The Kulumadau Epithermal Breccia-hosted Gold Deposit, Woodlark Island, Papua New Guinea

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 8
- File Size:
- 3822 KB
- Publication Date:
- Mar 18, 2015
Abstract
"An EXTENDED ABSTRACT is available for download. A full-length paper was not prepared for this presentation. The Kulumadau deposit represents an intermediate-sulfidation epithermal gold deposit (3.8 Mt at 2.3 g/t, Ag:Au = 1). Mineralisation is primarily confined to hydrothermal breccias within pre-existing fault zones, where it is disseminated throughout a hydrothermal matrix comprising chlorite-quartz-adularia-illite-I/S clays-calcite-pyrite. The host sequence represents numerous mid-Miocene pyroclastic flow eruptions within a tectonically active emergent shallow marine to subaerial depositional setting. Subsequent growth faulting was responsible for debris avalanches, which were subsequently cut by reverse faults. Faults were exploited by hydrothermal fluids, with the heightened porosity at the juncture between faults and debris material facilitating boiling of the ore constituents. Fluid inclusion studies suggest that fluid mixing between meteoric fluids and magmatic fluids, accompanied by boiling, were the primary mechanisms for gold deposition. The occurrence of anhydrite/gypsum as late-stage veins and their sulfur and oxygen isotopic values indicate post-mineralisation mixing of sea water with hydrothermal fluids.CITATION:Burkett, D, Graham, I, Spencer, L, Lennox, P, Cohen, D, Zwingmann, H, Lau, F, Kelly, B and Cendon, D, 2015. The Kulumadau epithermal breccia-hosted gold deposit, Woodlark Island, Papua New Guinea, in Proceedings PACRIM 2015 Congress, pp 205–212 (The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy: Melbourne)."
Citation
APA:
(2015) The Kulumadau Epithermal Breccia-hosted Gold Deposit, Woodlark Island, Papua New GuineaMLA: The Kulumadau Epithermal Breccia-hosted Gold Deposit, Woodlark Island, Papua New Guinea. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2015.