The Nature and Origin of the Gold-Bearing Laterities at Mount Gibson, Western Australia
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 3
 - File Size:
 - 68 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1988
 
Abstract
The Mount Gibson goidmine is located at the southern end of the Retaliation greenstone belt within  the Murchison Province, approximately 300 km northeast of Perth, Western Australia. Economic gold  mineralization occurs in the upper part of a Tertiary lateritic surface; its ultimate source presumably being Archaean greenstones. Gold is present in the laterite profile over a distance of  4 km in four separate prospects, from north to south, Mount Gibson Well, Midway, Orion and Tobias  Find, the two last constituting the Mount Gibson mine. The area has'low relief. A low ridge to the west of the mineralized zone is formed mainly of  rubble with minor outcrops of mafic volcanic and intrusive rocks. The terrain slopes gently to the  northeast, and the maximum relief, in the vicinity of the mineralization, is about 20 m. The weathering profile comprises, from the surface:  (i) soil, windblown sand or colluvium (thin), (ii) laterite; hardcap (including ferricrete and lesser silcrete and calcrete) is overlain by  loose nodules and pisolites, and passes downwards into a mottled zone of variably  ferruginized clay, (iii) clay; mainly pale brown, cream or yellow in colour, but in places contains relic quartz  veins or dark ferruginous zones, (iv) clay with fragments of altered rock; normally grey to pale green in colour but sometimes  includes an oxidized iron-rich horizon just above the weathered/fresh rock interface,  (v) bedrock. The complete profile varies from 10-100 m thick, averaging 20 m. Zone (ii) is commonly 3-5 m  thick. Loose pisolites of this zone fill cavities in the massive ironstone left by former tree  roots, and cover irregular depressions which may represent former stream courses. Samples, representing 3 m intervals down the holes, have been collected from cuttings taken from  rotary drill-holes along each of four traverses; one traverse at each-of the northern prospects and  two traverses in the Orion part of the mine area. These samples have been submitted for X-ray  diffraction analysis and for chemical analysis for a wide range of elements. Bedrock lithologies  have been determined from microscope studies of bottom-of-hole chips.
Citation
APA: (1988) The Nature and Origin of the Gold-Bearing Laterities at Mount Gibson, Western Australia
MLA: The Nature and Origin of the Gold-Bearing Laterities at Mount Gibson, Western Australia. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1988.