The Sovereign, Jubilee, Scotia and Jasper Creek Prospects, Waitekauri Valley, Hauraki Goldfield

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 12
- File Size:
- 759 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2005
Abstract
The Sovereign, Jubilee, Scotia and Jasper Creek prospects occur in an area of ~3.0 km by 2.5 km (~7.5 km2) in the Hauraki goldfield. The prospects are hosted by andesitic to dacitic flows, autoclastic breccias and localised pyroclastic and air fall deposits. Jubilee and Sovereign prospects lie along the northern and southern parts of the Waitekauri Fault, respectively, whereas Scotia is located ~1 km to the E, and Jasper Creek a further ~1.2 km to the ENE. Wall rocks are typically intensely altered, although the degree of alteration becomes more variable east of Scotia and at Jasper Creek. Alteration minerals include quartz, adularia, albite, chlorite, pyrite, illite, interstratified illite-smectite, smectite and calcite. Several of these minerals have distributions that show distinct zonation with adularia most abundant at Sovereign and Jasper Creek, but restricted to shallow levels at Scotia. Illite occurs throughout Sovereign and Jubilee plus the western margin of Scotia where it grades into interstratified illite-smectite; smectite predominates at Jasper Creek. Veins are uncommon and typically narrow, but show distinct zonations. Quartz veins are more abundant at Sovereign and Jubilee, whereas calcite veins are more abundant at Scotia and Jasper Creek. Laumontite veins occur at Scotia, and rare clinoptilolite, mordenite and stilbite veinlets with calcite occur at Jasper Creek. Fluid inclusion in quartz and calcite homogenised between 141¦ to 272¦C and trapped a dilute solution with an apparent salinity of less than 2.6 weight percent NaCl equivalent. Homogenisation temperatures are hottest at Sovereign (average 241¦C) and Jubilee (average 239¦C), cooler at Scotia (average 204¦C) and coolest at Jasper Creek (average 162¦C). Calculated paleowater table elevations suggest the water table was 680 m to 750 m above sea level at Sovereign and Jubilee, 450 m at Scotia and 225 m at Jasper Creek. The current data suggest three scenarios that can explain why Sovereign and Jubilee are deep and hot, whereas Jasper Creek is cool, shallow and marginal; 1. some or all of the prospects may represent separate overlapping hydrothermal system, 2. a high-relief hydrothermal system on the side of volcano with an inclined water table and outflow towards Jasper Creek, and 3. a low-relief hydrothermal system that has been either tilted or block faulted with greatest uplift and erosion to the west.
Citation
APA:
(2005) The Sovereign, Jubilee, Scotia and Jasper Creek Prospects, Waitekauri Valley, Hauraki GoldfieldMLA: The Sovereign, Jubilee, Scotia and Jasper Creek Prospects, Waitekauri Valley, Hauraki Goldfield. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2005.