Low Sulphidation Epithermal Au Ag
Low Sulphidation Epithermal Au Ag
Low Sulphidation Epithermal Au Ag
H05
by Andre Panteleyev1
modified for Yukon by A. Fonseca
Refer to preface for general references and formatting significance.
May 30, 2005
IDENTIFICATION
SYNONYMS: (Epithermal) adularia-sericite; quartz-adularia, Comstock, Sado-type; bonanza Au-Ag;
alkali chloride (hydrothermal).
COMMODITIES (BYPRODUCTS): Au, Ag (Pb, Zn, Cu).
EXAMPLES (Yukon): Grew Creek (105K 009), Mt. Skukum Mine (105D 158);
(British Columbia - International): Toodoggone district deposits - Lawyers (94E066), Baker
(94E026), Shas (94E050); Blackdome (92O050-053); Premier Gold (Silbak Premier), (104B054);
Cinola (103F034); Comstock, Aurora (Nevada, USA), Bodie (California, USA), Creede
(Colorado, USA), Republic (Washington, USA), El Bronce (Chile), Guanajuato (Mexico), Sado,
Hishikari (Japan), Colqui (Peru), Baguio (Philippines) Ladolam (Lihir, Papua-New Guinea).
GEOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS
CAPSULE DESCRIPTION: Quartz veins, stockworks and breccias carrying gold, silver, electrum,
argentite and pyrite with lesser and variable amounts of sphalerite, chalcopyrite, galena, rare
tetrahedrite and sulphosalt minerals form in high-level (epizonal) to near-surface environments.
The ore commonly exhibits open-space filling textures and is associated with volcanic-related
hydrothermal to geothermal systems.
TECTONIC SETTING: Volcanic island and continent-margin magmatic arcs and continental volcanic
fields with extensional structures. In Yukon, the Grew Creek deposit is associated with
magmatism emplaced along the crustal-scale Tintina strike-slip fault.
DEPOSITIONAL ENVIRONMENT / GEOLOGICAL SETTING: High-level hydrothermal systems from
depths of ~1 km to surficial hotspring settings. Regional-scale fracture systems related to grabens,
(resurgent) calderas, flow-dome complexes and rarely, maar diatremes. Extensional structures in
volcanic fields (normal faults, fault splays, ladder veins and cymoid loops, etc.) are common;
locally graben or caldera-fill clastic rocks are present. High-level (subvolcanic) stocks and/or
dykes and pebble breccia diatremes occur in some areas. Locally resurgent or domal structures are
related to underlying intrusive bodies.
AGE OF MINERALIZATION: Any age. Tertiary deposits are most abundant; in B.C. Jurassic deposits
are important. Deposits of Paleozoic age are described in Australia. Closely related to the host
volcanic rocks but invariably slightly younger in age (0.5 to 1 Ma, more or less). The Grew
Creek and Mt. Skukum deposits in Yukon have Tertiary ages.
HOST/ASSOCIATED ROCK TYPES: Most types of volcanic rocks; calcalkaline andesitic compositions
predominate. Some deposits occur in areas with bimodal volcanism and extensive subaerial
ashflow deposits. A less common association is with alkalic intrusive rocks and shoshonitic
volcanics. Clastic and epiclastic sediments in intra-volcanic basins and structural depressions.
1
Bimodal volcanic rocks of the early Tertiary Ross Suite host the Grew Creek deposit
and andesitic flow rocks are associated with the Mt. Skukum deposit.
DEPOSIT FORM: Ore zones are typically localized in structures, but may occur in permeable
lithologies. Upward-flaring ore zones centred on structurally controlled hydrothermal
conduits are typical. Large (> 1 m wide and hundreds of metres in strike length) to small
veins and stockworks are common with lesser disseminations and replacements. Vein
systems can be laterally extensive but ore shoots have relatively restricted vertical extent.
High-grade ores are commonly found in dilational zones in faults at flexures, splays and
in cymoid loops.
TEXTURE/STRUCTURE: Open-space filling, symmetrical and other layering, crustification,
comb structure, colloform banding and multiple brecciation.
ORE MINERALOGY (Principal and subordinate): Pyrite, electrum, gold, silver, argentite;
chalcopyrite, sphalerite, galena, tetrahedrite, silver sulphosalt and/or selenide minerals.
