The Coromandel Epithermal Gold-Silver Province: A Result of Collision of the Northland and Colville Volcanic Arcs in Northern New Zealand

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
D N. B Skinner
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
8
File Size:
921 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1997

Abstract

Changes in the configuration of late Cenozoic volcanic arcs related to Pacific-Australian plate convergence in northern New Zealand may have localised large-scale epithermal gold-silver mineralisation to a particular part of the volcanic arc system, the Coromandel Volcanic Zone (CVZ). The history of arc-type volcanism in northern New Zealand began with the development of the continental margin Northland Volcanic Arc from early-mid Miocene (26-15 Ma). From 18-15 Ma the Northland Volcanic Arc extended south into the northern and western part of the CVZ where it is dominantly composed of andesite with lesser dacite and very minor rhyodacite. In the south, centre and east of the CVZ, younger andesite-dacite volcanism overlapped in space and time (14-5 Ma) with voluminous rhyolitic volcanism associated with rift-hosted calderas and minor basaltic eruptions. This change to bimodal rhyolitic-basaltic volcanism and extensional tectonics was a result of southwest (SW)-directed propagation of the Colville-Lau oceanic island+ arc into the north-northwest (NNW) trending Northland Volcanic Arc and its underlying continental crust. The extensional tectonic regime created in the collision zone between the two arcs is also the site of the 14-6 Ma Coromandel epithermal gold-silver province, which contains some 50 separate deposits and has a production (1862-1996) of about 300 t Au and 1150 t Ag. Extensional tectonics facilitated the emplacement of silicic magma at shallow crustal level and led to reactivation of deep basement faults. The resulting enhanced heat flow and fault-focused fluid flow localised large hydrothermal systems and associated extensive low-sulphidation epithermal gold-silver deposits in the southern part of the province, as at Waihi, Golden Cross and Karangahake.
Citation

APA: D N. B Skinner  (1997)  The Coromandel Epithermal Gold-Silver Province: A Result of Collision of the Northland and Colville Volcanic Arcs in Northern New Zealand

MLA: D N. B Skinner The Coromandel Epithermal Gold-Silver Province: A Result of Collision of the Northland and Colville Volcanic Arcs in Northern New Zealand. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1997.

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