Compositional Variation and Distribution of Au-Ag-Hg and Au-Ag Alloy Subtypes in Nokomai and Nevis Valley Placers, New Zealand, and their Implications for Gold Sources

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
P Wopereis L C. Kerr D Craw
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
15
File Size:
2383 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2000

Abstract

Gold placers in the Nokomai and Nevis valleys are dominantly Quaternary in age. They occur mainly in western tributaries of the upper Nevis, eastern tributaries of the middle and upper Nokomai, and in the trunk valleys themselves. Placer gold in both valleys is dominantly a-phase Au-Ag-Hg alloy. Au-Ag alloy is absent or rare in most of the deposits, except in the lower Nokomai. Alpha-Au-Ag-Hg alloy is typically coarse-grained (up to 2 cm), angular, and rarely flattened or folded. Crystalline texture, quartz intergrowths, and psuedo-hexagonal crystal-pluck cavities are common. Fluvial transport distance predicted from the maximum Flatness Index ofAu-Ag-Hg alloy particles is typically less than 10-20 km. Coarse (up to 2 cm) cinnabar is commonly associated with the Au-Ag-Hg alloy, and both were probably derived from hydrothermal sources in western tributaries ofthe upper Nevis and eastern tributaries of the upper Nokomai. Minor secondary Au-Ag-Hg alloy occurs locally in the lower Nokomai, where it coats or cements detrital a-phase Au-Ag-Hg and Au-Ag alloy particles. Au-Ag alloy dominates over Au-Ag-Hg alloy in the lower half of the lower Nokomai alluvial plain and gravel of a raised channel incised into semischist basement adjacent to the plain. The Au-Ag alloy is rounded and commonly flattened and folded. Crystalline texture, quartz intergrowths, and pluck cavities are rare, and a fluvial transport distance of 25-40 km is estimated from maximum Flatness Index ofAu-Ag alloy particles. The Au-Ag alloy, three types of gamet, magnetite, clinozoisite and well foliated schist boulders in the abandoned channel are not found in the pumpellyite-actinolite facies bedrock in the Nokomai. These components were derived from greenschist facies schist and sedimentary sources in Otago, many tens of kilometers north of the Nokomai catchment. They were transported to the Nokomai either in Wakatipu Glacier till or fluvio-glacial outwash that entered the valley via Nokomai Saddle, the confluence with the Mataura, or both.
Citation

APA: P Wopereis L C. Kerr D Craw  (2000)  Compositional Variation and Distribution of Au-Ag-Hg and Au-Ag Alloy Subtypes in Nokomai and Nevis Valley Placers, New Zealand, and their Implications for Gold Sources

MLA: P Wopereis L C. Kerr D Craw Compositional Variation and Distribution of Au-Ag-Hg and Au-Ag Alloy Subtypes in Nokomai and Nevis Valley Placers, New Zealand, and their Implications for Gold Sources. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2000.

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