Deposits can be strongly zoned along strike and vertically. Deposits are commonly zoned
vertically over 250 to 350 m from a base-metal-poor, Au-Ag-rich top to a relatively Agrich base metal zone and an underlying base-metal-rich zone grading at depth into a
sparse base metal, pyritic zone. From surface to depth, metal zones contain: Au-Ag-AsSb-Hg, Au-Ag-Pb-Zn-Cu, Ag-Pb-Zn. In alkalic host rocks tellurides, V-mica (roscoelite)
and fluorite may be abundant, with lesser molybdenite.
GANGUE MINERALOGY (Principal and subordinate): Quartz, amethyst, chalcedony, quartz
pseudomorphs after calcite, calcite; adularia, sericite, barite, fluorite, Ca-Mg-Mn-Fe
carbonate minerals such as rhodochrosite, hematite and chlorite.
ALTERATION MINERALOGY: Silicification is extensive in ores as multiple generations of
quartz and chalcedony are commonly accompanied by adularia and calcite. Pervasive
silicification in vein envelopes is flanked by sericite-illite-kaolinite assemblages.
Intermediate argillic alteration [kaolinite-illite-montmorillonite (smectite)] formed
adjacent to some veins; advanced argillic alteration (kaolinite-alunite) may form along the
tops of mineralized zones. Propylitic alteration dominates at depth and peripherally.
WEATHERING: Weathered outcrops are commonly characterized by resistant quartz alunite
'ledges' and extensive flanking bleached, clay-altered zones with supergene alunite,
jarosite and other limonite minerals.
ORE CONTROLS: In some districts the epithermal mineralization is tied to a specific
metallogenetic event, either structural, magmatic, or both. The veins are emplaced within
a restricted stratigraphic interval generally within 1 km of the paleosurface.
Mineralization near surface takes place in hotspring systems, or the deeper underlying
hydrothermal conduits. At greater depth it can be postulated to occur above, or peripheral
to, porphyry and possibly skarn mineralization. Normal faults, margins of grabens,
coarse clastic caldera moat-fill units, radial and ring dyke fracture sets and both
hydrothermal and tectonic breccias are all ore fluid channeling structures. Through-going,
branching, bifurcating, anastamosing and intersecting fracture systems are commonly
mineralized. Ore shoots form where dilational openings and cymoid loops develop,
typically where the strike or dip of veins change. Hanging-wall fractures in mineralized
structures are particularly favourable for high-grade ore.
GENETIC MODEL: These deposits form in both subaerial, predominantly felsic, volcanic fields
in extensional and strike-slip structural regimes and island arc or continental andesitic
stratovolcanoes above active subduction zones. Near-surface hydrothermal systems,
ranging from hotspring at surface to deeper, structurally and permeability focused fluid
flow zones are the sites of mineralization. The ore fluids are relatively dilute and cool
solutions that are mixtures of magmatic and meteoric fluids. Mineral deposition takes
place as the solutions undergo cooling and degassing by fluid mixing, boiling and
decompression.
ASSOCIATED DEPOSIT TYPES: Epithermal Au-Ag: high sulphidation (H04); hotspring AuAg (H03); porphyry CuMoAu (L04) and related polymetallic veins (I05); placer gold
(C01, C02).
EXPLORATION GUIDES
GEOCHEMICAL SIGNATURE: Elevated values in rocks of Au, Ag, Zn, Pb, Cu and As, Sb, Ba, F, Mn;
locally Te, Se and Hg.
GEOPHYSICAL SIGNATURE: VLF has been used to trace structures; radiometric surveys may outline
strong potassic alteration of wall rocks. Detailed gravity surveys may delineate boundaries of
structural blocks with large density contrasts.
OTHER EXPLORATION GUIDES: Silver deposits generally have higher base metal contents than Au
and Au-Ag deposits. Drilling feeder zones to hotsprings and siliceous sinters may lead to
identification of buried deposits. Prospecting for mineralized siliceous and silica-carbonate float
or vein material with diagnostic open-space textures is effective.
