Microchemical characterization of alluvial gold from Scotland

- Organization:
- The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
- Pages:
- 14
- File Size:
- 7495 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jun 19, 1905
Abstract
Paper presented at Mineralisation in the Caledonides, the Mike Gallagher memorial meeting held in Edinburgh, 27-28 June 1996. Quantitative point analysis and microchemical mapping identified 52 different types of mineral in inclusions, usually ranging in size from 5 to less than 1 micrometre, inherited from source bedrock. A combination of grain chemistry, heterogeneity and inclusions provides a grain signature reflecting the type and history of source mineralisation. Several grains from an alluvial site are needed, to allow for bedrock variation and the presence of inclusions in only 10-20% of grains. A total of 1 530 grains obtained from 30 localities in Scotland were of ten types, two of them minor variants. Two types in the Highlands may be related to centres of Caledonian igneous activity, but the most widespread is likely to have been of deep-seated origin and structurally controlled. Gold in the Ochil Hills is probably from a source associated with Devonian andesitic activity. In the Southern Uplands, grain types reflect two separate episodes of mesothermal lode gold mineralisation and relationships with Permian red beds/mafic volcanics and with Tertiary dykes
Citation
APA:
(1905) Microchemical characterization of alluvial gold from ScotlandMLA: Microchemical characterization of alluvial gold from Scotland. The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining, 1905.