The Nature and Origin of the Ore-Forming Fluid in the Kidston Gold Deposit, North Queensland
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 4
 - File Size:
 - 144 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1987
 
Abstract
The Kidston orebody is a kilometre diameter  breccia pipe of Permo-Carboniferous age' assoc- iated with rhyolitic dykes and hosted by  Proterozoic granodiorite and metamorphic rocks.  Mineralization and alteration are associated  spatially and temporally with brecciation and  rhyolite intrusion. Three stages of alteration  have been recognized: pre-brecciation, and  early and late stage post-brecciation. Gold is  known to be particularly associated with late  stage post-brecciation cavity infill and sheeted  veins. Fluid inclusion and stable isotope results  show the importance of moderate-high temperat- ure, saline, magmatic fluids in the early stage  mineralization and in the brecciation of the  pipe. Later periods of alteration, accompanied  by gold deposition, are associated with fluids  only slightly depleted in 180 relative to mag- matic waters, unlike the strongly 180-depleted  meteoric water typically found in hydrothermal  Permian and Carboniferous deposits of eastern  Australia. The 5180 values and low salinities  in fluid inclusions suggest the fluid may have  formed from vapour condensation from a magmatic  fluid. Fluid inclusion data and alteration  assemblages define the prevailing chemical  conditions. Gold transport under these,  conditions would have been primarily as a  bisulfide complex.
Citation
APA: (1987) The Nature and Origin of the Ore-Forming Fluid in the Kidston Gold Deposit, North Queensland
MLA: The Nature and Origin of the Ore-Forming Fluid in the Kidston Gold Deposit, North Queensland. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1987.