of  extensive episodic calc-alkaline magmatism related to  W-dipping subduction. The oldest rocks may have  formed at least partly in a volcanic island arc, but  from the Late Devonian, the fold belt developed as a  convergent Pacific-type continental margin. For Late  Devonian-Carboniferous time, parallel belts  representing continental margin volcanic arc, forearc  basin and subduction complex assemblages can be  recognised. Major dextral transform faulting may  have offset parts of the fold belt in the Late  Carboniferous. In addition, some structural blocks  which appear to be out of place in the overall  palaeogeographic setting are possible exotic or suspect  terranes. A great variety of lode deposits ranging in age  from middle Palaeozoic to Early Cretaceous is present  in the New England Fold Belt. The vast majority of  these are related to emplacement of extensive granite  plutons and eruption of continental silicic volcanics in  Late Permian-Late Triassic time. However,  volcanogenic massive sulphides and volcanic hosted  epithermal gold-silver deposits in older rock sequences  include one major orebody (Mount Morgan) and several  important ones (Mount Chalmers, Cracow, Silver Spur,  Cangai and Halls Peak). Some problematical deposits  are best classified as metamorphic-hydrothermal.  These include gold-bearing quartz reefs and  stockworks in sedimentary host rocks, the most  important of which are at Gympie, and antimony-gold- tungsten mineralisation in the New England area,  mainly at Hillgrove.
Citation
APA: (1987) Tectonic Evolution and Metallogenesis of the New England Fold Belt, Eastern Australia
MLA: Tectonic Evolution and Metallogenesis of the New England Fold Belt, Eastern Australia. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1987.