Volcanic - Hosted Minerelisation on Woodlark Island Papua New Guinea
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 5
 - File Size:
 - 653 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1987
 
Abstract
Epithermal gold is hosted by late  Middle Miocene Okiduse Volcanics on  Woodlark Island. Dating of associated  alteration minerals indicate  mineralisation to be broadly  contemporaneous with volcanism (12.2 - 12.5 m.y.) and is probably related to  subduction of the Solomon Sea plate  along the Trobriand Trench. Mineralisation is polymetallic and  structurally controlled. Pyrite,  sphalerite, galena and minor  chalcopyrite occur in steeply dipping  fracture zones and/or hydrothermal  breccia bodies associated with mixed  clay-pyrite alteration envelopes. These  envelopes occur within a terrane of  regionally propylitised high-K,  calc-alkaline andesites and related  epizonal subvolcanics. Gangue minerals  include quartz, calcite, dolomite and  minor anhydrite. High level advanced  argillic alteration and siliceous cap  rocks are not present but may have been  eroded off the top of the system. Fluid inclusion and stable isotope  data suggest that the carbonates and  paragenetically associated auriferous  base metal sulphides probably deposited  from an isotopically evolved (+8%. 180)  reduced hydrothermal fluid sourced from  underlying sedimentary rocks. The fluid  was predominantly of low salinity (0-4  wt % NaCl equivalent) and had a  temperature of about 270¦C at the time  of boiling and mineral deposition.
Citation
APA: (1987) Volcanic - Hosted Minerelisation on Woodlark Island Papua New Guinea
MLA: Volcanic - Hosted Minerelisation on Woodlark Island Papua New Guinea. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1987.