Fluid and Metal Sources in the Mt Carbine Tungsten Deposit, North Queensland, Australia

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 5
- File Size:
- 584 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1987
Abstract
Paragenetic, fluid inclusion, stable isotope, and 87Sr/86Sr and 143Nd/144Nd isotope studies of the Mt Carbine tungsten deposit in North Queensland provide information on the sources of the mineralising components and record the history of fluid-rock interaction during the hydrothermal process. The ore minerals , wolframite and scheelite , are contained in quartz veins which post-date the major deformations in the Siluro-Devonian Hodgkinson Formation . Mineralisation was immediately preceded by the emplacement of the Mossman Batholith (280 ¦ 7 Ma). Two major stages of mineralisation are present and separated by a brittle fracturing episode . The stable isotope and Sr and Nd isotope data suggest that the ore fluids during stage I and most of stage II mineralisation were a mixture of magmatic water and non-magmatic water (connate or metamorphic) which had experienced a long residence time and had extensively exchanged with the sediments at high temperature. Subsequent mineralisation events were dominated by fluids of meteoric derivation with a short residence time. The data imply that other solutes, such as W, were probably derived in minor part from local country rock sources with the major contribution coming from a magmatic source related to the granite batholith.
Citation
APA:
(1987) Fluid and Metal Sources in the Mt Carbine Tungsten Deposit, North Queensland, AustraliaMLA: Fluid and Metal Sources in the Mt Carbine Tungsten Deposit, North Queensland, Australia. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1987.