New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics abstracts
Regional metamorphic Cu mobilisation in calc-alkaline rocks, Eglinton valley,
Southland, New Zealand
D. CRAW
J. G. WILLIAMS
R. D. JOHNSTONE
Geology Department
University of Otago
P.O. Box 56
Dunedin, New Zealand
Abstract The Early Permian Plato volcanics consist of mafic
volcanogenic sediments and synvolcanic mafic intrusions, intruded in the
Mesozoic by calc-alkaline plutons. The Plato volcanics have high and variable
background Cu contents of 50-110 ppm, and mafic intrusion backgrounds can
be >200 ppm. Neighbouring belts and calc-alkaline Mesozoic intrusions
have typical background Cu contents of 10-50 ppm. Mineralogical changes
during prehnite-pumpellyite to lower greenschist facies metamorphism of the
Plato volcanics and their synvolcanic intrusives have been partially controlled
by fluid access along brittle faults and fractures associated with late
Mesozoic fault zones. Rock alteration is dominated by epidote, actinolite,
chlorite, and hematite, with prehnite and locally andradite in lower grade
rocks. Epidote (up to 90 modal percent), with minor chlorite and hematite,
dominates the alteration assemblage on some fracture margins. Epidote cannot
accommodate more than c. 10 ppm Cu, so oxidative metamorphism and
epidotisation release Cu from mafic rocks. The Cu migrates locally (metre
scale) and concentrates in fault zones as chalcopyrite veins up to 1 m
long. Surficial alteration remobilises Cu to form brochantite-limonite-calcite
coatings under cliff overhangs. The described Cu anomalies are not economically
significant due to lack of kilometre-scale Cu mobility.
Keywords Cu; metamorphism; oxidation; epidote; Eglinton
New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics, 1997, Vol. 40: 31-41
0028-8306/97/4001--0031 $2.50/0 (c) The Royal Society of New Zealand
1997
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (1118K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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