New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics abstracts
Carrick Range Au and Sb mineralisation in Caples Terrane, Otago Schist, Central
Otago, New Zealand
P. M. ASHLEY
Department of Geology & Geophysics
University of New England
Armidale, NSW 2351, Australia
D. CRAW
Geology Department
University of Otago
P.O. Box 56
Dunedin, New Zealand
Abstract Mineralised zones of the Carrick Range, bearing gold
and stibnite veins, constitute one of the rare economically significant
mineralised fields in the Caples Terrane. The mineralised zones have a
polyphase hydrothermal history. Early low-angle shears are filled by milky
quartz, with minor carbonate, sulphides, and gold. These are cut by steeply
dipping hydrothermal breccias and veins with prismatic and fine-grained
chalcedonic quartz +/- carbonate (calcite and ankerite). Gold is associated
with some high-angle mineralised zones, and stibnite with spatially separated
but texturally similar high-angle zones. Fluid inclusions in early milky quartz
homogenise mainly between 145deg. and 210deg.C, with some higher temperature
homogenisation up to 300deg.C. Late prismatic quartz has inclusions that
homogenise at 150-170deg.C, and ice-melting temperatures suggest low salinity
(2.4-4.8 wt% NaCl equivalent). Oxygen isotopic ratios of early milky quartz
range from d
18O = +15.4 to +17.6[[perthousand]], whereas
fine-grained late quartz ranges from +13.4 to +22.8[[perthousand]]. Vein
carbonates have d
18O between +13.8 and +19.9[[perthousand]], and
d
13C between -1.6 and -3.6[[perthousand]]. The isotopic data,
combined with other geological and mineralogical evidence, imply that
mineralisation occurred over a wide range of temperature (140deg.-400deg.C)
with a fluid of constant isotopic composition similar to typical Otago Schist
metamorphic fluid. Sulphide sulphur isotopic ratios fall in a narrow range of
d
34S = -1.6 to +2.6[[perthousand]], consistent with a homogenised
crustal sulphur source. Late stage mineralisation occurred at shallow crustal
levels (upper 2 km?), but earlier mineralisation was probably deeper.
Mineralisation may have occurred sporadically, or as a continuous event during
progressive uplift, during Cretaceous and/or early Miocene extensional
tectonics.
Keywords gold; stibnite; Carrick Range; Otago Schist; Caples
Terrane; isotopes; fluid inclusions
New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics, 1995, Vol. 38: 137-149
0028-8306/95/3802-0137 $2.50/0 (c) The Royal Society of New Zealand
1995
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (2722K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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