The Metallogeny of Ancient Greenstone Belts and Implications for Modern Submarine Hydrothermal Systems

International Marine Minerals Society
Mark Hannington H. L. Gibson U. Schwarz-Schampera
Organization:
International Marine Minerals Society
Pages:
2
File Size:
86 KB
Publication Date:
Sep 24, 2006

Abstract

Ancient ore deposits provide important clues for the understanding of the origin and distribution of modern submarine hydrothermal systems. An analysis of the formation conditions, tectonic settings, and preservation of ancient seafloor mineral deposits from the recent geological past to the late Archean sheds light on the time-space relationships and diversity of mineral deposit types likely to be found in the modern oceans. Microplate tectonics that characterized ancient ore-hosting greenstone belts were strikingly similar to those active in volcanic arc environments of the western Pacific today. In such complex settings, oblique collisions, opposing subduction zones, and rapid changes in stress regimes (e.g., from compressional to tensional and back to compressional) were common, causing juxtaposition of diverse styles of mineralization. The world-class base metal deposits of the late Archean Abitibi greenstone belt of Canada, for example, were formed within a relatively short time span of ~20 m.y., in response to successive arc rifting, back-arc basin development, and exhumation of accretionary complexes along major arc-parallel crustal-scale faults. Similar processes and environments are important settings for metallogenesis in modern submarine volcanic arcs. Active marginal basins of similar size and representing similar stages of evolution are well represented in the western Pacific today and contain a similar suite of mineral deposit types. Examples from the eastern Manus Basin and adjoining New Ireland Basin (PNG) and in the Lau-Tonga-Kermadec arc-backarc system illustrate these similarities. Certain gold-rich volcanogenic massive sulfide deposits at the southern margin of the Abitibi greenstone belt (e.g., Bousquet and LaRonde deposits in the eastern Blake River Gp.) may be important ancient analogs of newly discovered gold-rich black smoker deposits found along the active fronts of today's submarine volcanic arcs.
Citation

APA: Mark Hannington H. L. Gibson U. Schwarz-Schampera  (2006)  The Metallogeny of Ancient Greenstone Belts and Implications for Modern Submarine Hydrothermal Systems

MLA: Mark Hannington H. L. Gibson U. Schwarz-Schampera The Metallogeny of Ancient Greenstone Belts and Implications for Modern Submarine Hydrothermal Systems. International Marine Minerals Society, 2006.

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