Tectonic setting of some mineral deposits of the New Guinea Region
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 9
 - File Size:
 - 7319 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1991
 
Abstract
Mineral deposits of the central New  Guinea region (Gunung Bijih, Ok Tedi, Mount  Kare, Porgera, Frieda River) and of  southeastern New Guinea (Wau-Edie Creek,  Wafi, Hamata, Hidden Valley, Tolukuma,  Misima) are associated with hot, forceful  intrusions of magma of mantle origin that  penetrated thick Precambrian and Palaeozoic  continental crust. The interaction of high- temperature melt with continental crust,  and the differentiation of melt while in  transit through thick crust, may be factors  in generating ore. Mineralised intrusives in  central New Guinea are a result of Neogene- Quaternary magmatism and were emplaced in a  foreland thrust belt environment, a setting  similar to the (mineralised) Laramide  intrusions of southwestern USA. In both  cases, central New Guinea and the Laramide,  magmatism is not obviously subduction- related. Mineralised intrusives in south- eastern New Guinea (Wau-Edie Creek, etc.),  also, are in a thrust belt setting, and are  not obviously subduction-related. The  association of. gold in southeastern New  Guinea with a second (Pliocene) phase of  igneous activity, rather than with earlier  (Miocene) activity suggests that re-working  by successive intrusions may be a factor in  localising ore. This is seen, also, in the  Bismarck-Solomon islands region where the  richer deposits are associated with later  (Pliocene) intrusives rather than with  earlier (Eocene-Oligocene) intrusives.  Unlike the mainland mineral deposits, those  of the Bismarck-Solomon islands are clearly  subduction-related.
Citation
APA: (1991) Tectonic setting of some mineral deposits of the New Guinea Region
MLA: Tectonic setting of some mineral deposits of the New Guinea Region. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1991.