ECONOMIC FACTORS
TYPICAL GRADE AND TONNAGE: The following data describe the median deposits based on
worldwide mines and U.S.A. models:
Au-Ag deposits (41 Comstock-type 'bonanza' deposits) - 0.77 Mt with 7.5 g/t Au, 110 g/t Ag and
minor Cu, Zn and Pb. The highest base metal contents in the top decile of deposits all contain
<0.1% Cu, Zn and 0.1% Pb
Au-Cu deposits (20 Sado-type deposits) - 0.3 Mt with 1.3% g/t Au, 38 g/t Ag and >0.3% Cu; 10
% of the deposits contain, on average, about 0.75% Cu with one having >3.2% Cu.
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
Buchanan, L.J. (1981): Precious Metal Deposits associated with Volcanic Environments in the
Southwest; in Relations of Tectonics to Ore Deposits in the Southern Cordillera;
Arizona Geological Society Digest, Volume 14, pages 237-262.
Christie, A.R. (1992): Grew Creek epithermal gold-silver deposit, Tintina Trench, Yukon.
In: Yukon Geology, Volume 3, Exploration and Geological Services Division,
Yukon Region, Indian and Northern Affairs Canada, p. 223-259.
Duke, J.L. (1990): The Grew Creek gold-silver deposit in south-central Yukon Territory.
In: Mineral deposits of the Northern Canadian Cordillera, Yukon-Northeastern
British Columbia, J.G. Abbott and R.J.W. Turner (eds.), 8th IAGOD Symposium
Field Trip No. 14 Guidebook, Geological Survey of Canada Open File 2169, p.
309-313.
Mosier, D.L., Berger, B.R and Singer, D.A. (1986): Descriptive Model of Sado Epithermal Veins;
in Mineral Deposits Models, Cox, D.P. and Singer, D.A., Editors, U. S. Geological
Survey, Bulletin 1693, page 154.
Mosier, D.L. and Sato, T. (1986): Grade and Tonnage Model of Sado Epithermal Veins; in
Mineral Deposits Models, Cox, D.P. and Singer, D.A., Editors, U. S. Geological
Survey, Bulletin 1693, pages 155-157.
Mosier, D.L., Singer, D.A. and Berger, B.R (1986): Descriptive Model of Comstock Epithermal
Veins; in Mineral Deposits Models, Cox, D.P. and D.A. Singer, D.A., Editors, U. S.
Geological Survey, Bulletin 1693, pages 150-153.
Heald, P., Foley, N.K. and Hayba, D.O. (1987): Comparative Anatomy of Volcanic-Hosted
Epithermal Deposits: Acid-Sulfate and Adularia Sericite Types; Economic Geology,
Volume 82, pages 1-26.
Mosier, D.L., Sato, T., Page, N.J., Singer, D.A. and Berger, B.R. (1986): Descriptive Model of
Creede; in Mineral Deposits Models, Cox, D.P. and Singer, D.A., Editors, U.S.
Geological Survey, Bulletin 1693, pages 145-149.
Yukon MINFILE
MINFILE NO
105F 125
105G 150
105J 038
105K 091
105F 051
105K 014
NAMES
BLACKHAWK
SPICE
FLOOD
EL PINO, LYON
JOE
TILLMAN, DOE, DOLL, JESS
STATUS
PROSPECT
ANOMALY
ANOMALY
ANOMALY
UNKNOWN
UNKNOWN
Au (g/t)
6.49
17.87
11.30
14.00
24.90
21.48
2.70
8.42
0.99
8.90
4.09
11.50
9.03
2.47
Ag (g/t)
112.99
269.67
0.00
0.00
201.20
78.86
0.00
168.29
15.43
33.60
217.50
783.60
188.92
3.10
60N
62N
64N
66N
140W
#
Y
105D 158
MT. SKUKUM MINE
135W
105K 009
GREW CREEK
#
Y
#
S
105F 125
BLACKHAWK
130W
100
Map of Yukon showing low sulphidation epithermal Au occurrences and Eocene Ross Suite volcanic rocks
115O 158
HOT
#
S
125W
km
200
Yukon MINFILE
# Deposit or past producer
Y
# Drilled prospect
S
# Prospect, showing, or anomaly
S
Eocene Ross Suite volcanic rocks
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Map of part of eastern Yukon showing Au geochemistry, the Ross Suite volcanic rocks and regional airborne magnetics
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