4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

Gold and sulphide minerals in tertiary quartz pebble conglomerate gold placers, Southland, New Zealand

Journal

ORE GEOLOGY REVIEWS
Volume 28, Issue 4, Pages 525-545

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.oregeorev.2005.03.009

Keywords

quartz pebble conglomerate; authigenic gold; sulphidation; marcasite; framboidal pyrite; colloform pyrite

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Auriferous quartz pebble conglomerates (QPC) formed during Tertiary sedimentary recycling in the Waimumu district, Southland, New Zealand. These sediments contain fine-grained gold of detrital origin with abundant surface textures and goldforms associated with authigenic gold remobilisation. Most authigenic gold contains no detectable silver and occurs as overgrowths on detrital Au-Ag and Au-Ag-Hg alloys that contain up to 13 wt.% Ag, and 9 wt.% Hg. Fine-grained Au-Ag and Au-Ag-Hg alloys are compositionally heterogeneous, exhibiting both well-defined silver-depleted and silver-enriched rims. Rare coarse Au-Ag alloy is intergrown with quartz and is homogenous. Discrete grains of authigenic, porous, sheet-like gold occur in carbonaceous mudstone within a QPC sequence. Some QPC contain abundant sulphide minerals. Some of these sulphides (pyrite and arsenopyrite) are of long-distance detrital origin, presumably from the Otago Schist, whereas the bulk of the sulphide suite is marcasite of variably transported diagenetic origin, derived from the erosion of QPC and underlying Tertiary sediments. There has also been authigenic deposition of sulphide minerals in the QPC themselves. These diagenetic sulphides include framboidal and anhedral marcasite, and framboidal and euhedral pyrite. Sulphur isotope data for the sulphide minerals range from -45 parts per thousand to + 18 parts per thousand (relative to VCDT). Sulphur isotope data for euhedral detrital pyrite and arsenopyrite range from -9 parts per thousand to - 1 parts per thousand and are most likely derived from the Otago Schist to the north. Both framboidal and anhedral marcasite have lower values (<-20 parts per thousand) reflecting microbial sulphate reduction as a source for the precursor hydrogen sulphide. Anhedral marcasite contains elevated concentrations of Ni, Co, As and Cr, commonly with compositional banding of these metals. Both the gold and diagenetic sulphides from the Belle-Brook QPC are compositionally similar to gold and sulphides from Archaean QPC. Porous, sheet-like authigenic gold is morphologically similar to gold associated with carbonaceous material in the Witwatersrand. In addition, Southland marcasite textures resemble the rounded and banded pyrite in Witwatersrand QPC placers. There is abundant evidence from these Tertiary QPC in southern New Zealand for sedimentary transport of sulphide minerals and post-depositional sulphide mineralisation in the surficial environment despite an oxygen-rich atmosphere. These young deposits thus provide an example of authigenic gold and sulphide textures formed during diagenesis in unmetamorphosed placers. Many of these textures are similar to those commonly ascribed to metamorphic processes in Archaean auriferous QPC. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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