Mesothermal Gold Mineralisation in the Tectonically Active Southern Alps: Analogues for the Otago Schist?

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
P O. Koons S C. Cox R J. Norris
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
8
File Size:
1176 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1997

Abstract

 The Southern Alps is an active oblique collisional zone which has a characteristic wedge-shaped geometry above a low-angle ductile shear zone. The Main Divide region is a relatively low strain zone above this ductile shear zone, and is _deforming principally along steeply dipping strike-slip faults. Extensional fractures are common at a high angle to the regional structural trend. These steeply dipping structures act as conduits for gold-bearing fluids from depth, and small mesothermal gold deposits have formed at several structural levels including the near-surface region. Gold has also been deposited in a meteoricmetamorphic fluid mixing zone near a conductive thermal anomaly on the western slopes of the mountains. These various gold deposits and their well-constrained structural and tectonic settings can be used as analogues for larger, deeper-eroded mesothermal gold deposits in the Mesozoic Otago Schist belt. High level Miocene veins in NW Otago have formed beneath the main divide of the initiating Southern Alps. Late metamorphic gold-bearing veins formed as fluid escaped from the ductile-deforming crustal root beneath Mesozoic mountains.  
Citation

APA: P O. Koons S C. Cox R J. Norris  (1997)  Mesothermal Gold Mineralisation in the Tectonically Active Southern Alps: Analogues for the Otago Schist?

MLA: P O. Koons S C. Cox R J. Norris Mesothermal Gold Mineralisation in the Tectonically Active Southern Alps: Analogues for the Otago Schist?. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1997.

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