Hydrothermal Alteration at the Bowdens Silver Deposit, NSW

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
T Leach I Pringle
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
4
File Size:
1138 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2004

Abstract

The Bowdens Silver Deposit is a low sulfidation epithermal silver-base metal deposit that has formed on the northern margin of a hydrothermal system within air-fall breccias, ignimbrites and crystal tuffs of rhyolitic composition. The deposit lies near the north-eastern margin of the Lachlan Fold Belt and the rhyolitic host rocks are of Early Permian age. The silver mineralisation occurs as flat-lying zones of disseminations and silicic fracture-filling within the Rylstone Volcanics and is closely associated with sulfides of iron, arsenic, lead and zinc. High-grade silver mineralisation is also found in steeply-dipping fracture zones which host banded sulfide veins. Studies of the alteration products indicate that high temperature fluids, flowing from south of the current project area, resulted in quartz (¦adularia) û illite/sericite alteration. Cool, low pH steam-heated waters on the northern and eastern margins of the prospect area resulted in siderite û smectite-illite clay û Fe-carbonate û marcasite û kaolinite alteration. Mixing of the two fluid types resulted in the deposition of iron and base metal sulfides, a decrease in both sulfur activity and pH of the mineralising fluid, and subsequent silver mineralisation.
Citation

APA: T Leach I Pringle  (2004)  Hydrothermal Alteration at the Bowdens Silver Deposit, NSW

MLA: T Leach I Pringle Hydrothermal Alteration at the Bowdens Silver Deposit, NSW. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2004.

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