The Tifalmin Porphyry Copper Gold District, Star Mountains, Western Papua New Guinea

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
L D. Queen
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
4
File Size:
1150 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 Tifalmin porphyry copper district is located in the Star Mountains roughly 35 km north-east of the Ok Tedi mine. The district is a cluster of temporally and geochemically related porphyry copper deposits and their associated skarns. It covers an area of roughly 10 × 6 km and comprises at least three intrusions (Olgal, Futik and Kum Kom) where drilling has demonstrated the presence of porphyry copper mineralisation, and another three intrusions (Rattatat, Unfin and Pad 48) where porphyry copper mineralisation is strongly suggested by surface investigations and geochemical or geophysical signatures.Copper and gold mineralisation was first discovered in the area in the 1960s as part of the regional exploration program by Kennecott that located Ok Tedi. The mineralisation is associated with poly-phase porphyritic diorites, quartz diorites and tonalites that intrude the Upper Eocene to Middle Miocene Darai limestone and underlying Cretaceous to Eocene Feing Group. Radiometric K-Ar and U-Pb zircon ages cluster between 4 and 2 Ma for both the mineralised and post-mineral intrusions. In addition to porphyry-type mineralisation, variable amounts of calc-silicate and/or magnetite skarn occur near the contact of most of the intrusions. Mineralisation in the Olgal and Futik porphyries occurs as chalcopyrite replacement of mafic minerals and in a stockwork of micro-veinlets. Mineralisation mostly occurs in the intrusions but is also observed in hornfelsed siltstones and sandstones of the Feing Group on the southern margin of the Olgal intrusive body. Quartz veining is uncommon. Secondary magnetite is commonly associated with the highest copper and gold grades. Sericitic alteration is most prominent in the mineralised hornfels. Structurally, the area is dominated by syn- to post-mineralisation thrusting from the north. At least one of the deposits (Olgal) appears to be truncated at depth by a thrust fault.CITATION:Queen, L D, 2015. The Tifalmin porphyry copper gold district, Star Mountains, Western Papua New Guinea , in Proceedings PACRIM 2015 Congress, pp 357–360 (The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy: Melbourne)."
Citation

APA: L D. Queen  (2015)  The Tifalmin Porphyry Copper Gold District, Star Mountains, Western Papua New Guinea

MLA: L D. Queen The Tifalmin Porphyry Copper Gold District, Star Mountains, Western Papua New Guinea. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2015.

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